Salt is one of those ingredients where a gram or two makes a huge difference. Too little and everything tastes flat. Too much and it’s inedible. Unlike sugar or flour where you have some wiggle room, salt has a narrow sweet spot — and it’s different for every type of baked good.

The Baker’s Percentage Approach

In professional baking, salt is expressed as a percentage of flour weight. This makes it easy to scale recipes and compare across different batch sizes. The formula is simple:

salt % = (salt weight / flour weight) × 100

What Are the Normal Ranges?

Here’s what the sources consistently recommend:

Baked Good Salt % (of flour weight) Notes
Bread 1.8–2.2% The most well-established range. Also controls yeast activity.
Cookies 0.5–1.5% Wide range depending on style. Sweet cookies go lower, salted/chocolate cookies go higher.
Cakes 0.5–1.0% Delicate — too much toughens the crumb and mutes sweetness.
Pastry 1.5–2.5% Pie crusts and puff pastry need more salt to balance the high fat content.
Enriched doughs 1.5–2.0% Brioche, challah — fat and sugar need salt to balance.

What Does Salt Actually Do?

Salt isn’t just about flavor. It has real structural effects:

  • Enhances flavor without tasting “salty” — it suppresses bitterness and rounds out sweetness
  • Strengthens gluten networks, making doughs chewier and more structured
  • Controls yeast activity in bread (slows fermentation for more even rise)
  • Affects browning — salt promotes Maillard reaction, giving better crust color
  • Too much: mutes sweetness, toughens texture, can taste overtly salty
  • Too little: flat, one-dimensional flavor, weaker structure

Auditing Our Own Recipes

Here’s how our recipes stack up:

Recipe Flour Salt Salt % Verdict
Double Chocolate Chip Cookies 125g 0.5g 0.4% Low — but cocoa and chocolate carry bitterness that salt would normally balance. Could bump to 1–1.5g.
Matcha White Chocolate Cookies 150g — (salted butter) ~0.8% via butter Fine — salted butter contributes roughly 1.2g salt.
Brown Butter Hojicha Cookies 150g 2g 1.3% Normal range, plus flaky salt on top. Good for balancing white chocolate sweetness.
Canelé 285g 3g (fleur de sel) 1.1% Right in range for a custard-heavy pastry.
Matcha Gateau au Chocolat 20g 0.5g 2.5% Looks high, but flour is minimal — salt is really balancing the 100g white chocolate + 38g×2 sugar.
Chocolate Gateau au Chocolat 20g 0.5g 2.5% Same as above — salt relative to total batter weight is actually very low.

When Baker’s Percentage Breaks Down

Baker’s percentage (salt as % of flour) works well when flour is the dominant dry ingredient — bread, cookies, pie crust. But it falls apart for recipes where flour is a minor player.

Our gateau au chocolat recipes have only 20g flour in a ~350g batter. Calculating salt as % of flour gives 2.5%, which looks dangerously high. But 0.5g salt in 350g of batter is 0.14% of total weight — barely perceptible.

For low-flour recipes (flourless cakes, custards, meringue-based cakes, brownies), think about salt as a percentage of total batter weight instead:

Context Salt % of total weight Notes
Most baked goods 0.3–0.6% General sweet baking range
Bread 1.0–1.3% Higher because bread has less sugar to balance
Very sweet desserts 0.1–0.3% Sugar does a lot of the flavor work

Our gateau recipes at 0.14% of total weight are on the low end — you could actually bump them to 0.7–1g without anyone noticing “salt,” just more flavor depth.

The rule: use baker’s percentage (% of flour) when flour is >30% of total weight. For everything else, use % of total batter weight.

The Salted Butter Variable

One thing that trips people up: salted butter contains about 1.2–1.7g salt per 100g (varies by brand). If a recipe uses salted butter and also adds salt, you’re double-salting. Most baking recipes call for unsalted butter specifically so you can control the salt precisely.

Our matcha white chocolate cookies use salted butter with no additional salt — that’s fine, the butter provides roughly 1.4g salt for the batch, landing at ~0.8% of flour weight.

Rules of Thumb

  • For cookies: start at 1% of flour weight. Adjust up for very sweet cookies (white chocolate, caramel) or down for delicate flavors.
  • For cakes: start at 0.5–0.8% of flour weight. Err on the low side.
  • For bread: 2% of flour weight is the standard. Don’t go below 1.5% or above 2.5%.
  • Always use unsalted butter and add salt separately for control.
  • Flaky finishing salt (Maldon, fleur de sel) on top of cookies is separate from the dough salt — it’s a texture and flavor accent, not a structural ingredient.

Sources