Concentrate vs. Flower for Edibles
Should you use flower or concentrate for your edibles? A practical comparison covering potency, flavor, cost, and ease of use.
Editorial Notes
BatchCraft Editorial Team
Chaady Research Desk
Content is written for educational recipe-planning use and cross-checked against the calculator, recipe gallery, and process guidance already published on the site.
Published 2026-03-12
Recipe and planning pages are designed to work with the BatchCraft calculator workflow, including serving-size assumptions, prep notes, and batch-planning helpers.
Flower or Concentrate?
This is one of the most common questions for anyone making edibles beyond their first batch. Flower is the traditional choice — it's what most recipes and guides assume you're using. But concentrates offer some compelling advantages that make them worth considering.
The right answer depends on your priorities: Are you optimizing for cost? Flavor? Precision? Convenience? Let's compare them head-to-head.
Potency Per Gram
| Material | Typical Concentration | Active mg per Gram | Grams for 100mg Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flower | 20% | 200mg (raw) → ~127mg (after losses) | ~0.78g |
| Trim | 8% | 80mg (raw) → ~51mg (after losses) | ~1.96g |
| Kief | 50% | 500mg (raw) → ~319mg (after losses) | ~0.31g |
| Concentrate | 75% | 750mg (raw) → ~478mg (after losses) | ~0.21g |
| Distillate | 90% | 900mg (already active) | ~0.11g |
* "After losses" assumes standard efficiency (85% decarb × 75% infusion = 63.75%). Distillate is already active so no decarb loss applies.
Flavor Impact
This is often the deciding factor. The more plant material you add to a carrier, the stronger the herbal flavor in your final product.
- Flower — Noticeable herbal flavor in most recipes. Works well in chocolate, coffee, and strong-flavored dishes that can mask it.
- Concentrate — Minimal flavor impact. You're adding a tiny amount of pure compound, not plant matter.
- Distillate — Essentially flavorless. The gold standard for clean-tasting edibles.
If you want the cost savings of flower with less flavor impact, use a shorter infusion time (1-2 hours instead of 3-4). You'll extract less chlorophyll and plant tannins, resulting in a milder flavor at the cost of slightly lower efficiency.
Cost Analysis
Cost per mg of active compound is the true comparison metric, not cost per gram of material. Here's a general comparison based on typical pricing:
| Material | Typical Cost/g | Usable mg/g | Cost per 10mg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flower | $8-15 | ~127mg | $0.63-1.18 |
| Trim | $2-5 | ~51mg | $0.39-0.98 |
| Concentrate | $25-60 | ~478mg | $0.52-1.26 |
| Distillate | $20-40 | ~900mg | $0.22-0.44 |
Trim and distillate tend to offer the best value per dose. Flower and concentrate are roughly comparable. The best choice often comes down to availability and your specific recipe needs.
Ease of Use
- Flower — Requires decarb, long infusion time, and straining. More hands-on but well-documented with many guides available.
- Concentrate — Requires decarb (usually). Dissolves directly into warm fat without straining. Faster process overall.
- Distillate — No decarb needed. Just stir into any recipe at the right temperature. By far the easiest to use.
Start with flower for your first batch — the process teaches you the fundamentals. Once you're comfortable, try concentrate or distillate for cleaner, more precise results.
When to Use Each
- Use flower when: budget is key, you want the full-spectrum experience, you're learning the process, or you have large quantities to use up.
- Use concentrate when: clean flavor matters, you want faster prep, or you need precise dosing without distillate-level cost.
- Use distillate when: you want zero flavor impact, maximum dosing precision, or the simplest possible process.
- Use trim when: you have large quantities at low cost and flavor isn't a priority (e.g., large butter batches for baking).
Use the BatchCraft Calculator to compare — enter the same target recipe with different material concentrations and see how the required amounts change. The Reverse Finder can also show you what recipes match the material you already have.
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