Cell Counting Calculator
Enter cell counts for each large square of the hemocytometer. Leave blank to skip a square.
Results
How to Use the Cell Counting Calculator
This calculator uses the standard hemocytometer formula to convert raw cell counts into concentration values used in cell culture work.
Choose the tab that matches your counting method. For Basic Count, enter the total cells counted across all squares and select how many squares you counted. For Multi-Square, enter each square individually to get variance data. For Live/Dead, enter trypan blue-stained counts separately to calculate viability alongside concentration.
Hemocytometer Cell Counting Formula
The standard formula for calculating cell concentration from a hemocytometer is:
The factor 10⁴ (10,000) comes from the volume of each large square in a Neubauer hemocytometer — each large square covers a depth of 0.1 mm over an area of 1 mm², giving a volume of 0.1 µL (10⁻⁴ mL).
Hemocytometer Counting Rules
- Count cells touching the top and left boundary lines — exclude those touching bottom and right.
- Count only 4 corner squares + 1 center square for a standard 5-square count.
- Aim for 100–300 cells per large square for accurate results; recount if outside this range.
- Average the counts from both sides of a double-sided hemocytometer for best accuracy.
- If using trypan blue, count within 3 minutes — dye uptake increases over time, falsely lowering viability.
What Counts as a Good Viability?
Cell viability above 90% is considered excellent for most downstream applications including transfection, assays, and cryopreservation. Viability between 80–90% is acceptable but may affect experimental results. Below 80%, it is recommended to discard the culture and revive or passage fresh cells.
Common Dilutions in Cell Counting
Trypan blue exclusion dye is typically mixed 1:1 with cell suspension (dilution factor = 2). If cells were diluted in PBS before adding trypan blue, multiply both dilution factors together (e.g. 1:5 PBS dilution + 1:1 trypan = dilution factor of 10).