How to Size a Glycol Chiller for Your Draft Beer System
Posted by Ron on 11th May 2026
Getting BTU sizing right is one of the most important decisions in any draft beer system, whether you are building out a neighbourhood bar, a busy brewery taproom, or a high-volume stadium concession. This guide walks through everything you need to know: what glycol chillers do, how the BTU formula works, real-world examples by venue size and how to match the right unit to your setup.
- BTU sizing determines whether your chiller keeps up with your system - undersized means foam and warm beer; oversized means wasted energy and premature wear.
- The correct formula: [(Faucets × 100) + (Trunk Length × BTU/ft) + 500] × 1.25 - accounts for faucet heat load, trunk line heat gain, base overhead and a safety buffer.
- Air-cooled units suit most bars and small breweries; water-cooled units are the right call for high-volume or enclosed environments.
- BeverageCraft carries glycol chillers from 1,150 BTUs (25 ft runs) up to 13,000 BTUs (850 ft runs).
- Regular maintenance - glycol checks, coil cleaning, annual flushes - protects your investment and keeps every pour consistent.
What Is a Glycol Chiller and Why Do You Need One?
A glycol chiller is a refrigeration unit that circulates a chilled mixture of propylene glycol and water through the trunk line running alongside your beer lines. By keeping that glycol mix at temperature - typically around 28-32°F - the chiller ensures your beer stays cold the entire distance from keg to faucet, even if that distance is measured in hundreds of feet.
Without a chiller, any draft system where the keg storage and the tap tower are separated by more than a short distance will struggle with temperature consistency. The beer picks up heat as it travels and heat means foam, flat pints and waste. A properly sized glycol system eliminates that problem entirely.
Glycol chillers are the backbone of long-draw systems used in:
- Bars and restaurants where the walk-in cooler is in the back and taps are at the front
- Brewery taprooms serving directly from a cellar
- Stadiums, arenas and large venues with multiple bar stations
- Outdoor events and mobile setups requiring portable cooling
How the Refrigeration Cycle Works
Inside the chiller unit, a compressor and evaporator coil drop the glycol-water mix down to your target temperature. A pump then pushes that chilled fluid through the trunk line - the insulated bundle that houses both your glycol lines and beer lines together. The glycol absorbs heat from the beer as it travels, then returns to the chiller to be cooled again. The cycle runs continuously during service.
Depending on your setup, a trunk line can carry anywhere from 2 to 16 beer lines alongside one to four glycol lines, all wrapped together with insulation to minimise heat gain from the surrounding environment.
Air-Cooled vs. Water-Cooled: Which One Is Right for You?
For most bars and restaurants in temperate climates, an air-cooled unit is the practical and cost-effective choice. If your mechanical room runs hot, your venue has extremely high pour volume or you are in a space where adding heat to the room is a real problem, it is worth considering a water-cooled configuration.
Why Getting the BTU Size Right Actually Matters
It is tempting to either guess or just buy the biggest unit available to be "safe." Both approaches create real problems.
The goal is to match your chiller's output to what your system actually demands - accounting for your number of taps, the distance beer travels and the conditions in your venue.
How to Calculate the BTU Load for Your System
Use this formula to calculate the minimum BTU/hr your chiller needs to handle. If you prefer to skip the manual math, use our free BTU sizing calculator.
- Faucets × 100 - Each faucet adds approximately 100 BTU/hr of heat load to the system
- Trunk Length × BTU/ft - Heat gain along the trunk line; typically 7-13 BTU/ft depending on insulation and ambient conditions
- 500 BTU/hr Base Load - Fixed overhead to cover system inefficiencies and ambient heat pickup
- 1.25 Safety Factor - Ensures the chiller can handle real-world peak service without straining
Example Calculation
A bar with 8 faucets and a 75-foot trunk line, using 10 BTU/ft:
[(8 × 100) + (75 × 10) + 500] × 1.25 = [800 + 750 + 500] × 1.25 = 2,563 BTU/hr required
Always round up to the next available chiller model - never down. The safety factor is already built in, but rounding up gives you additional headroom for unusually busy service periods.
Skip the math - use our free BTU sizing calculator. Enter your faucet count, trunk line distance, environment type and it does the rest.
Use the Free BTU Calculator →BTU Reference Table
Estimated BTU/hr requirements at common trunk line distances and faucet counts, calculated using 10 BTU/ft and the 1.25 safety factor.
Estimated BTU/hr requirements by trunk line distance and faucet count:
Calculated using [(Faucets × 100) + (Trunk Length × 10) + 500] × 1.25. Adjust BTU/ft upward for warmer environments or poorly insulated trunk lines.
Real-World Sizing Examples
Small Bar or Restaurant (Short Draw)
4 faucets, 30-foot trunk line from a back-of-house walk-in cooler to the bar.
[(4 × 100) + (30 × 10) + 500] × 1.25 = 1,500 BTU/hr required
A compact entry-level chiller handles this comfortably. The ChillPro 1150H (1,150 BTU, 25-ft run) suits the smallest setups; the G30-3/8GP (2,600 BTU, up to 125-ft run) covers this with headroom to spare.
Mid-Size Brewery Taproom
10 faucets running 75 feet from the cellar to the taproom bar.
[(10 × 100) + (75 × 10) + 500] × 1.25 = 2,813 BTU/hr required
The ChillPro 7500 (7,500 BTU) handles this if conditions are favourable; the ChillPro 13000 (13,000 BTU, up to 850-ft run) is the right call where you want solid headroom and room to grow.
Large Venue or Multi-Bar Operation
20 faucets across two bar stations, with trunk lines running up to 125 feet.
[(20 × 100) + (125 × 10) + 500] × 1.25 = 4,688 BTU/hr required
A single high-capacity unit or two mid-range units running in parallel will cover this load. For stadiums and large entertainment venues, multiple ChillPro 13000 units are a common configuration. Contact our team to discuss the right setup for your layout.
Installation: What to Get Right From the Start
A correctly sized chiller still needs a correct installation. A few areas where setup quality has an outsized impact on long-term performance:
Common Installation Mistakes
- Sizing based on tap count alone, without accounting for line distance
- Placing an air-cooled unit in an enclosed, unventilated mechanical space
- Using the wrong glycol-to-water ratio
- Running trunk lines through unconditioned spaces without adding insulation
- Skipping the initial system calibration and pressure check
Keeping Your Chiller Running Well
A glycol chiller that is properly maintained will run reliably for years. The maintenance schedule is not complicated:
Recommended maintenance schedule:
FAQ | Glycol Chiller Sizing
Not sure which chiller fits your setup? Run your BTU numbers and browse our full lineup - or reach out to the BeverageCraft team directly for a recommendation based on your specific tap count, distance and venue type.
Browse Glycol Chillers