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Fermentation Calculators

Track fermentation timing, plan diacetyl rests, cold crashes and conditioning schedules.

8 free calculators in Fermentation

Understanding Fermentation in Homebrewing

Fermentation is where your wort becomes beer, and managing it well is the single biggest factor in producing clean, flavourful homebrew. For UK brewers working in unheated garages or spare rooms, ambient temperatures can swing significantly with the seasons — from below 10°C in winter to above 25°C during a summer heatwave. The temperature control calculator helps you work out whether you need a heat belt, brew fridge or simple insulation wrap to keep your fermentation in the yeast's ideal range. The fermentation time calculator gives you a realistic timeline for primary fermentation, which typically runs five to ten days for a standard-strength bitter or pale ale.

If you are brewing lagers — and British-brewed lagers are growing in popularity at CAMRA festivals and homebrew competitions alike — the diacetyl rest calculator is essential. Diacetyl produces an unwanted buttery off-flavour, and a well-timed rest at 18-20°C near the end of primary fermentation allows the yeast to reabsorb it. Follow this with a cold crash using the cold crash calculator to drop yeast and proteins out of suspension for brilliantly clear beer.

Safety matters too. The bottle bomb calculator checks whether your final gravity has truly stabilised before you bottle, preventing dangerous over-carbonation. Track your gravity readings over time with the fermentation log calculator — consistent readings over two to three days confirm fermentation is complete. The lag time calculator is useful for diagnosing slow starts, helping you determine whether a sluggish fermentation is down to underpitching, low viability or cool temperatures.