My first attempt at brewing coffee at 9,200 feet above sea level produced something that tasted like hot brown water. I was staying at a cabin outside Breckenridge, Colorado, using the same beans I’d ground at home in Denver, the same ratio, the same pour-over technique I’d been using for two years. The result was thin, sour, and genuinely unpleasant. I dumped it and made a second cup thinking I’d just messed something up. Same result.
That was the moment I actually sat down and thought through the physics instead of just assuming my process was portable.

Water boils at roughly 202°F at 9,000 feet. At sea level you’re at 212°F. That 10-degree gap sounds small until you think about what extraction actually requires. The Maillard-derived soluble compounds that give coffee its body and sweetness don’t dissolve efficiently below about 205°F. At altitude, you’re never reaching that threshold with boiling water. You’re extracting the fast-dissolving acids first — the ones responsible for that sharp, sour, hollow taste — and leaving the heavier, sweeter compounds behind. The cup isn’t weak because you used less coffee. It’s chemically incomplete.
The fix most people reach for is “use more coffee.” I tried that. Going from a 1:15 to a 1:12 ratio at altitude just gave me a more concentrated version of the same sour, thin extraction. More of a bad thing is still a bad thing.

What actually works is attacking the problem from two directions simultaneously: temperature and grind.
On temperature: you need to brew hotter than boiling, which means you need a kettle with a temperature control that you can set above the local boiling point. This sounds counterintuitive — you can’t heat water above its boiling point at a given altitude without pressurization — but what you can do is use water that’s been heated to 205–208°F before it starts boiling off. At altitude, water reaches a rolling boil at a lower temperature and then stays there. If you pull it off heat just before that rolling boil and let it sit for 30 seconds, you’re actually closer to 200°F, not hotter. A variable-temperature kettle set to 205°F will cut off before reaching a full boil at altitude, giving you water that’s genuinely hotter than what you’d get from boiling and waiting.
I tested this with a Thermapen at the cabin. Boiling water off the stove, poured immediately: 201°F. Variable kettle set to 205°F: 204°F at pour. That 3-degree difference was enough to change the cup noticeably — more body, less of that sharp front-loaded acidity.

The grind adjustment is where most altitude guides get it wrong, and this is the non-consensus part worth paying attention to.
Every resource I found initially said to grind finer at altitude to compensate for lower extraction. The logic is: finer grind increases surface area, which speeds up extraction, which compensates for the lower temperature. That logic is correct in isolation. The problem is that at altitude, your water is also moving through the bed differently. Lower atmospheric pressure affects how water flows through a pour-over or drip basket. I found that going finer at altitude with a pour-over consistently led to channeling — the water finding paths of least resistance through the bed rather than saturating it evenly. The result was simultaneously over-extracted in some spots and under-extracted in others, which produces a muddy, harsh cup with a weird aftertaste.
What worked better for pour-over specifically: keep the grind at your normal sea-level setting, or go one click coarser, and compensate entirely through temperature. The coarser grind reduces channeling risk, and the hotter water handles the extraction deficit. For immersion methods — French press, AeroPress — finer grind plus extended steep time works fine because channeling isn’t a factor.
I’ve since replicated this at two other high-altitude locations (Taos at 6,900 feet and a friend’s place in Park City at 7,000 feet) and the pattern held. Pour-over: don’t go finer. Immersion: finer grind, longer steep.

AeroPress at altitude is genuinely the easiest path if you don’t want to think about it. The pressurized extraction partially compensates for the temperature deficit, and the immersion-then-press method is forgiving of the grind adjustments. I brewed a genuinely good cup at 9,200 feet with an AeroPress, 205°F water, a grind two clicks finer than my normal setting, and a 2:30 steep before pressing. That’s not a compromise cup — it was actually good.
The pour-over took more dialing in. I landed on: same grind as sea level, 205°F water from the variable kettle, slightly slower pour to extend contact time, and a 30-second longer total brew time. The cup was maybe 85% of what I’d make at home. Good enough that I stopped being annoyed about it.

One thing I haven’t seen mentioned anywhere: the altitude effect compounds with bean roast level. Light roasts are already harder to extract because the cellular structure is denser and the soluble compounds are less accessible. At altitude, a light roast becomes genuinely difficult to brew well without pressurized equipment. The sour, thin problem is dramatically worse. Medium roasts are much more forgiving. If you’re heading somewhere above 7,000 feet and you’re a light roast person, either bring a medium or bring an AeroPress. Trying to dial in a light roast pour-over at altitude is a project, not a morning routine.








