Calculating the pH of Salts Calculator
Estimate whether a salt solution is acidic, basic, or neutral and calculate its pH using standard hydrolysis relationships for salts formed from strong acids, weak acids, strong bases, and weak bases.
Interactive Salt pH Calculator
Examples: NaCl, CH3COONa, NH4Cl, NH4CH3COO.
Used for weak acid + strong base and strong acid + weak base salts.
Enter the Ka of the parent weak acid. Example acetic acid: 1.8e-5.
Enter the Kb of the parent weak base. Example ammonia: 1.8e-5.
This calculator uses standard 25 degrees C aqueous chemistry.
Results
Enter your salt data and click Calculate pH to see the result, classification, equations used, and chart.
Expert Guide to Calculating the pH of Salts
Calculating the pH of salts is one of the most useful topics in aqueous equilibrium chemistry because it connects acid-base theory, hydrolysis, conjugate pairs, and equilibrium constants into a single practical framework. Many students initially assume that all salts are neutral because they are formed from an acid and a base. In reality, the pH of a salt solution depends on the strengths of the parent acid and parent base, not simply on the fact that the compound is called a salt. Sodium chloride is essentially neutral in water, but ammonium chloride is acidic and sodium acetate is basic. The reason is hydrolysis of the ions that come from the salt.
When a salt dissolves in water, it separates into cations and anions. Some of those ions are spectators, meaning they do not react appreciably with water. Other ions act as weak acids or weak bases and shift the equilibrium of water enough to change the pH. The entire calculation rests on identifying which ion hydrolyzes and using the correct equilibrium constant. Once you know the ion behavior, the math becomes systematic.
Four categories of salts
The most reliable way to calculate salt pH is to classify the salt into one of four groups.
- Strong acid + strong base salt: typically neutral, pH about 7 at 25 degrees C.
- Weak acid + strong base salt: basic, because the conjugate base of the weak acid reacts with water.
- Strong acid + weak base salt: acidic, because the conjugate acid of the weak base reacts with water.
- Weak acid + weak base salt: pH depends on the relative values of Ka and Kb.
Examples make this clearer. Sodium chloride, NaCl, comes from hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide, both strong. Neither Na+ nor Cl– hydrolyzes significantly, so the pH stays close to 7. Sodium acetate, CH3COONa, comes from a weak acid, acetic acid, and a strong base, sodium hydroxide. The acetate ion is the conjugate base of a weak acid, so it hydrolyzes water to generate OH and produces a basic solution. Ammonium chloride, NH4Cl, comes from hydrochloric acid and ammonia. The ammonium ion is the conjugate acid of a weak base and donates H to water, making the solution acidic.
Important equations used in salt pH calculations
At 25 degrees C, the ionic product of water is:
For the conjugate base of a weak acid:
For the conjugate acid of a weak base:
For a weak base salt such as sodium acetate, if the salt concentration is C and the hydrolysis constant is Kb, then for typical dilute solutions:
For a weak acid salt such as ammonium chloride, if the salt concentration is C and the hydrolysis constant is Ka, then:
For salts of a weak acid and a weak base, a very useful approximation is:
This last relation assumes a salt containing the conjugate acid of a weak base and the conjugate base of a weak acid, such as ammonium acetate. In this special case, concentration often cancels out in the approximation, so the pH depends mainly on the relative acid and base strengths.
Step by step method for solving any salt pH problem
- Identify the ions formed when the salt dissolves.
- Determine the parent acid and base for each ion.
- Decide whether each ion hydrolyzes significantly in water.
- Select the correct equilibrium expression based on the salt category.
- Calculate [H+] or [OH-] using the weak-acid or weak-base approximation.
- Convert to pH or pOH using logarithms.
- Interpret the result as acidic, neutral, or basic.
Worked example 1: sodium acetate
Suppose you need the pH of a 0.10 M sodium acetate solution. Acetic acid has Ka = 1.8 x 10-5. Sodium acetate is a salt of a weak acid and a strong base, so the acetate ion is basic.
First calculate the base hydrolysis constant of acetate:
Then estimate hydroxide concentration:
Now calculate pOH and pH:
The solution is basic, which matches chemical intuition because acetate removes protons from water weakly and generates OH.
Worked example 2: ammonium chloride
Now consider 0.10 M ammonium chloride. Ammonia has Kb = 1.8 x 10-5. NH4+ is the conjugate acid of a weak base, so the solution is acidic.
Calculate the acid hydrolysis constant:
Estimate hydrogen ion concentration:
Then:
Again, this is chemically sensible. The ammonium ion donates protons weakly to water, pushing the pH below 7.
Worked example 3: ammonium acetate
Ammonium acetate contains NH4+ and CH3COO–. One ion is acidic and one is basic. If Ka of acetic acid and Kb of ammonia are both about 1.8 x 10-5, then:
Even though both ions hydrolyze, their effects are approximately balanced. This is a classic demonstration that weak acid plus weak base salts are not automatically neutral, but can be neutral if their strengths are similar.
Comparison table: typical salts and expected pH behavior
| Salt | Parent acid | Parent base | Typical 0.10 M behavior at 25 degrees C | Approximate pH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium chloride, NaCl | HCl, strong | NaOH, strong | Essentially neutral | 7.00 |
| Sodium acetate, CH3COONa | Acetic acid, Ka = 1.8 x 10^-5 | NaOH, strong | Basic due to acetate hydrolysis | 8.87 |
| Ammonium chloride, NH4Cl | HCl, strong | NH3, Kb = 1.8 x 10^-5 | Acidic due to ammonium hydrolysis | 5.13 |
| Ammonium acetate, NH4CH3COO | Acetic acid, weak | Ammonia, weak | Near neutral when Ka and Kb are similar | 7.00 |
Reference constants used often in pH of salts calculations
Many classroom and lab calculations repeatedly use a small set of common weak acids and weak bases. The table below summarizes several values often encountered. These are representative 25 degrees C values and may vary slightly by source or rounding convention.
| Species | Type | Representative equilibrium constant | Source relevance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acetic acid, CH3COOH | Weak acid | Ka ≈ 1.8 x 10^-5 | Used for acetate salt calculations |
| Ammonia, NH3 | Weak base | Kb ≈ 1.8 x 10^-5 | Used for ammonium salt calculations |
| Hydrofluoric acid, HF | Weak acid | Ka ≈ 6.8 x 10^-4 | Relevant for fluoride salts |
| Pyridine, C5H5N | Weak base | Kb ≈ 1.7 x 10^-9 | Relevant for pyridinium salts |
| Water | Autoionization | Kw = 1.0 x 10^-14 | Connects Ka and Kb through conjugate pairs |
Common mistakes students make
- Assuming all salts are neutral. This is the biggest misconception.
- Using Ka when Kb is required, or vice versa. Always identify which ion is hydrolyzing.
- Forgetting to convert between pH and pOH. If you calculate hydroxide concentration, find pOH first.
- Ignoring the parent species. Sodium ion and chloride ion usually do not hydrolyze, but ammonium and acetate do.
- Misclassifying weak acid plus weak base salts. Their pH is determined by the balance of Ka and Kb, not by concentration alone in the common approximation.
Why salt hydrolysis matters in real chemistry
Salt pH is not just a textbook exercise. It matters in analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry, water treatment, biochemistry, and industrial formulation. Buffer design often depends on salts of weak acids, such as sodium acetate or sodium bicarbonate. Fertilizer chemistry and soil chemistry can be influenced by ammonium salts. Pharmaceutical formulations may rely on salt forms of active molecules that alter solution pH and therefore stability or absorption. Laboratory quality control also depends on understanding whether a dissolved salt will shift pH enough to influence reactions, corrosion, precipitation, or indicator color.
In environmental settings, dissolved salts can influence aquatic chemistry and metal solubility. Agencies and universities publish pH and water chemistry resources that show how strongly acidity affects corrosion, ecology, and treatment outcomes. For additional authoritative background, review chemistry and water quality information from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey, and educational chemistry materials from institutions such as LibreTexts Chemistry. If you specifically want government or university resources on pH fundamentals, the USGS pH and Water page is a very accessible reference.
When approximations are valid
The square-root approximations used in many salt pH calculations are based on the idea that the amount hydrolyzed is small compared with the original salt concentration. This is usually valid when the hydrolysis constant is small and the concentration is not extremely low. In introductory chemistry, these approximations are standard and produce excellent estimates for salts such as sodium acetate and ammonium chloride at concentrations like 0.10 M or 0.010 M. In very dilute solutions, highly concentrated solutions, or systems with significant activity effects, a more rigorous equilibrium calculation may be needed.
Practical summary
If you remember only a few rules, remember these. First, identify whether the ions come from strong or weak parents. Second, spectator ions from strong acids and strong bases usually do not affect pH. Third, the conjugate base of a weak acid makes a salt solution basic, while the conjugate acid of a weak base makes a salt solution acidic. Fourth, weak acid plus weak base salts require comparing Ka and Kb. Once these rules become automatic, calculating the pH of salts becomes fast, logical, and highly reliable.