The Scoville Scale measures chili pepper heat in Scoville Heat Units (SHU). Created in 1912 by American pharmacist Wilbur Scoville, this scale remains the global standard for rating pepper pungency.
How the Scoville Scale Works
Originally, Scoville used human taste testers in a method called the Scoville Organoleptic Test. Testers sampled increasingly diluted pepper extracts until they could no longer detect heat. A pepper requiring 1,000 dilutions to lose its burn scored 1,000 SHU.
Today, scientists use High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) to measure capsaicinoid concentration directly. This method delivers precise, reproducible results without subjective human panels. The measurements convert to SHU using established formulas.
Understanding the Scale
The Scoville Scale spans from 0 SHU (bell peppers) to over 2,000,000 SHU (Carolina Reaper). Here is how peppers stack up:
- Mild (0-2,500 SHU): Bell peppers, banana peppers, shishito
- Medium (2,500-25,000 SHU): Jalapeño, serrano, poblano
- Hot (25,000-70,000 SHU): Cayenne, tabasco, aji amarillo
- Very Hot (70,000-350,000 SHU): Thai chili, habanero, Scotch bonnet
- Extreme (350,000+ SHU): Ghost pepper, Carolina Reaper, Trinidad Scorpion
Why It Matters
The Scoville Scale helps cooks choose peppers that match their heat tolerance and recipe needs. A salsa verde with 100,000 SHU habaneros hits differently than one with 2,500 SHU jalapeños. Sauce makers use the scale to blend consistent heat levels across batches.
Growers and breeders also rely on Scoville testing. They select seeds, track genetic variations, and market peppers by verified heat ratings. Without this scale, the hot sauce industry would lack standardization.
Limitations and Variations
No two peppers test exactly alike. Growing conditions, soil nutrients, water stress, and harvest timing all influence capsaicin levels. A jalapeño might range from 2,500 to 8,000 SHU depending on where and how it grew.
The scale also measures pure heat, not flavor complexity. A 100,000 SHU habanero tastes fruity and floral, while a 100,000 SHU extract tastes like liquid fire. Heat and flavor are partners, not equals.
Despite these quirks, the Scoville Scale endures. It gives pepper lovers a common language, a challenge ladder, and a reason to respect the flame.
Sources
Editorial transparency
Every release includes author credentials, publish dates, and citations.
- Author
- Republic of Heat Editorial Team
- Published
- Nov 8, 2025
- Updated
- Nov 8, 2025
- Republic of Heat lab notebooks
- Peer-reviewed capsaicin research
- Producer interviews & field notes