Cell Dilution Calculator — Solve C1V1=C2V2 Instantly | LazyTools
🧪 Math & Science — Cell Biology

Cell Dilution Calculator

Calculate how to dilute a cell suspension to any target concentration. Solve for aliquot volume, initial concentration, final concentration or total volume — enter three values and get the fourth instantly using C1V1=C2V2.

Free forever Solves all 4 variables C1V1=C2V2 Dilution factor shown
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Cell Dilution Calculator Tool

Solve for
Known values
cells/mL
mL
cells/mL
mL
Reset
🧪
Enter three values and click Calculate
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Use the Bacteria Generation Time Calculator to model population growth, doubling time and growth rate from initial and final cell counts — the natural next step after preparing your dilution.
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Features

What makes this cell dilution calculator better than the rest

Most cell dilution tools solve in one direction only — give C1, C2 and V2, get V1. This tool solves for any of the four C1V1=C2V2 variables, shows the dilution factor, warns when the aliquot volume is too small to pipette, and works on any device at the bench.

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Solves all four variables
Choose to solve for aliquot volume (V1), initial concentration (C1), final concentration (C2) or final volume (V2). Enter any three and get the fourth.
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Dilution factor display
Automatically shows the dilution factor (C1/C2) alongside your result, so you can immediately judge whether serial dilution is more practical.
Serial dilution advisory
When the calculated aliquot volume falls below 1 uL (unpipettable range), the tool flags this and recommends a serial dilution approach with example steps.
Instant, browser-side
No server round-trips. Results appear immediately and your cell counts never leave your device. Works fully offline after first load.
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Any concentration unit
Works with cells/mL, cells/cm3, CFU/mL or any consistent unit. The formula is unit-agnostic as long as inputs are consistent.
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Mobile-optimised for the bench
Use it on your phone or tablet while pipetting. The layout adapts cleanly to any screen width without losing usability.
How to use

How to calculate cell dilution step by step

1
Choose what to solve for
Select the unknown variable from the dropdown. The most common use case is V1 — how much stock suspension to take. But you can equally solve for initial concentration, final concentration or final volume.
2
Enter the three known values
Fill in your initial concentration (C1), desired final concentration (C2) and desired final volume (V2). Use consistent units throughout — all volumes in mL, all concentrations in cells/mL.
3
Click Calculate
The result appears instantly, along with the dilution factor and the diluent volume (V2 minus V1) to add. If V1 is below 1 uL, a serial dilution advisory appears automatically.
4
Check the dilution factor
If the factor is very large (e.g. 1:100,000), consider splitting it into serial dilution steps. Each step should involve at least 10 uL to stay within accurate pipetting range.
Quick reference

Common cell dilution factors and their uses

DilutionFactorConcentration keptTypical use
1:2250%Routine subculture and passage
1:101010%Common serial dilution step
1:1001001%Haemocytometer counting prep
1:1,0001,0000.1%CFU plating at high density
1:10,00010,0000.01%Very dense cultures
1:100,000100,0000.001%Use serial dilutions — V1 too small
vs the competition

LazyTools Cell Dilution Calculator vs the competition

FeatureLazyToolsOmniGraphPadSigma-Aldrich
Solve for aliquot volume (V1)✓ Yes✓ Yes✓ Yes✓ Yes
Solve for initial concentration (C1)✓ Yes✗ No✗ No✗ No
Solve for final concentration (C2)✓ Yes✗ No✗ No✗ No
Solve for final volume (V2)✓ Yes✗ No✗ No✗ No
Dilution factor shown✓ Yes✗ No~ Partial✗ No
Serial dilution advisory✓ Yes✗ No✗ No✗ No
Works below 1 µL warning✓ Yes✗ No✗ No✗ No
No login required✓ Yes✓ Yes✗ Login✓ Yes
100% browser-side✓ Yes✗ No✗ No✗ No
Complete guide

Cell Dilution — A Complete Guide to the C1V1=C2V2 Formula

Cell dilution is the process of reducing the concentration of cells in a suspension by adding diluent. Whether you are preparing cells for haemocytometer counting, seeding plates at a target density, or performing limiting dilution assays, accurate dilution is a foundational step in cell biology and microbiology. Errors at the dilution step propagate through every downstream measurement.

What is the C1V1=C2V2 cell dilution formula?

The formula C1V1 = C2V2 expresses conservation of the total number of cells across a dilution step. C1 is the initial concentration, V1 is the volume taken from stock, C2 is the desired final concentration, and V2 is the final total volume. Since no cells are created or destroyed during dilution, the amount before equals the amount after. Rearranging gives: V1 = (C2 × V2) / C1, the most commonly needed calculation.

How to calculate aliquot volume for a cell suspension dilution

Example: your stock has 10^7 cells/mL and you want 10^5 cells/mL in 5 mL. V1 = (10^5 × 5) / 10^7 = 0.05 mL (50 uL). You take 50 uL of stock and add 4.95 mL of medium. The dilution factor is 10^7 / 10^5 = 100, or 1:100.

When to use serial dilutions instead of a single step

When V1 falls below approximately 1 uL, pipetting error becomes unacceptable relative to the volume. Most lab pipettes are accurate to about ±1% at 100 uL and ±10% at 1 uL. At submicroliter volumes, error can exceed 50%. Serial dilutions solve this: a 1:100,000 dilution can be achieved as three 1:100 steps (10 uL into 990 uL) and one 1:10 step (100 uL into 900 uL). Each step is pipettable.

How to use the dilution factor for cell counting

The dilution factor (DF = C1/C2 = V2/V1) is used to back-calculate the original concentration from a counted value. After haemocytometer counting on a diluted sample, multiply the counted concentration by the dilution factor to get the original stock concentration. If you counted 250 cells/mL in a 1:100 dilution, the original concentration is 250 × 100 = 25,000 cells/mL.

Cell dilution vs bacterial dilution: same formula, different ranges

The mathematics are identical — C1V1 = C2V2 applies to mammalian cell suspensions, bacterial cultures, and any other suspension. Practical differences: bacterial cultures may reach 10^9 CFU/mL (far above typical mammalian cell densities of 10^5 to 10^7 cells/mL), requiring larger dilution factors and more serial steps. The diluent also differs: PBS or medium for mammalian cells; LB broth, PBS or saline for bacteria.

Common mistakes in cell dilution

The most common error is confusing V2 (total final volume) with the diluent volume. V2 is the total — stock plus diluent. The diluent to add is V2 minus V1. A second frequent mistake is inconsistent units: mixing mL and uL in the same calculation. A third is taking aliquots from an unsuspended pellet: always resuspend thoroughly before pipetting.

Frequently asked questions

C1 x V1 = C2 x V2. C1 is initial concentration, V1 is aliquot volume, C2 is final concentration, V2 is final total volume.
V1 = (C2 x V2) / C1. Enter these three values into the calculator to get V1 automatically.
Dilution factor = C1/C2 = V2/V1. It tells you how many times the suspension was diluted. Multiply counted concentration by DF to get original concentration.
When V1 falls below ~1 uL, use serial dilutions. Split the total dilution factor into multiple manageable steps, each using at least 10 uL.
Any consistent units: cells/mL, CFU/mL, cells/cm3. The formula is unit-agnostic as long as C1 and C2 use the same unit.
Yes. Select C1 as the solve variable, then enter V1, C2 and V2.
How many times the stock has been diluted. A large factor (e.g. 1:100,000) means the aliquot volume will be very small and serial dilution is advisable.
Diluent volume = V2 minus V1. For a 10 mL final volume with a 0.1 mL aliquot, add 9.9 mL of diluent.
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