High Altitude Baking Calculator

Living above 3,000 feet? Cakes collapse, breads dry out, and cookies spread weird because of low air pressure. This calculator adjusts your recipe to fix it.

Quick answer: At elevations above 3,000 feet, you generally need more liquid, more flour, less sugar, less leavening, and a slightly higher oven temperature. The exact amounts depend on how high you live — enter your elevation below.
High altitude (5,000-7,000 ft) — significant adjustments recommended

Recipe amounts (as written)

Adjusted for your altitude

Yeast doughs: If using yeast, reduce by 1/4 and watch the rise — it'll happen faster.
Liquid evaporation: Cover dough/batter while resting to prevent drying.

Why altitude changes everything

At sea level, air pressure pushes down on your batter. That pressure helps leavening gases stay contained while heat sets the structure. At elevation, there's less air pressing down — so the gases expand faster and farther. Cakes rise dramatically, then collapse. Bread crusts over before the inside finishes baking. Sugar concentrates more because water boils away faster.

The fix is counterintuitive: you generally add structure-building ingredients (flour, liquid) and reduce the things that cause runaway expansion (sugar, leavening). You also crank the oven a bit higher to firm up the structure before the gas bubbles can do too much damage.

How to use this calculator

Enter your elevation. Common references: Denver is 5,280 feet, Salt Lake City 4,226 feet, Reno 4,500 feet, Boulder 5,328 feet, Albuquerque 5,312 feet, Cheyenne 6,062 feet, Flagstaff 6,910 feet, Aspen 7,908 feet. If you're not sure, search "elevation [your city]" on Google.

Then enter the original recipe amounts for flour, sugar, liquid, baking powder/soda, plus the oven temperature and time. The calculator shows the adjusted version. The math is based on guidelines from the King Arthur Baking Company, Colorado State University Extension, and the USDA — the same sources professional bakers in mountain regions reference.

Altitude adjustment guidelines (reference)

Adjustment3-5K ft5-7K ft7-10K ft10K+ ft
Baking powder/soda−1/8 tsp/tsp−1/4 tsp/tsp−1/4 tsp/tsp−1/4 to 1/2 tsp/tsp
Sugar−1 tbsp/cup−2 tbsp/cup−2 to 3 tbsp/cup−3 tbsp/cup
Liquid+1 to 2 tbsp/cup+2 to 3 tbsp/cup+3 to 4 tbsp/cup+4 tbsp/cup
Flour+1 tbsp/cup+1 to 2 tbsp/cup+2 to 3 tbsp/cup
Oven temp+15-25°F+15-25°F+15-25°F+15-25°F

What about cookies, pies, and other baked goods?

Cookies

Cookies are forgiving. At 5,000+ ft, try slightly less sugar (1 tbsp per cup), slightly less leavening (a pinch less per teaspoon), and a touch more flour if dough seems too soft. Most drop cookies need almost no adjustment.

Pie crusts and pastry

Add 1-2 extra tablespoons of cold water per cup of flour. The dough will look slightly wet — that's correct. Bake at the original temperature, no need to bump it.

Yeast bread

Reduce yeast by 1/4 to 1/3. The dough rises faster, and over-rising leads to collapse and a coarse crumb. Punch down twice instead of once.

Custards, candy, and deep-frying

Water boils at lower temperatures with altitude — about 2°F lower per 1,000 feet. For candy-making and deep frying, lower the target temperature by the same amount. Check your candy thermometer at boiling water and recalibrate.

Frequently asked questions

At what elevation do I need to adjust?

Adjustments start at 3,000 feet. Below that, recipes generally work as written. Above 5,000 feet, every component matters.

Why does altitude affect baking?

Lower air pressure means leavening gases expand more, water evaporates and boils at lower temperatures, and recipes that rely on precise structural ratios start to fail.

Should I increase oven temperature?

Yes — by 15 to 25°F at any altitude above 3,000 ft. Higher temperature firms the batter structure faster, before excess gas can over-expand it. Reduce baking time slightly to compensate.

Do I adjust every recipe?

Mostly cakes, quick breads, and yeast breads. Cookies and pies need only minor tweaks. Stovetop cooking, candy, and deep frying are affected because boiling points drop.

How do I find my elevation?

Search "elevation [your city]" on Google. Most phones have a compass or altimeter app that shows it too.