Turkey Brine Calculator for Whole Birds and Cuts

Turkey Brine Calculator

Size a wet brine, equilibrium brine, injection brine, or dry-brine conversion for whole turkeys, spatchcocked birds, breasts, legs, and holiday roasts with salt-by-weight math instead of guesswork.

🦃Turkey Brining Presets

Each preset loads a realistic turkey situation, including cut shape, salt strength, sugar level, coverage water, injection pickup, chilling allowance, and brine time.

Turkey and Brine Inputs
Standard wet brine uses salt percent of water; equilibrium uses turkey plus liquid.
Weight in pounds before brining.
Approximate breast or roast thickness in inches.
Quarts of water or brine per pound of turkey.
Wet brines often land near 5 to 6 percent salt by water weight.
Brown sugar, maple sugar, or white sugar as percent of basis weight.
Weight is the real formula; volume is only a kitchen translation.
Percent of turkey weight added as injected brine. Use 0 for soak-only brines.
Extra liquid volume for ice packs, ice melt, or chilled top-up.
Extra space above turkey and brine to prevent overflow.
Temperature in F. Keep raw poultry below 40 F.
Food safety note: brine raw turkey only under refrigeration at 40°F / 4°C or colder, use a food-safe nonreactive container, discard used brine, and cook poultry to a safe internal temperature. This calculator sizes the brine; it does not replace food safety judgment.

Your turkey brine plan

Adjust the turkey weight, brine method, salt strength, and container allowance, then calculate.

Ready
Brine Liquid0 qtwater before turkey displacement
Salt Needed0 gweigh salt for best accuracy
Brine Time0 hrbased on cut and thickness
Container Size0 qtincludes headspace allowance

Full breakdown

Water formularate x weight
Salt basiswater weight
Timing modelcut + thickness
Container modelbird + brine
📏Turkey Brine Reference Grid
5-6%Classic wet brine salt range
1.3-1.8%Dry brine salt by turkey weight
8-12%Typical injection pickup range
12-18 hrCommon whole turkey brine window

Wet brine percentages here mean salt weight divided by water weight unless you choose equilibrium brine. Dry brine percentages mean salt weight divided by turkey weight.

🧪Brine Method Comparison
Standard Wet5-6%

Fast, familiar, and good for whole birds when the turkey is fully submerged and chilled.

Equilibrium Wet1.6-2.0%

Salt is calculated against turkey plus water, so the final seasoning is gentler and harder to overshoot.

Injection8-12%

Moves seasoned brine into thick breast meat and large roasts, then a light soak evens the surface.

Dry Brine24-48 hr

Uses no tub of liquid, helps skin dry, and seasons by turkey weight instead of water volume.

📚Turkey Cut Timing Table
Turkey CutCoverage RateSalt TargetTypical Time
Whole turkey, 10 to 16 lb0.48 to 0.55 qt per lb5.0 to 6.0 percent wet brine12 to 18 hours, then dry skin well
Spatchcocked turkey0.38 to 0.45 qt per lb4.8 to 5.5 percent wet brine8 to 14 hours because the bird is flatter
Bone-in turkey breast0.42 to 0.50 qt per lb4.5 to 5.5 percent wet brine6 to 10 hours for a juicy but not hammy texture
Boneless breast roast0.35 to 0.42 qt per lb4.0 to 5.0 percent wet brine4 to 8 hours, or inject for thick roasts
Drumsticks, thighs, and wings0.32 to 0.40 qt per lb5.5 to 6.5 percent wet brine4 to 8 hours because pieces expose more surface
🧂Salt and Sugar Conversion Table
IngredientApprox Cup WeightBest UseCalculator Detail
Diamond Crystal kosher saltAbout 137 g per cupFlaky, lighter cup measureProduces more cups for the same salt grams
Morton kosher saltAbout 243 g per cupDenser crystalsUse less volume than Diamond for equal grams
Fine table saltAbout 288 g per cupStrongest cup-for-cup choiceBest weighed because a cup is very salty
Light brown sugarAbout 220 g per packed cupClassic roast turkey brinesAdds browning and balances salt perception
HoneyAbout 340 g per cupInjection or dissolved brinesCounts as sugar weight after it is mixed in
🥤Common Turkey Brine Batch Sizes
Turkey SizeClassic Water5.5% Salt WeightContainer Planning
6 lb breast2.7 to 3.0 qt140 to 156 g salt8 to 10 qt nonreactive container
10 lb spatchcocked bird4.0 to 4.5 qt208 to 234 g salt12 to 16 qt food-safe tub or bag
12 lb whole turkey5.8 to 6.2 qt302 to 322 g salt16 to 20 qt stockpot, bucket, or brining bag
16 lb holiday turkey7.6 to 8.8 qt395 to 457 g salt24 qt cooler or tall food-safe container
20 lb large turkey9.5 to 11 qt494 to 572 g saltUse equilibrium brine or a very cold cooler setup
🌡Chilling and Texture Reference
VariableTarget RangeWhy It MattersAdjustment
Brine temperature34 to 40°F / 1 to 4°CRaw poultry must stay cold while salt diffusesChill brine fully before adding turkey
Strong brine timeShorter windowHigh salt brines season quickly but can taste curedUse 4.5 to 5 percent or reduce hours
Skin crispingDry surfaceWet skin steams before it brownsAir-dry uncovered after brining when possible
Injected breast8 to 12 percent pickupThick white meat benefits from internal seasoningReduce soak time to avoid oversalting the surface
💡Turkey Brining Notes
Weight beats volume. Kosher salt brands vary dramatically by cup weight. The calculator gives a cup estimate, but weighing salt in grams is the cleanest way to repeat a turkey brine.
Plan for drying time. A wet-brined turkey roasts better after the surface is patted dry and rested uncovered in the refrigerator, especially when crisp skin matters.

Brining a turkey requires many different variable to consider to ensure that the turkey meat comes out juicy, not wet. Many variables can impact the brining of turkey including the size of the turkey, the thickness of the turkey breast, and whether the turkey is a whole turkey or a spatchcocked turkey. Other variables include the salt concentration in the brine, and how long the turkey is to sit in that brine.

Each of these variables can be managed with the calculator to remove the guesswork that an individual might otherwise use in scaling the recipe. Many people know that adding more salt to the turkey will produce more flavor. However, the flavor relationship with salt is not direct; the salt must move into the turkey’s meat through a process called diffusion.

How to Brine a Turkey with a Calculator

Diffusion takes time to move the salt to the turkey’s center. While a strong brine will allow the turkey to season faster, the stronger the brine the more the turkey’s surface may season to the flavor of the brine before the center of the turkey seasons to the same flavor. For this reason, the calculator also asks for the salt strength of the brine and the thickest measurement of the turkey cut.

The thicker the turkey the longer that the salt must travel to reach the center of the turkeys meat. For instance, a turkey with a six-inch breast will take longer to season than a spatchcocked turkey with a four-inch breast. The water rate for the brine asks for how much liquid the brined turkey requires to cover the turkey.

This is not asking for the amount of brine that is to be used, but rather the amount of liquid that will be required to cover the turkey that is placed into a container. Turkeys require more liquid than legs or wings. If the container isnt filled enough, parts of the turkey will remain half submerged in the brine.

Additionally, if the container is filled with too much liquid, the brine may overflow from the container when the refrigerator is opened. The calculator includes allowances for these variables as well. The amount of sugar that is to be used in the brine will aid in the browning of the turkey’s skin and will also help to soften the perception of the salt in the turkey’s meat.

Since sugar does not penetrate the turkey’s meat as salt does, the user of the calculator can adjust the amount of sugar in the turkey. Some may desire a turkeys with a sweet flavor while others may not desire the addition of sweetness to the turkey’s flavor. The same is true of the aromatics choice.

Aromatics will add flavor to the brine but less than a percentage of that flavor will find its way into the turkey’s meat. Aromatics will prevent the brine from having a flat flavor but can be skipped over by individuals who wish only to season the turkey evenly and add moisture to the meat. Dry brining is accomplished on a different principle than wet brining.

A small amount of salt is applied to the turkey’s skin. The turkey releases moisture and reabsorbs the moisture. The calculator can also convert a wet brining recipe to a dry brined turkey target and show the difference in the weight of the salt that will be required.

Dry brining will take longer than wet brining. Dry brined skin will be dryer than wet brined skin and drier skin will lead to crispy skin when roasted. Injection is somewhere in between dry brining and wet brining.

The seasoned liquid is pushed into the breast of the turkey where the turkey is thickest. The turkey will sit in the brine for a shorter period of time after this step. Injection is a percentage of the turkey’s weight since there is a limit to how much liquid the turkey can hold.

Too much injection will lead to the turkey’s skin tasting oversalt. The time for the turkey to sit in the brine will be shorter if the turkey is injected with the seasoned liquid. Raw turkey must remain below 40 degrees throughout the brining process.

The refrigerator that is used to brine the turkey may not remain at a constant temperature. The refrigerator field in the calculator will account for the refrigerator’s temperature since that will impact the rate at which the salt diffuses into the turkey’s meat. If the refrigerator is warm the time for brining can be shortened so that the raw turkey remains below 40 degrees.

The container in which the turkey is to be brined may impact the amount of liquid that is required. If the turkey is to be placed into a brining bag the amount of liquid will be less than if the turkey is to be placed in a stockpot. Brining bags will conform to the shape of the turkey and require less space in the container.

Additionally, the brining container may contain ice packs to keep the turkey’s temperature low. The headspace in the container will be accounted for in the calculator since there is risk in both running out of space and buying a container that is too large. The value of the calculator allows for each of these variables to be considered individually.

For instance, if a person desires a gentle brine they may determine that that type of brine is best applied to a smaller turkey. An injected turkey breast may require less time in the brine than a whole turkey. The type of salt can impact how many cups of salt are required since different types of salt contain different amounts of salt per cup.

Swapping types of salt may require adjustments to the amount of salt to be used. Finally, after brining the turkey the skin should be patted dry to allow for crispy skin when the turkey is roasted.

Turkey Brine Calculator for Whole Birds and Cuts

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