Artisan sourdough bread on a flour-dusted table beside a baking lame and bowl of flour

High-altitude baking calculator

High Altitude Baking Calculator

Enter your elevation and recipe type to get practical high-altitude baking adjustments for cakes, cookies, bread, sourdough, brownies, and quick breads.

Start with flour, liquid, leavening, oven temperature, and bake time, then test one calm change at a time.

Recipe adjustment worksheet

Turn a sea-level recipe into a high-altitude starting point.

Enter the original recipe and your elevation. The calculator gives you a practical first pass for the next bake, not a pretend-perfect answer.

Original recipe

sea level → mountain kitchen
ft
g
g
mL
tsp
°F
min

Adjustment note

Run the worksheet to turn the sea-level recipe into a first high-altitude test note.

Example calculator outputs

See what a high-altitude adjustment looks like before you bake.

These examples are crawlable starting points. Use the calculator for your exact elevation, recipe type, pan, oven, and ingredient amounts.

Example: cake at 5,280 ft

Help the cake set before it over-expands.

  • Reduce baking powder or baking soda slightly.
  • Add a little flour for structure.
  • Increase liquid if the crumb turns dry.
  • Consider a modest oven temperature increase and check early.

Example: cookies at 6,000 ft

Slow spread and protect the edges.

  • Chill dough before baking if cookies run flat.
  • Use a touch more flour when dough feels loose.
  • Pull when centers are just set instead of waiting for dark edges.
  • Test one tray before changing the full batch.

Example: bread at 7,000 ft

Watch proofing endpoints more than the clock.

  • Expect fermentation and proofing to move faster.
  • Use dough volume, feel, and spring-back cues.
  • Add moisture gradually if flour absorbs more than expected.
  • Score and bake before the loaf overproofs.

Methodology

How to adjust a recipe for altitude without guessing wildly.

The calculator turns common high-altitude baking rules into a practical worksheet, then keeps the baker in control. Elevation matters, but so do recipe type, pan depth, oven accuracy, humidity, and ingredient brands.

1. Start with the symptom

Sinking cakes, dry cookies, weak oven spring, gummy centers, and brittle edges usually point to different fixes. The best adjustment depends on what failed, not just the number on the map.

2. Change the pressure-sensitive variables

High altitude often changes how leavening expands, how quickly moisture evaporates, and when structure sets. The worksheet focuses on flour, liquid, sugar, leavening, temperature, and bake time.

3. Test one calm change at a time

Treat the output as a first pass, not a guarantee. Bake, record the result, and adjust one variable on the next batch so you know what actually helped.

This tool is designed for home bakers adapting sea-level recipes at altitude. It is not a substitute for testing a specific recipe in your oven.

Altitude baking guides

Fix the baking problem you can see.

Choose the guide that matches what happened: flat cookies, dry edges, sinking cakes, weak bread rise, or gummy centers.

High Altitude Baking AdjustmentsStart here when a sea-level recipe needs more structure, moisture, heat, or bake time at elevation.High Altitude Baking ChartQuick altitude bands for flour, liquid, sugar, leavening, oven temperature, and timing changes.High Altitude Temperature GuideWhen to raise oven temperature, when to leave it alone, and how to avoid dry edges.High Altitude Cookie AdjustmentsFix cookies that spread, dry out, or bake unevenly in thin mountain air.Why Cookies Go Flat at High AltitudeA symptom-first fix for cookies that melt, spread, or lose their shape before the center sets.Dry Cookie Edges at High AltitudeAdjust pan heat, bake time, and moisture so the edges stop turning brittle before the middle is done.High Altitude Cake AdjustmentsHelp cakes rise, set, and stay moist when lower air pressure makes batter behave differently.Why Cakes Sink in the Middle at High AltitudeTroubleshoot cakes that rise fast, collapse in the center, or cool into a gummy dip.

High-altitude baking FAQ

Common questions before you adjust a recipe.

How do I adjust a recipe for high altitude?

Start with your elevation, recipe type, and the recipe's flour, liquid, sugar, leavening, oven temperature, and bake time. Most high-altitude recipes need small changes to moisture, structure, leavening, heat, or timing, then a test bake to confirm the result.

What elevation counts as high altitude for baking?

Many bakers start making altitude adjustments around 3,000 feet, with stronger changes often needed at 5,000 feet and above. Recipe type, pan size, oven behavior, and local humidity still matter.

Should I change baking temperature or baking time first?

For cakes, quick breads, and some brownies, a small temperature increase can help the structure set before gases expand too far. For cookies and delicate bakes, timing, pan choice, dough temperature, and moisture may matter more than a temperature change.

Is this calculator a guaranteed recipe conversion?

No. The calculator gives a practical starting point for the next bake. Use the output as a controlled first pass, write down what happened, and adjust one variable at a time.