Oxidizer Workflow

Hydrogen Peroxide
Dilution Calculator

Use this page when the job starts with 30%, 12%, or another H₂O₂ concentrate and needs to be stepped down into a working bath. It launches the main Alliance Chemical calculator with the right peroxide stock loaded and routes buyers to the grade that matches the use case.

30% Tech Stock
3% Household Eq.
8 Concentrations
02

Choose The Right Starting Peroxide

H₂O₂ buying decisions depend on whether the working solution is close to what you buy, or whether you want one concentrate feeding multiple targets. Buying 30% to dilute down to 3% makes sense when you need flexibility. Buying 3% directly makes sense when that is the end-use strength.

3% technical is the strength most customers already know — equivalent to household peroxide. Choose it when that is the end-use strength and you do not want to dilute on-site.

12% technical is a mid-tier concentrate often used in hair, pool, and light industrial applications. It is a convenient midpoint when dilution from 30% feels aggressive but 3% is too weak.

30% technical is the flexibility stock. One drum can feed 3%, 6%, 10%, and 12% working solutions depending on the day. Handling requirements are real — 30% peroxide is a strong oxidizer — but the per-unit cost advantage is significant.

Above 30%, handling risk rises sharply. For most industrial and light-lab work, 30% is the practical ceiling. Anything stronger should be matched to a documented process with trained handlers.

30 percent hydrogen peroxide product image from Alliance Chemical
30% technical peroxide is the flexible stock when one facility needs to make 3%, 8%, and 10% working solutions from the same drum.
03

Common H₂O₂ Dilution Targets

H₂O₂ working strengths are driven by the job. Household-equivalent 3% is the most common step; stronger targets show up in sanitization, agriculture, and specialty workflows.

Starting Stock Target Typical Use Notes Launch
30% technical 3% Household-equivalent strength Classic dilution target for DIY, pet care, and plant applications that assume pharmacy-grade 3% peroxide. Open
30% technical 8% Commercial sanitization Harder-duty surface sanitization where 3% lacks punch. Verify contact time and material compatibility before scaling. Open
12% technical 3% Step-down from mid-tier stock Simpler dilution step when 12% is already on-site and a 3% working solution is needed. Open
30% technical 1:9 water Ratio-written SOP One part 30% to nine parts water lands near 3%. Use this entry when your procedure is written as parts, not final percent. Open
04

H₂O₂ Handling Reality Check

Hydrogen peroxide gets a pass in most people's heads because the household version is stored under the sink. Above 10%, that mental model breaks — concentrated peroxide is a strong oxidizer with real fire and burn risk.

Concentrated peroxide is an oxidizer, not a benign cleaner. 30% H₂O₂ on skin causes chemical burns. On combustible material (rags, paper, organic solvents) it can start a fire. Store away from fuels, reducing agents, and transition metals.

Use compatible materials. HDPE and fluoropolymer containers are peroxide-safe. Uncoated metals — especially iron, copper, and brass — catalyze decomposition, release O₂ and heat, and pressurize closed containers. Never store concentrated peroxide in a metal vessel.

Heat decomposition matters. H₂O₂ slowly decomposes to water and oxygen at room temperature. Elevated temperature, contamination, or catalyst exposure accelerates this exponentially. Keep containers vented where applicable, store cool, and rotate stock.

Dilute into water, not the other way around. Add peroxide to water slowly to control the heat of mixing. Never mix concentrated peroxide with acetone, organic solvents, or unknown chemistries — some combinations produce explosive peroxides.

Related Internal Resources

Use these pages to compare acids, understand adjacent use cases, and route visitors deeper into the resource center instead of bouncing back to search.

05

Frequently Asked Questions

Visible answers that match the search intent this page is targeting.

FAQ

How do I dilute 30% hydrogen peroxide to 3%?
Use one part 30% H₂O₂ to nine parts water (distilled if the end use is sensitive). That lands at 3% final concentration. The calculator on this page returns exact volumes for any batch size.
Can I substitute 12% peroxide for 3% household peroxide?
Only after diluting. 12% is four times stronger than household 3%, which changes dwell time, material compatibility, and burn risk. For recipes calling for 3%, dilute to 3% first rather than substituting.
What concentration of H₂O₂ is strongest you sell?
Alliance Chemical stocks peroxide up to 30% in technical and ACS grades. Above 30%, handling complexity rises sharply and is typically restricted to trained, documented industrial processes.
Does peroxide lose strength over time?
Yes. Peroxide decomposes to water and oxygen even in ideal storage. Rate depends on temperature, container material, and contamination. Keep it cool, in HDPE or fluoropolymer, away from metals, and rotate stock.

Need Hydrogen Peroxide In Bulk?

Buy 3% ready-to-use when that is the working strength. Stock 12% or 30% when one concentrate has to feed multiple dilutions.