People who homebrew will tell you it saves money. People who've been homebrewing for a few years will tell you a more complicated story. The true economics of homebrewing depend on how you account for equipment, time, and what you're comparing against — and the honest math is more nuanced than either camp usually admits.
Startup Costs: Equipment Investment
The upfront investment is the biggest variable in homebrew economics and also the most frequently underestimated.
| Equipment Tier | What's Included | Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| Basic extract kit | 5-gallon plastic bucket, auto-siphon, airlock, capper, bottles, basic ingredients | $100–$150 |
| All-grain starter | Brew kettle (7–10 gal), wort chiller, grain mill, mash tun, thermometer, hydrometer | $250–$400 |
| Intermediate all-grain | Stainless steel equipment, better wort chiller, kegging setup (keezer/kegerator) | $500–$800 |
| Advanced with temp control | Fermentation chamber, digital temperature controller, conical fermenter, CO2 system | $800–$1,500+ |
| Electric brew system | Grainfather, Brewzilla, or similar all-in-one electric system | $400–$900 |
Most homebrewers start with an extract kit. Extract brewing uses pre-made malt extract (liquid or dry) instead of mashing whole grains, which simplifies the process but increases ingredient costs by roughly 20–30% per batch.
Kegging is a common equipment upgrade that many brewers make after 6–12 batches. A basic kegging setup (used keezer, two cornical kegs, CO2 tank and regulator) runs $300–$600 but eliminates bottle caps, sanitizer for bottles, and the 2–3 hours of bottling time per batch.
Cost Per Batch: 5-Gallon Brew
A 5-gallon batch is the homebrewing standard — large enough to be economical, small enough to manage in a home kitchen or garage.
All-grain American IPA, 5 gallons (example):
| Ingredient | Quantity | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Pale 2-row malt | 4.5kg | $9.00 |
| Crystal 60L malt | 250g | $1.00 |
| Centennial hops (bittering) | 28g (1 oz) | $2.50 |
| Citra hops (flavor/aroma) | 56g (2 oz) | $5.50 |
| Dry yeast (US-05) | 1 packet | $4.50 |
| Protofloc/Irish moss (kettle fining) | Small amount | $0.50 |
| Water additions (salts) | Gypsum, CaCl2 | $0.50 |
| Electricity (3-hour boil + equipment) | Estimated | $1.50 |
| Sanitizer (Star San, pro-rated) | Per batch | $0.50 |
| Total | $25.50 |
This all-grain batch costs approximately $25–35. Extract versions of the same beer cost $35–55 because liquid malt extract is more expensive than grain. Specialty beers (Belgian saison with specialty yeast, imperial stout with adjuncts, sour with mixed culture) can reach $50–80 per batch.
Ingredient Cost Breakdown: Grain, Hops, Yeast
Understanding where ingredient money goes helps optimize cost.
Grain is the most flexible cost lever. Buying bulk (25lb or 55lb sacks of base malt) instead of pre-crushed homebrew store bags cuts base malt cost by 40–60%. Base malts (2-row, pilsner, Maris Otter) cost $1.50–$2.50/kg in bulk versus $3–4.50/kg in small quantities. Specialty malts (crystal, roasted, Munich) represent a small portion of most grain bills and are less worth buying in bulk.
Hops are priced by the ounce. Whole hops ($1.50–$2.50/oz) are slightly cheaper than pellets per ounce but less efficient — use 10–15% more by weight. The biggest hop cost is dry hopping for modern IPAs: a heavily dry-hopped NEIPA might use 4–6 oz of hops just in the dry hop addition, adding $8–15 to the recipe.
Yeast is the easiest cost to control. Liquid yeast strains ($9–12 each) can be washed and repitched up to 4–6 times, effectively reducing yeast cost per batch to under $2. Dry yeast packets ($4–6) cannot be reliably washed but are shelf-stable and consistent.
Cost Per Pint: Homebrew vs Craft vs Macro
Five gallons equals approximately 640 fluid ounces, or 48 twelve-ounce servings. Accounting for trub loss, bottle sediment, and transfer losses, realistic yield is 44–46 servings.
Homebrew cost per pint = Total Batch Cost ÷ (Yield in oz ÷ 16)
For a $30 all-grain batch yielding 40 twelve-oz servings (480 oz = 30 pints):
$30 ÷ 30 = $1.00 per pint
| Beer Type | Cost Per Pint (Approximate) |
|---|---|
| Homebrew (all-grain) | $0.60–$1.10 |
| Homebrew (extract) | $0.90–$1.50 |
| Macro lager (store-bought) | $0.40–$0.80 |
| Craft beer (six-pack retail) | $1.50–$2.50 |
| Craft beer (bar / taproom) | $5.00–$9.00 |
Against macro lager, homebrewing doesn't save money — industrial-scale production and cheap adjuncts make Budweiser-tier beer genuinely inexpensive. Against craft beer at retail, homebrewing saves roughly $0.50–$1.50 per pint. Against taproom prices, homebrewing is dramatically cheaper.
Break-Even Analysis: How Many Batches?
Break-even calculation divides total equipment investment by per-batch savings versus the alternative you're replacing.
Scenario: replacing $15 craft six-packs (2.50/pint) with homebrew ($1.00/pint)
- Savings per pint: $1.50
- Pints per batch: 30
- Savings per batch: $45
- Equipment cost (all-grain starter): $350
Break-even batches = $350 ÷ $45 = 7.8 batches
At one batch per month, equipment pays for itself in roughly 8 months. At one batch every six weeks, break-even takes about a year.
However, this ignores the very real tendency for homebrewers to upgrade equipment. Surveys of homebrewer spending consistently show that the hobby costs more than expected because of incremental equipment purchases — a second carboy, a refractometer, a pH meter, a grain mill. Many brewers spend $1,000–$2,000 on equipment over their first two years.
Time Cost: Is Your Time Worth It?
The most honest calculation includes the value of your time.
A typical all-grain brew day:
| Activity | Time |
|---|---|
| Setup and water heating | 30 min |
| Mashing | 60 min |
| Lautering and sparging | 30–45 min |
| Boil | 60 min |
| Chilling and transfer | 30 min |
| Cleanup | 45–60 min |
| Total active brew day | 4–5 hours |
Fermentation requires periodic check-ins (5–10 min/day) over 2–4 weeks. Bottling takes 2–3 hours. Total active time per batch: 7–9 hours.
Time cost per batch at $20/hr = 8 hours × $20 = $160
Total cost per batch including time = $30 (ingredients) + $160 (time) = $190
Cost per pint including time = $190 ÷ 30 = $6.33
At $6.33 per pint with time factored in, homebrewing is more expensive than buying craft beer at a store. The honest conclusion: homebrewing is not primarily a money-saving activity. It is a craft hobby with material rewards. The people who enjoy it most are those who value the process — the recipe design, the brewing day, the experimentation — not primarily the output. When you love brewing, the time isn't a cost. When you just want cheap good beer, the supermarket wins.