You’ve been paying $14 for a mojito at a bar that took two minutes to make.
And here’s the kicker — you can make a far better one at home in the same amount of time, for about $1.50 a glass.
The mojito is one of those drinks that sounds fancy, feels refreshing, and yet is deceptively simple once you know the ratio. Most people overcomplicate it or skip a key step, and that’s exactly where it falls apart. This guide covers all of it, so yours comes out perfectly every single time.

What You’ll Need
For 1 serving:
- 8–10 fresh mint leaves (plus extra for garnish)
- 2 teaspoons white granulated sugar (or 3/4 oz simple syrup)
- 1 oz fresh lime juice (about 1.5–2 limes)
- 2 oz white rum (Bacardi Superior or Havana Club work great)
- 2 oz club soda (chilled)
- 1 cup crushed ice (or regular ice if that’s what you’ve got)
- 1 lime wedge + fresh mint sprig for garnish
💡 Quick note on limes: Bottled lime juice is not the same. Fresh squeezed makes a dramatic difference in flavor. Don’t skip this step.
Tools You’ll Need
| Tool | Why You Need It |
|---|---|
| Muddler | Releases the mint oils without shredding it (shredded mint = bitter drink) |
| Highball or Collins glass | The tall glass holds everything without overflow |
| Jigger or measuring spoons | Ratios matter more than you think |
| Bar spoon or cocktail stirrer | Mixes without killing the carbonation |
| Citrus juicer | Gets every drop of juice from the lime |
| Fine mesh strainer (optional) | For a cleaner pour with no lime pulp |
How to Make a Mojito
Step 1: Muddle the Mint
Add mint leaves and sugar to the bottom of your glass.
Using your muddler, press down and twist gently 4–5 times. You’re trying to bruise the leaves, not destroy them. You’ll smell the mint immediately when you’re doing it right.
Stop muddling the second you’ve done 5 presses. Over-muddling = bitter. This is probably the #1 mistake people make.
Step 2: Add Lime Juice
Squeeze your limes fresh and pour the 1 oz of lime juice directly over the mint and sugar.
Give it a quick stir to start dissolving the sugar into the lime juice. You want it slightly syrupy before the rum goes in.
Step 3: Add Ice
Fill the glass about 2/3 full with crushed ice.
Crushed ice chills the drink faster and dilutes it slightly as it melts, which softens the rum. Crushed ice also just looks better, which matters.
Step 4: Pour the Rum
Measure out 2 oz of white rum and pour it over the ice.
Don’t use flavored rum for a classic mojito. White rum is clean and light, and it lets the mint and lime shine. Save the coconut rum for something else.
Step 5: Top With Club Soda
Pour 2 oz of chilled club soda down the inside of the glass.
This preserves the bubbles. Pouring it straight down the center kills the carbonation instantly.
Step 6: Stir Gently, Then Garnish
Use your bar spoon to stir just 3–4 times, gently from the bottom up.
Add your lime wedge on the rim, tuck a fresh mint sprig in the ice, and you’re done. Tap the mint sprig lightly on your palm before placing it, this wakes up the aroma and it’ll smell incredible.
Pro Tips
These are the things that took me from “fine mojito” to “wait, can I have another one”:
- Muddle the mint with sugar, never lime. The acid in lime actually dulls the mint oils. Sugar acts as an abrasive that draws them out cleanly.
- Chill your glass first. Pop it in the freezer for 5 minutes before building the drink. A cold glass keeps the ice from melting too fast.
- Don’t skip the fresh lime. Real lime juice has a brightness that bottled stuff just can’t replicate. One lime per serving, always fresh.
- Use crushed ice if you can. It chills more surface area faster. If you don’t have a crusher, a ziplock bag + rolling pin works perfectly.
- Taste before you top with soda. Before the club soda goes in, taste the base. Too tart? Add a tiny bit more sugar. Too sweet? A few extra drops of lime. Fix it before the soda, or you can’t adjust it after.
Substitutions and Variations
| Swap | Use Instead |
|---|---|
| White rum | Coconut rum (tropical twist), dark rum (richer/smokier), or vodka for a “mojito mule” vibe |
| White sugar | Simple syrup, agave nectar, or honey syrup |
| Club soda | Sparkling water, Sprite (sweeter), or ginger beer (spicier) |
| Lime | Lemon (a bit softer), blood orange (sweeter, beautiful color) |
| Mint | Basil (surprisingly good), or a mix of mint and basil |
Fun variations worth trying:
- Strawberry Mojito: Muddle 2–3 fresh strawberries in with the mint
- Watermelon Mojito: Add 2 oz watermelon juice instead of one ounce of the club soda
- Spicy Mojito: Muddle 2 thin slices of jalapeño with the mint
- Virgin Mojito: Skip the rum entirely, increase lime juice to 1.5 oz and add extra club soda

Make Ahead Tips
Making a batch for a party? You absolutely can prep this ahead.
Mojito batch base (for 8 servings):
- Mix together: 8 oz white rum, 8 oz fresh lime juice, 5 oz simple syrup, and 40–50 muddled mint leaves
- Strain out the mint and store in a pitcher in the fridge for up to 24 hours
- When ready to serve: pour about 2.5 oz of the base over ice and top with 2 oz club soda per glass
Add the club soda only when serving. Never pre-mix the soda, or you’ll end up with flat mojitos and a room full of disappointed people.
Nutritional Breakdown
| Nutrient | Per Serving |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~170 kcal |
| Carbohydrates | 14g |
| Sugar | 12g |
| Alcohol | 14g (~2 oz rum) |
| Fat | 0g |
| Protein | 0g |
To lighten it up:
- Use agave nectar instead of sugar (lower glycemic index)
- Cut sugar to 1 tsp instead of 2
- Swap club soda for plain sparkling water (no sodium)
Meal Pairing Suggestions
The mojito is a natural pairing for food with bold, bright flavors. It cuts through richness and complements citrus-forward dishes like nobody’s business.
- Grilled shrimp tacos with a lime crema
- Fish ceviche (the lime echoes beautifully)
- Spicy Thai dishes (the mint and coolness balance the heat)
- Pulled pork sliders (the acidity cuts through the fat)
- Light summer apps like bruschetta or caprese
Leftovers and Storage
A mojito is a drink made to be consumed immediately, so there aren’t really “leftovers” in the traditional sense.
But if you’ve already made a big batch base (rum + lime + syrup, no soda), here’s how to handle it:
- Fridge: Store strained batch base for up to 24 hours. Beyond that, the lime flavor starts to degrade.
- Pre-muddled mint: Mint wilts fast once muddled. Don’t store muddled mint, make it fresh each time.
- Already made drinks: Once the soda is in, drink it within 20 minutes or the bubbles are gone and the ice has diluted it too much.
FAQ
Can I use spearmint instead of regular mint?
Yes, spearmint works and some people prefer it. It’s slightly milder than peppermint. Standard “mojito mint” is actually spearmint, so you’re on the right track.
Why does my mojito taste bitter?
Almost always from over-muddling. Once you shred the mint instead of bruising it, the chlorophyll in the leaves makes everything taste green and bitter. Five gentle presses, that’s it.
Can I make a mojito without a muddler?
Yes. A wooden spoon handle, the back of a fork, or even the bottom of a small jar works. The technique matters more than the tool.
What’s the difference between club soda and sparkling water?
Club soda has added minerals like sodium bicarbonate which gives it a slightly salty, mineral taste. Sparkling water is just carbonated water. Both work, but club soda adds a tiny layer of complexity to the drink.
My mojito isn’t sweet enough after adding the soda. Can I fix it?
Stir in a small amount of simple syrup (about 1/4 teaspoon at a time) until it’s where you want it. Don’t add granulated sugar after the soda or it won’t dissolve properly.
What rum does a classic mojito use?
Traditionally, it’s white rum. Havana Club 3 Años is the OG Cuban choice. Bacardi Superior and Plantation 3 Stars are widely available and both excellent.
How much lime juice is too much?
More than 1.5 oz and the drink becomes really sour and sharp. Stick to 1 oz for balanced flavor. If you love tart, go to 1.25 oz max.
Wrapping Up
A good mojito is about four things: fresh lime, bruised (not shredded) mint, quality white rum, and cold bubbly water.
That’s genuinely it. No bar tricks, no fancy syrups, no complicated equipment required.
Once you make this at home, you’ll understand why the ones from most bars are disappointing. Now you’ve got the ratios, the technique, and all the variations to keep it interesting beyond drink #1.
Try it this weekend and come back to tell me how it went. Did you add strawberries? Go spicy with jalapeño? Swap in basil? Drop your version in the comments below. I want to hear all about it, the good and the “oops, I over-muddled” ones too. 🍃