How to Make Americano at Home: Espresso + Hot Water Done Right
What Is an Americano?
An americano is espresso diluted with hot water. You pull a 30 ml espresso shot, then add 120 to 180 ml of hot water on top. The result tastes smoother than straight espresso but keeps the full flavor profile that drip coffee cannot match.
If you want to learn how to make americano at home, you only need two things: a machine that pulls real espresso and hot water at the right temperature. The InstaCuppa 3-in-1 Espresso Coffee Maker handles both. Its kettle mode heats water to 75 or 100 degrees Celsius. So you pull your shot and heat your water in the same machine. No separate kettle needed.
I have been making americanos every morning for the past year. This guide covers the exact ratio, water temperature, iced variation, and the one mistake that ruins the drink for most people.
How to Make Americano at Home (Step by Step)
Making an americano at home takes under three minutes. Pull one espresso shot using 7 to 9 grams of ground coffee. Heat 120 to 180 ml of water to 75 to 85 degrees Celsius. Pour the hot water into your cup first, then add the espresso on top.
Here is the full process:
- Preheat your machine. Turn on your espresso maker and let it warm up for 2 to 3 minutes. A cold machine pulls sour, under-extracted shots.
- Grind your coffee. Use a medium-fine grind for pressurized portafilters. If you use pre-ground, pick espresso-labeled bags. Avoid instant coffee completely.
- Dose and tamp. Fill the portafilter basket with 7 to 9 grams. Tamp with steady pressure. You want a flat, even surface.
- Pull the espresso. Lock the portafilter in. Press the 25 ml or 40 ml button. A good shot takes 20 to 30 seconds and shows a thin layer of crema on top.
- Heat your water. Use the kettle mode at 75°C or 100°C. If your machine does not have kettle mode, boil water separately and let it cool for 30 seconds.
- Combine. Pour hot water into your cup first. Then gently pour the espresso on top. This preserves the crema layer.
Pro tip: Water first, espresso on top. This is the secret most beginners miss. When you pour water on top of espresso, it breaks the crema and makes the drink taste flat.
What Is the Best Espresso-to-Water Ratio?
The standard americano ratio is 1 part espresso to 4 parts hot water. For a single 30 ml shot, add 120 ml of water. For a stronger drink, use a 1:3 ratio. For a milder cup, go up to 1:6. Personal taste decides the final number.
| Strength | Ratio | Espresso | Water | Total Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strong | 1:3 | 30 ml | 90 ml | ~120 ml |
| Standard | 1:4 | 30 ml | 120 ml | ~150 ml |
| Mild | 1:6 | 30 ml | 180 ml | ~210 ml |
| Double shot | 1:4 | 60 ml | 240 ml | ~300 ml |
Water temperature matters: Use water between 75°C and 85°C. Boiling water (100°C) scorches the espresso and adds bitterness. The 3-in-1 kettle mode at 75°C gives you the cleanest flavor.
Caffeine fact: A single americano contains 63 mg of caffeine per shot. A double americano gives you 126 mg, roughly the same as a 240 ml cup of drip coffee — National Coffee Association, 2025.
How Do You Make an Iced Americano?
An iced americano uses the same espresso base but replaces hot water with cold water and ice. Pull a 30 ml shot of espresso. Fill a tall glass with ice cubes. Pour 150 ml of cold filtered water over the ice. Then pour the espresso on top. The drink stays strong because espresso is already concentrated.
Three tips for better iced americanos:
- Use cold water, not room temperature. Cold water keeps the ice from melting too fast and watering down your drink.
- Pull a double shot. Ice dilutes flavor. A double shot (60 ml) with 150 ml cold water gives you a balanced iced americano.
- Make espresso ice cubes. Freeze leftover espresso in ice trays. Use these instead of regular ice. Your drink gets stronger as it melts, not weaker.
Iced americanos are perfect for Indian summers. The whole thing takes 2 minutes and costs you about Rs 10 to 15 per cup with ground coffee.
Americano vs Drip Coffee: What Is the Difference?
An americano and drip coffee look similar but taste different. An americano starts with espresso (high pressure, fine grind, 25 to 30 seconds). Drip coffee uses gravity to pass hot water through coarser grounds over 3 to 5 minutes. The brewing method changes the flavor, body, and caffeine content.
| Factor | Americano | Drip Coffee |
|---|---|---|
| Brewing method | Espresso + hot water | Gravity drip through filter |
| Grind size | Fine to medium-fine | Medium |
| Brew time | 25-30 seconds + water | 3-5 minutes |
| Body | Smooth, slightly oily, crema | Clean, lighter body |
| Caffeine (per 240 ml) | ~126 mg (double shot) | ~96 mg |
| Equipment needed | Espresso machine | Drip brewer or pour-over |
If you already own an espresso machine, the americano gives you a cleaner, more full-bodied cup than drip coffee. You also get versatility. The same machine that makes your americano can pull straight espresso, brew cappuccinos, and heat water for tea using kettle mode.
What Mistakes Ruin an Americano?
The five most common americano mistakes are using boiling water, pouring water on top of espresso, using stale coffee, skipping machine preheat, and using the wrong grind size. Each one changes the taste dramatically, and all five are easy to fix.
- Boiling water on espresso. Water at 100°C burns the crema and adds harsh bitterness. Let boiled water cool for 30 to 45 seconds, or use 75°C kettle mode.
- Water on top of espresso. This destroys the crema layer. Always pour water first, then espresso on top. The crema floats on the surface and gives you aroma with every sip.
- Stale pre-ground coffee. Coffee goes stale within 2 weeks of grinding. Buy whole beans and grind fresh, or use sealed capsules. Read our grinder guide if you want to grind at home.
- Cold machine. A cold group head makes sour, under-extracted espresso. Run a blank shot (water only) before your first pull. This takes 30 seconds and makes a huge difference.
- Wrong grind for your portafilter. Pressurized portafilters (like the one in the 3-in-1) need a medium-fine grind. Too fine chokes the machine. Too coarse gives you watery, weak espresso.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make an americano with instant coffee?
No. An americano requires real espresso pulled under pressure. Instant coffee dissolved in hot water is just black coffee. It does not produce crema or the concentrated flavor that defines an americano.
How many calories are in an americano?
A plain americano has about 5 to 10 calories. All the calories come from the espresso oils. If you add milk or sugar, the calories increase based on what you add.
Is americano stronger than regular coffee?
A double-shot americano has about 126 mg of caffeine per 240 ml cup. Regular drip coffee has about 96 mg per 240 ml. So a double americano is stronger. A single-shot americano (63 mg) is weaker than drip coffee.
Can I add milk to an americano?
Yes. Adding a splash of milk or cream to an americano is common. This is sometimes called a "white americano." For a milk-heavy drink, you want a latte instead, which uses steamed or frothed milk.
What is the best water temperature for an americano?
Use water between 75°C and 85°C. Boiling water at 100°C scorches the espresso and makes the drink bitter. If you do not have a temperature-controlled kettle, boil water and wait 30 to 45 seconds before pouring.