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How Long Does Fermentation Take? A Beginner's Timeline

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One of the first questions every new brewer asks: how long does fermentation take? The answer depends on what you're brewing, but here's a clear timeline you can actually plan around.

Beer Fermentation Timeline

Most ales finish primary fermentation in 1-2 weeks. After that, you can bottle and carbonate for another 1-2 weeks. Total time from brew day to drinking: roughly 3-4 weeks.

Lagers take longer — 4-8 weeks or more — because they ferment at colder temperatures. For your first brew, stick with ales.

Mead Fermentation Timeline

Mead is slower. Primary fermentation takes 2-4 weeks, and most mead benefits from several months of aging. Technically drinkable at 4-6 weeks, but noticeably better at 3 months. See our detailed mead brewing timeline.

Cider Fermentation Timeline

Hard cider is similar to beer — 2-3 weeks for primary fermentation, then 1-2 weeks carbonating in bottles. Simpler than beer to make, since you start with store-bought juice.

How Do You Know When It's Done?

The easiest way: watch your airlock. When bubbling drops to less than one bubble per minute for several days, primary fermentation is likely done. For precision, use a hydrometer — two identical readings a few days apart means fermentation has finished.

The Universal Rule

When in doubt, wait longer. Almost every fermented drink improves with more time. Rushing is the most common fermentation mistake beginners make. Your future self will thank you for the patience.

Ready to start your first brew? Grab a 1 gallon brewing kit and check out our fermentation guide.

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