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Alcohol By Volume
30%
ABV
Proof 60°
Conversion ABV = Proof ÷ 2 (US standard)

What Is This Calculator?

This tool converts alcohol proof into ABV (alcohol by volume, expressed as a percentage). It uses the United States standard, in which proof equals exactly twice the ABV. Other countries historically used different proof definitions (for example, the UK degrees proof system), so this calculator is scoped to the US convention.

How to Use It

Enter the proof number printed on the bottle (for example, 80) and the calculator instantly returns the equivalent ABV percentage. Most US spirits list both figures, so you can use this to verify a label or to convert a recipe that only states proof.

The Formula Explained

The relationship is simple and exact under the US system:

$$\text{ABV}\% = \dfrac{\text{Proof}}{2}$$

Because proof is defined as double the alcohol-by-volume percentage, every proof point equals half a percentage point of alcohol. To go the other way, multiply ABV by 2 to get proof.

Diagram converting proof 80 to 40 percent ABV by dividing by two
US proof is converted to ABV by dividing by two.

Worked Example

A bottle of vodka is labeled 80 proof. Dividing by two gives $$80 \div 2 = 40\% \text{ ABV}.$$ A high-proof bourbon at 120 proof works out to \(120 \div 2 = 60\%\) ABV.

Proof to ABV Conversion Table

In the United States, alcohol proof is exactly twice the alcohol by volume (ABV), so the conversion is simply \(\text{ABV} = \frac{\text{Proof}}{2}\). The table below lists common proof values, their corresponding ABV percentage, and the typical spirit associated with each strength.

Proof (°) ABV (%) Typical Spirit / Notes
60 30% Many flavored liqueurs and lower-strength spirits
70 35% Flavored whiskeys, some schnapps and liqueurs
80 40% Most vodka, whiskey, gin, rum and tequila (standard strength)
86 43% Some bourbons and Scotch whiskies
90 45% Higher-strength whiskeys and bonded-style spirits
100 50% Bottled-in-bond whiskey (US legal minimum is 100 proof)
101 50.5% Wild Turkey 101 and similar high-proof bourbons
120 60% Cask-strength / barrel-proof whiskeys
151 75.5% Overproof rum (e.g. 151 rum), often used in flaming cocktails
190 95% Everclear and other neutral grain spirits (near the practical distillation limit)
200 100% Pure (absolute) ethanol — no water content

For example, a 151-proof overproof rum has an ABV of \(151 \div 2 = 75.5\%\), while the theoretical maximum of 200 proof corresponds to 100% pure ethanol.

FAQ

Is proof always double the ABV? In the US, yes. The British "degrees proof" system used a different ratio (100 UK proof ≈ 57.1% ABV), so this calculator follows the simpler US standard.

What is the maximum proof? Pure ethanol is 200 proof (100% ABV), the theoretical upper limit.

Why does proof exist at all? "Proof" originated as a way to test ("prove") whether spirits had enough alcohol to ignite gunpowder, and the term stuck as a labeling standard.

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