Drug Dilution Calculator (C1V1 = C2V2) for Nurses

Leave the unknown field empty (or set to 0). The calculator will solve for it.

mg/mL
mL
mg/mL
mL
V₁ — stock volume needed
10mL
Draw up 10 mL of stock, then add diluent to reach 100 mL total

The formula

C₁V₁ = C₂V₂

The total amount of drug doesn’t change during dilution — only the concentration and the volume.

Worked example

You have heparin 5,000 units/mL stock. You need a final concentration of 100 units/mL in 50 mL. How much stock do you draw up?

  1. Known: C₁ = 5000, C₂ = 100, V₂ = 50
  2. Rearrange: V₁ = (C₂ × V₂) / C₁ = (100 × 50) / 5000
  3. Calculate: V₁ = 1 mL of heparin stock
  4. Add diluent (NS) to reach 50 mL total
Clinical tip: Always document both the original concentration and the final concentration on the syringe label. “Heparin 100 u/mL (diluted from 5000 u/mL stock)” is far safer than just “Heparin”.

Frequently asked questions

Why use a dilution calculator?

To prevent dose errors in high-risk drugs that come in concentrated stock. Heparin, insulin, vasopressors, and many paediatric medications require dilution before administration.

Does the diluent matter?

Yes — some drugs are incompatible with certain fluids (e.g. some antibiotics with dextrose, calcium with bicarbonate). Always check the drug monograph for compatible diluents.

How accurate is C₁V₁ = C₂V₂ in practice?

Mathematically exact, but volume measurement errors at very small volumes (< 0.5 mL) introduce real-world inaccuracy. For doses requiring tiny stock volumes, use a smaller-concentration stock if available.

Clinical safety notice. Always perform an independent double-check for high-risk dilutions. Label the final syringe with both the original and final concentrations.