

Bread is made with only a few ingredients, flour and water being the most fundamental of them. Understanding the ratio between them, also known as hydration (or dough or bread hydration) can tell you a great deal about what qualities to expect from your dough and your finished loaf. From home bakers to seasoned professionals, hydration is a topic that always generates questions, so below we’re answering some of the most common ones.
In breadmaking, hydration refers to the total quantity of moisture in a bread dough. We quantify it using a ratio found by dividing the total weight of water (or water-containing liquids such as milk, juice, tea, or even alcohol) by the total weight of flour in a given recipe. The ratio of the two numbers (water / flour), written as a percentage, mathematically expresses what is referred to as hydration. Bakers often refer to doughs like our Pan de Cristal (100%) as high hydration, or “slack,” whereas a firmer dough like our Easiest Loaf of Bread You’ll Ever Bake (63%) may be referred to as medium hydration, or “stiff.”
Hydration affects doughs at every step of the breadmaking process, from how we mix and develop strength to how we fold, shape, and even bake. If you understand hydration, you’ll bake better bread. (For some side reading, I highly recommend our piece on baker’s math for a deeper dive into how we calculate and describe bread doughs.)
While we do need water to make bread (and even cookies, crackers, or cakes) we don’t necessarily need to know things like hydration percentage or how it affects doughs to make great bread. That said, understanding hydration and its role in baking can help improve the quality and consistency of your breadmaking while also giving clues about how a dough will perform.
Here’s an example. If I go to make a recipe with all-purpose flour and a hydration percentage in the 75% to 85% range, I know before even mixing the dough that it will likely be slack or sticky. And similarly, a recipe hydrated in the 55% to 65% range will likely feel firm or even stiff. This knowledge helps guide my approach to the recipe while also enabling me to compare recipes in an “apples to apples” fashion.
Bonnie Ohara, baker, author, and owner of Alchemy Bread in Modesto, California, emphasizes the value of understanding hydration: “Knowing hydration can be a context clue when communicating with other bakers about a recipe.” She explains that knowing hydration is a good starting point to deepen your understanding of how to handle tricky doughs or troubleshoot problems.
To take this a step further, if I know a dough is high hydration (let’s say 80% or higher, roughly), the dough will likely present as slack and sticky, possibly requiring some adjustments in how I handle it. And by the same token, a firm dough (in the low 60s for hydration) may require less folding or other handling during fermentation. The big takeaway here is that knowing hydration is like checking the weather before setting out for a road trip. It prepares you for the conditions ahead.
Hydration is calculated by taking the weight of water or liquid in a recipe and dividing it by the weight of flour to get a percentage.
Let’s look at an example recipe:
Flour: 1,000g
Water: 750g
Salt: 20g
Yeast: 10g
Remember that hydration = water / flour. So in the recipe above, if water is 750g and flour is 1,000g, the total hydration of the dough is 750 / 1,000, or 75%.
Another example: If a recipe has the same weight of flour and water (let’s say 750g of each), then the hydration would be 100%.
(A useful additional resource here is the piece I wrote on baker’s math.)
Yes. Hydration refers to the total quantity of water in the final dough. Both the flour and water amount in a sourdough preferment or sourdough culture should be considered when factoring hydration. Think of it like this: Everything that comprises the loaf you place in the oven should be considered as part of the loaf.
Let's look further.
Here are the ingredients for a sourdough “country-style” loaf. While this example is a little more daunting, just remember what I said above: Total quantity of water divided by total quantity of flour = total hydration.
All-purpose flour: 400g
Whole wheat flour: 50g
Rye flour: 50g
Water: 375g
Salt: 11g
Sourdough preferment: 100g (consisting of 50g flour and 50g water)
Let’s add it up.
Water: 375g (in the final mix) + 50g (in the preferment) = 425g
Flour: 400g all-purpose + 50g whole wheat + 50g rye (all in the final mix) + 50g (in the preferment) = 550g
These numbers mean that this loaf has 77% hydration (425 / 550 = .77).
High hydration refers to doughs that are often in excess of 80% hydration. In some cases, hydration may actually exceed 100% due to the thirsty needs of high protein or whole-grain flours (such as our bread flour or whole wheat). In those situations, the recipe has more water than flour. At the other end of the spectrum are doughs that fall around 60% hydration, which would be considered low hydration or “stiff.”
The importance of water in our baked goods cannot be overstated: No water, no bread (or coffee cake, or cookies, or almost any other baked good). Water enables fermentation, hydrates starches and proteins, and positively impacts texture, flavor, crumb, and keeping qualities. So, the more insight we have into the hydration of our doughs, the more we can understand how to use it to our advantage and understand the recipe or breads we’re baking.
There are no hard rules here. Beyond water I treat liquids such as milk, tea, coffee, beer, wine, juice, kombucha, or kvass as water in terms of hydration. While the quantity of solids or subcomponents (juice pulp, milk solids, fat, alcohol, etc.) do vary in each example, there's enough water to count them as hydration.
While it’s true that these all contain water and have impacts on doughs, for bread we generally don’t consider them as part of the hydration percentage. We do think about the functional impacts, however. For example, in baker’s math terms, brioche dough is often 50% butter, 50% whole eggs, and 10% water or milk. While the hydration percentage looks extremely low — too low to even hydrate the flour, yeast, or sugar — the dough still works beautifully. Why? Because the eggs are roughly 75% water, and the butter also contains around 18% water.
The way hydration is calculated doesn’t change with flour types. So, 1,000 grams of flour and 750 grams of water will always be 75% hydration; it doesn’t matter if the flour is rye, whole wheat, buckwheat, or gluten-free.
However, whole-grain flours are “thirstier,” and doughs made with whole-grain flours typically require more water. As a result, a dough made with all-purpose flour and hydrated at 75% will feel significantly softer than an equally hydrated whole wheat dough.
For flour percentages, the best practice is to only include the milled product of grains. While cocoa powder, dry milk powder, potato flour, freeze-dried fruit powders, and other ingredients do absorb water from the dough, we do not consider them as part of the flour percentage. But, as with water content in eggs, do always consider the impact of any ingredient on hydration.
Recently, there's been a trend toward higher hydration doughs, with the perception that the higher the hydration, the more skilled the bake, prompting the question: Is wetter really better? The answer is ... “Maybe. Sometimes. Not always.” Each dough has its own sweet spot. I asked Judson Smith, the co-owner and head baker at Brimfield Bread Oven in Brimfield, Ohio, to list some positive attributes of slack doughs. His list was long. Wet or high-hydration doughs “promote better extensibility, better fermentation, moister crumb, and better keeping quality.” But he also noted that with wetter doughs come challenges. They take “more skill to handle and shape, require longer bakes, and often have thicker crusts.”
Further, he noted that with enriched doughs such as challah, higher hydration can really be a problem, producing “slumpy finished products and less strand definition.” Ultimately, low-hydration doughs can have great applications in baking. From loaves that look better with definition (as with braids), to bagels or pretzels, which have a more closed crumb structure and toothy chew, too much water can sometimes ruin the day.
Yes! Hydration can be adjusted at any point. It’s something that professional bakers adjust in small degrees while mixing; we add a little water if a dough feels “thirsty” or hold some if necessary, depending on the season or flour composition. At home, I also make small adjustments when swapping whole-grain flour into a recipe or adapting to dry seasonal conditions on the fly.
But for any big, longstanding changes (in the case of water, let’s say a change bigger than 3% to 5%), I recommend working with baker’s math to calculate adjustments and ensure that ratios between ingredients remain intact. So, if a dough sits at 74% hydration and I consistently add what I calculate to be a full additional 3% of water, I’ll eventually make that change in my files, updating the formula to reflect the 77% hydration baguette that I like to make.
There is a learning curve with high-hydration doughs. It’s important to begin with breadmaking fundamentals, gaining experience folding doughs, maintaining leavens, shaping, scoring, and loading. Then as skills and confidence build, practice shaping gently, and folding for strength as I suggest in our hydration tips video. So, before you go to the 100% hydration Pan de Cristal (and the even wetter chocolate version), maybe you try our 80% hydration Pain de Campagne and get comfortable with the folding methods and dough handling.
We hope that these answers add some clarity to the hydration conversation. Armed with this information, you’re ready to take on everything from stiff pan loaves to softer hearth bakes. If you get tripped up, don’t forget our piece on baker’s math and tips videos to help you along the way. And we’ll keep engaged in our comments section, looking for ways we can support great bakes and beautiful loaves.
Cover photo by Mark Weinberg, food styling by Liz Neily.
January 15, 2025 at 11:14am
Quantitatively, if I substitute your bread flour at 12.7% protein, for your all purpose flour at 11.7%, how much would I need to alter the hydration? Is there a simple way to calculate this?
What about your white whole wheat, going from 11.7 % to 13%?
March 4, 2025 at 5:42pm
In reply to Quantitatively, if I… by Joe Sloan (not verified)
Hi Joe! In general, if you use bread flour in place of all purpose, you can add an extra teaspoon or 5g of water for each cup or 120g of flour substituted this way. Happy baking!
June 9, 2024 at 8:36am
Hi, thank you for this great article. I have learned during the years that the level of hydration goes up according to the type of bread we make. For example, I use something around 65 percent when I want to make flat bread. By flatbread, I mean bread like Lavash or Naan. For pizza and bread similar to pizza, like Barbari, the percentage goes up. I usually make 72 to 78 percent for this type of baking. Everything over 75 I use for Westen type of bread which should be high and with open crumb. As I am originally Iranian, I mentioned Lavash and Barbari.
June 9, 2024 at 9:49am
In reply to Hi, thank you for this great… by Mojtaba Talaian (not verified)
Thanks for offering your own baking wisdom, Mojtaba!
May 23, 2024 at 3:49am
This is super interesting, thank you. I’ve recently changed to a new recipe which I thought was much higher hydration, but it’s not so drastic after all :) I feel like I understand the maths for the first time n four years of sourdough making!
Quick query: how do seeds like chia and hemp affect the hydration calculations?
May 24, 2024 at 1:09pm
In reply to This is super interesting,… by Sarah Jasmon (not verified)
Hi Sarah, check out Martin's Baker's Math blog post as to how to handle added grains and seeds and other ingredients that might require a soaker, and for more information on how Martin recommends incorporating a soaker into a sourdough bread recipe, check out this blog post.
April 26, 2024 at 5:58pm
How do liquid sweeteners fit into hydration calculation situation? I have a WW sourdough recipe that is 85% hydration. But I want to add a little bit of liquid sweetener (honey, molasses, barley malt syrup) to give a little more rise. Since the recipe is 100% WW flour I figure 25 grams liquid sweetener doesn't need to be accounted for because of the "thirst" of the flour and that the water content of the sweetener is roughly 20% water (5 grams). Am I wrong in assuming this or should I be adding 5 grams less water to maintain a strict 85% hydration.
April 27, 2024 at 1:23pm
In reply to How do liquid sweeteners fit… by Dave in the Ph… (not verified)
Hi Dave, liquid sweeteners aren't included when calculating the hydration percentage of a bread recipe, although it is good to be mindful of the added water content they may bring to your recipe. Since you're adding this ingredient to the recipe, you may find you need to add a touch more flour or you could hold back on 5g of water, but there is no need to calculate things quite so precisely.
April 23, 2024 at 6:26am
Hi! I recently found out that I add about 5 grams of water each time I perform a bowl/coil fold, which adds up to about 20-30 grams per dough. Since I don't bake such large quantities at home, this is a significant amount percentually. For example: a dough that was originally 500g of water and 750g of flour is 67% hydrated, but add 30 grams of water and suddenly you're in the 70% territory (not even including the liquid starter)! I thought, maybe people who boast about those high hydration doughs include this in their formula? Either way, it has made me more cautious of the amount of water I start with.
April 13, 2024 at 4:27pm
I’m looking for a long fermentation due to gluten intolerance. Hydration seems to impact this but I’m still so confused. Can I take your “Extra tangy sourdough bread” recipe (which I’ve used for the past year and love) and combine all ingredients at once (rather than waiting for the 2nd day for the last of the flour), then start the long fermentation, or do I need to increase the hydration?
Pagination