Have you ever wondered what makes up the actual cost of your
pint of craft beer? Me too. I searched
the interwebs for an answer to that question and to my surprise there was very
little information about what actually makes up the cost of a pint. I guess
that isn’t really surprising since most of the products we buy have hidden costs.
Think about it. Do you know what the actual costs are for an oil filter, a loaf
of sourdough bread, or an iPad? We know what we are willing to pay for these
items, but do we really know the factors that make up the costs?
As for a craft beer, much of the costs come down to where
your beer is brewed. Taxes, ingredient costs, labor, and whether the brewer
owns their place of business can radically change the costs associated with
producing a pint of beer. The size of the brewer’s setup can also have a large
impact on the costs associated with production. A 100 barrel brew house may
actually have higher ingredient and labor costs versus a 10,000 barrel brew
house, but that aside, let’s speak in generalities. The following assumptions
will be made on the basis of an average pint of beer costing $5 dollars.
Let’s say for the average brewery it costs about $50 per
barrel (31 gallons) in ingredients to produce your average pale ale, but could
go as high as $70 per barrel depending on the brewer’s setup and ingredient
costs. If that barrel brings in revenue of $700 a barrel, between 6 to 8 percent
of a pint of beer pays for the ingredients. To the average homebrewer that
would mean your average 5 gallon batch of pale ale would cost less than $11
(wouldn’t that be nice). Ingredient
costs will also vary with the brewery’s location, shipping costs, and
efficiency of their setup. Even a $0.06/lb difference in ingredient costs or a
3 percent difference in malt yield can have a large impact on the bottom line. (1) If you were running a 10,000 barrel brewery and had a 3% decrease in efficiency
that would increase your grain bill by about 15,500 pounds per year. For a
million barrel facility that inefficiency would be an additional 1.55 million
pounds of malt.(2)
- Metzger, S. What Does Your Beer Really Cost. The New Brewer. Jan 2012. https://www.brewersassociation.org/attachments/0000/8424/JF_TNB12_Beer_Costing-1.pdf
- Papazian, C., 1994. Home Brewer’s Companion. Avon Books.
- Beer Tax Rates by State. Jan 2014. http://www.taxadmin.org/fta/rate/beer.pdf
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