null Skip to main content

Dialling In Your Matcha to Milk Ratio: A Practical Guide for Cafes

For a quality matcha latte served at a cafe, the sweet spot for matcha to milk ratio sits between 2 grams and 2.5 grams of matcha per 50ml of milk, with 20ml of premium syrup per 150ml of milk as the sweetness baseline. Below this range the drink reads as milk-forward with only hints of matcha. Above it, astringency and harshness begin to dominate. Before dialling in the ratio, two decisions must be made first: whether your matcha is good enough to complement or cheap enough to need masking, and what sweetness level you are targeting.
Behind The Leaves #42

Two Decisions to Make Before Touching the Ratio

Most cafes jump straight into testing ratios, but this wastes time because one upstream variable changes everything: sweetness. Adding sweetener to matcha noticeably masks bitterness and harshness, even at levels too subtle to taste. This means that if you decide your sweetness level after testing your milk ratio, you will need to retest all your ratios again. Set sweetness first, then dial in the ratio.


The sweetness baseline used in this experiment is 20ml of premium syrup (glucose-based, straightforward ingredients) for every 150ml of milk. This was calibrated to a moderate level: noticeable but not overwhelming, allowing the matcha to remain the main character.


The second decision is your matcha strategy. If you are working with a quality matcha, the goal is to complement it with milk and sweetener, letting the matcha shine. If you are working with a weaker or lower-grade matcha, the goal shifts to masking its weaknesses. These two strategies produce different optimal ratios and different ideal milk types. Decide which applies to your product before you start experimenting.

The Six-Level Experiment: What Each Ratio Delivers

Six matcha levels were tested against a fixed 50ml of milk and proportional sweetener, stepping from 1 gram up to 3.5 grams of matcha in increments of 0.5 grams. The tasting results across the range were clear and consistent.


Level one (1g) is milk-forward. You can detect hints of matcha, but the drink reads primarily as a sweetened milk with a faint green tea note. Not suitable for a cafe trying to serve a genuine matcha experience.


Level two (1.5g) is still milk-forward. Slightly stronger matcha presence but still subtle. This might work as an entry-level gentle option, but it does not deliver the matcha character most customers expect from a matcha latte.


Level three (2g) is where the shift happens. The matcha becomes the dominant character of the drink. You start to taste its structure, not just its scent. This is the lighter end of the recommended range, suitable for cafes aiming at a more accessible, everyday drinking experience.


Level four (2.5g) is a proper matcha-forward drink. The matcha is clearly the lead flavour, the sweetness feels balanced, and the overall profile is what dedicated matcha drinkers expect. This is the upper end of the recommended range and may feel strong for some customers, depending on the matcha used.


Level five (3g) starts to introduce noticeable astringency. The sweetness level begins to feel insufficient relative to the matcha intensity. Drinkable for matcha enthusiasts, but too assertive for the average cafe customer.


Level six (3.5g) crosses into harsh territory. The harshness of the matcha becomes dominant. Not recommended for standard cafe service.

The Recommended Range and How to Adjust

The optimal zone for a quality matcha latte is levels three and four: 2 to 2.5 grams of matcha per 50ml of milk. Scale this directly: 4 to 5 grams per 100ml, or 6 to 7.5 grams per 150ml.


Within this range, your final choice depends on your cafe's positioning and customer base. A lighter, more accessible offering suits a casual cafe or a customer base new to matcha. A stronger, more assertive profile suits a matcha-specialist cafe or a loyal customer base who understands and expects intensity.


One practical note on sweetness as a tool: even at quantities too low to consciously taste, adding a small amount of sweetener to the matcha reduces the perception of harshness and bitterness. In many cases this makes the matcha seem higher quality than it actually is. This is a useful lever for cafes to know about, independently of how sweet you ultimately want the drink.


Once you have a starting ratio, adjust based on feedback. Too harsh or too heavy on matcha: reduce by 0.25 grams. Too milk-forward or light: increase by 0.25 grams. Small increments matter at this ratio range.

Key Takeaways

The sweet spot for a matcha latte is 2 to 2.5 grams of matcha per 50ml of milk. Below 2 grams the drink is milk-forward. Above 2.5 grams astringency becomes noticeable for most customers.


Set your sweetness level before testing your matcha ratio. Sweetener changes how the matcha behaves in the drink. If you do it in the wrong order, you will need to retest everything.


Even trace amounts of sweetener reduce perceived bitterness and harshness. This effect occurs below the threshold where sweetness is consciously tasted. Cafes can use this to improve the perceived quality of their matcha without making the drink overtly sweet.
Decide your matcha strategy first: complement or mask. A good matcha should be complemented by milk and sweetener. A weaker matcha needs masking. These strategies require different approaches to ratio and milk type.


Scale the ratio consistently, not arbitrarily. A ratio of 2g per 50ml scales cleanly to 4g per 100ml or 6g per 150ml. Keeping the sweetener proportional (20ml syrup per 150ml milk) maintains balance as serving size changes.

Insights From Yuki

This experiment ran six concurrent matcha levels in a single session rather than testing one at a time across separate days. This side-by-side format made the transitions between levels easy to observe directly, and the shift from milk-forward to matcha-forward at level three was clear and consistent on first tasting.


One key observation is that the jump between level two (1.5g) and level three (2g) is the most significant transition in the range. Below 2 grams the matcha is a background note. At 2 grams it becomes the primary character of the drink. The difference is not subtle.


One key practical observation for cafes: the sweetener tip is genuinely useful and often overlooked. Even at quantities where sweetness is undetectable on the palate, adding a small amount of sweetener to the matcha mixture before adding milk noticeably softens the harshness of the drink and raises the perceived quality. This is worth testing as a standard step in your matcha preparation workflow, regardless of how sweet you want the final product to be.

Q&A

What is the best matcha to milk ratio for a matcha latte?

For a quality matcha latte, use 2 to 2.5 grams of matcha per 50ml of milk. At 2 grams the drink is matcha-forward but accessible. At 2.5 grams it is more assertive and suited to matcha enthusiasts. Below 2 grams the drink reads as milk-forward with only faint matcha character.

Why should you decide sweetness before testing your milk ratio?

Adding sweetener to matcha masks bitterness and harshness and noticeably changes how the matcha tastes and feels. If you test your milk ratio first and add sweetener later, the parameters shift and your ratio test results no longer apply. Setting sweetness first prevents you from having to redo the experiment.

How do you adjust a matcha latte that tastes too harsh?

Reduce the matcha amount by 0.25 grams and re-taste. Alternatively, add a small amount of sweetener, even below the perceptible sweetness threshold, as this reduces the perception of harshness without making the drink taste sweet. If you are using a lower-grade matcha, increasing milk volume is another option but will dilute the matcha character.
About the author:

Yuki Ishii

Founder & CEO of Tealife

LinkedIn | YouTube

Yuki is the founder of Tealife, a Singapore-based Japanese tea company. He’s passionate about Japanese tea and spends his time testing, trying, and experimenting - then sharing what he learns through content to help people discover the depth of Japanese tea beyond just matcha.