How to Dilute High-Proof Spirits for Bottled Cocktails and Aperitivi
By Rowan Gobey ·
Every home bartender who moves beyond shaking individual drinks eventually faces the same question: how do I turn this high-proof infusion, tincture, or neutral spirit into something balanced enough to bottle? The answer is dilution — and while the math is simple, the details matter enough that getting them wrong can spoil an otherwise beautiful batch.
The Dilution Formula
At its heart, dilution is a conservation problem. The amount of pure alcohol in your liquid does not change when you add water. Only the total volume changes. This gives us the classic formula:
C₁ × V₁ = C₂ × V₂
C₁ is your starting ABV (the alcohol percentage of your infusion or spirit). V₁ is the volume you begin with. C₂ is the target ABV you want to reach. V₂ is the final volume after adding water. Rearrange to find V₂, subtract your starting volume, and you have the exact amount of water to add.
For example: if you have 500 ml of 45% ABV gentian maceration and you want to bottle it at 22% ABV, the math tells you to add approximately 522 ml of water. Without that calculation, you're guessing — and guesses compound when you scale up.
Why Sugar Changes Everything
Water is not the only thing you add when finishing an aperitivo or liqueur. Sugar syrup adds volume without adding alcohol, which means it also dilutes your batch. But syrup is denser than water, and the relationship is not perfectly linear.
In practice, a useful rule of thumb is that every 10 g/L of sugar lowers your perceived ABV by roughly 0.2%. If you're making a sweet red bitter at 150 g/L sugar, that's approximately a 3% ABV drop on top of your water dilution. Skip this correction and your finished product will be weaker than you intended — sometimes by a meaningful margin.
The ABV Dilution Calculator handles both the base dilution and the sugar correction in one step, so you don't have to run two sets of numbers.
Practical Tips for Clean Dilution
- Use filtered or distilled water. Tap water minerals and chlorine can muddy delicate botanical flavours, especially in clear aperitivi.
- Add water gradually and taste. The math gets you 95% of the way there, but your palate is the final arbiter of balance.
- Let the batch rest. Dilution is not always instantaneous. Give your bottle 24–48 hours after dilution before making final judgements.
- Measure ABV with a hydrometer or refractometer if possible. These tools remove ambiguity, especially when working with opaque syrups or heavy infusions.
- Document everything. Record starting ABV, starting volume, water added, sugar added, and final ABV. Patterns emerge over time that no calculator can predict.
Common Mistakes
The most frequent error is forgetting that ABV is a percentage of the total volume. Adding 100 ml of water to 500 ml of 40% spirit does not give you 600 ml of 33.3% spirit — it gives you 600 ml of roughly 33.3% spirit, which is close, but imprecise methods accumulate error. Always calculate from V₂, not from a rough percentage subtraction.
Another common mistake is diluting before sweetening. If you know your finished product needs both water and sugar, calculate them together. Diluting first and sweetening second almost always leads to over-dilution.
From Theory to Practice
Dilution is one of those skills that separates casual experimenting from consistent production. Once you understand the relationship between volume, ABV, and dissolved solids, you can approach any recipe with confidence — whether you're bottling a single 750 ml batch or preparing a twenty-litre run for an event.
If you want the full framework — including how to balance bitterness, sweetness, and acidity in low-ABV drinks — you'll find it in The Art of Aperitivo. And if you just need the numbers right now, the dilution calculator is free, instant, and works entirely in your browser.