May 31, 2026 · Industrial Cleaners Direct
Dilution Math Made Simple
Dilution is where a cleaning program’s cost, performance, and safety all meet. Get it right and a concentrate delivers consistent results at a low cost-per-gallon; get it wrong and you either waste product or leave soils behind. The math is not complicated, but it pays to have a clear mental model — and a calculator to check yourself — before standardizing on a product.
A dilution ratio like 1:32 means one part concentrate to 32 parts water, which yields 33 parts of working solution. Translated to a practical unit: to make one gallon (128 ounces) of working solution at 1:32, you use about 4 ounces of concentrate and top up with water. The same logic scales to a mop bucket, a spray bottle, or a 55-gallon batch — you are always splitting the total volume into the ratio’s parts. ICD’s does this arithmetic for you so you can sanity-check ratios before committing.
