Has My Beer Finished Fermenting? How to Know for Certain Your Beer Is Ready Before You Bottle It
Fermentation is the name of the game when making beer.
If you don't have fermentation taking place, you simply don't have beer. You have a 23-litre bucket of watery malt.
But fermentation is also the part of the process that new brewers find hardest to read. It is invisible inside a sealed container. The only direct signals you get are indirect ones: gas escaping through an airlock, a ring of sediment on the fermenter wall, a number on a hydrometer. Getting good at reading those signals is what separates brewers who package with confidence from brewers who bottle too early and end up with over-pressurised glass or flat, under-attenuated beer.
The good news is that the signals are reliable once you know what you are looking for and, critically, what they actually mean versus what they do not mean. This guide covers all of them.
👁️ Visual Signs of Active Fermentation
Key Takeaway:Look First, Worry LaterThe first thing to bear in mind is that it can take at least 15 hours before CO2 bubbles start gurgling through the airlock. This lag phase is normal. The yeast is not sitting idle during this window: it is absorbing oxygen, synthesising the sterols and unsaturated fatty acids it needs for healthy cell membranes, and beginning to reproduce. Fermentation in the chemical sense is already underway before you see a single bubble. So do not go drowning your sorrows just yet if nothing is moving through the airlock in the first 12 to 15 hours.
Give it 20 to 48 hours before you start problem-solving. Here is what to look for while you wait:
- Airlock activity: Bubbles passing through the water trap at regular intervals are the most obvious sign. In the peak of active fermentation, this can be several bubbles per second. As fermentation winds down it slows to one every few minutes, then stops. A slowing airlock is not a problem. It is the process working correctly.
- The tidemark: In a glass fermenter you will see a dark, frothy ring of residue around the inner wall at the high-water mark of the krausen. This dried scum is yeast and protein and hop material carried up by the CO2 foam and left behind as it subsides. It is completely normal and a reliable indicator that fermentation occurred and peaked. You may be able to see it through a translucent white plastic drum as well.
- Krausen foam: During active fermentation a thick, rocky foam develops on the surface of the beer. It can be impressive in a vigorous fermentation, rising to several centimetres or more above the wort level. As fermentation slows, the krausen falls and the foam collapses back into the beer. A fermenter with no current foam but a visible tidemark tells you fermentation happened and has substantially completed.
- Sediment on the floor of the fermenter: As yeast finishes its work it flocculates and drops out of suspension, building a pale tan or cream-coloured layer on the bottom of the vessel. A clear (or clearing) beer above a visible sediment layer is a good sign. The clarity of the beer above is the result of yeast dropping out, which only happens once fermentation is effectively over.
If you are using a plastic drum and the walls are too opaque to see through, remove the airlock briefly and peer through the hole. You should be able to see the surface of the beer and identify whether foam or scum is present. Do this quickly and replace the airlock promptly.
One important thing to check early: did you firmly seal your fermenter lid? If the lid is not sealed correctly, CO2 is escaping around the edge rather than being forced through the water trap. The pressure build-up is never sufficient to push gas through the airlock, so you see no bubbles, but fermentation is proceeding normally. Press the lid down firmly and check whether bubbling begins or increases. This is a very common cause of the "no bubbles" anxiety moment and almost always has a simple fix.
🌡️ When Fermentation Actually Has Not Started
Key Takeaway:Temperature Is the Most Common CulpritMost of the time, a "no activity" concern resolves itself within 48 hours or turns out to be a lid seal issue. But genuine fermentation failure does happen, and when it does, the cause is almost always one of a short list of problems.
Temperature too low
This is by far the most common cause of genuine fermentation failure. We're going to assume your fermenter is in a warm place and not in some shed where the temperatures are approaching zero degrees centigrade, because your yeast will go to sleep if this is the case. Most ale yeast strains need a minimum of around 18°C to ferment with any real vigour. Below 15°C many strains slow dramatically. Below 10°C most ale yeasts effectively stop. Move the fermenter to a warmer location: somewhere with a consistent ambient temperature of 18 to 22°C for ales. A gentle rouse of the fermenter (picking it up and swirling briefly) can help resuspend settled yeast and restart activity. Do not shake it vigorously as this can introduce unwanted oxygen at this stage of fermentation.
Temperature too high
The other extreme kills yeast outright. Pitching wort that is too hot, above roughly 35°C for most ale strains, stresses or kills the yeast cells before fermentation begins. If you pitched warm and nothing has happened after 48 hours, the yeast may need replacing. Cool the wort to the correct temperature range first, then repitch a fresh packet.
Dead or underpitched yeast
Yeast past its best-before date, yeast that was stored incorrectly, or a pitch rate that was simply too small for the volume can all cause slow or failed starts. A single packet of dry yeast is generally adequate for a standard 23-litre kit batch at normal gravity. For higher-gravity worts above 1.060, a second packet significantly improves reliability. If you suspect yeast viability is the issue, pitching a fresh rehydrated packet of dry yeast into the fermenter at the correct temperature will almost always rescue the batch within 12 to 24 hours.
Sanitiser residue
Excessive sanitiser left in the fermenter, particularly bleach-based products that were not properly rinsed, can inhibit or kill yeast. No-rinse sanitisers like Star San are formulated to be safe at correct dilution but are harmful at much higher concentrations. If you suspect sanitiser residue, there is little to do except wait and see whether fermentation begins once any inhibitory effect dissipates, or repitch fresh yeast.
📏 The Only Reliable Test: Your Hydrometer
Key Takeaway:Two Identical Readings. That Is Your Green Light.Visual signs tell you fermentation is happening. Only a hydrometer tells you fermentation is finished. This distinction matters enormously because packaging beer with residual fermentable sugar still present produces over-carbonated or explosive bottles and does not allow the beer to reach its correct attenuation and flavor profile.
Use your hydrometer to take a gravity reading and compare it against your original gravity reading from brew day. Fermentation is generally considered complete when the final gravity is roughly one quarter to one third of the original gravity. In practical terms this means:
- A wort with an original gravity of 1.040 should finish around 1.008 to 1.010.
- A wort with an original gravity of 1.050 should finish around 1.010 to 1.013.
- A wort with an original gravity of 1.060 should finish around 1.012 to 1.016.
These are approximate targets. The actual final gravity depends on your yeast strain's attenuation characteristics, the fermentability of the wort (influenced by mash temperature if you are brewing all-grain), and fermentation conditions. The yeast manufacturer or your recipe will usually specify an expected final gravity range, and that is the number to target rather than a generic rule of thumb.
You did take that original gravity reading at the start, right?
The most important rule is this: take two readings 24 to 48 hours apart. If they are identical, fermentation is complete. If the gravity is still dropping between readings, fermentation is still active regardless of what the airlock is or is not doing. A gravity reading that agrees with itself across two days is confirmation that the yeast has finished its work. That is your green light, not the calendar, not the airlock, and not the appearance of the beer.
Bottling beer with active residual fermentation in progress produces bottle bombs. The yeast continues to ferment in the sealed bottle, generating CO2 with nowhere to go except into increasing pressure. Bottles can deform, vent, or shatter. This is a safety hazard, a mess, and a waste of everything you have put into the batch. The two-reading confirmation protocol takes two minutes spread across two days. It is not optional if you want to bottle safely.
⏳ Fermentation Is Done. Now Wait Anyway.
Key Takeaway:A Stable Gravity Is Not Permission to Bottle ImmediatelyDon't bottle your beer the moment you confirm a stable final gravity. Let it mellow for a bit longer.
This advice sounds like brewer superstition but it has a real chemical basis. Even after the primary fermentation is complete and gravity has stabilised, a number of finishing processes continue in the fermenter that improve the quality of the finished beer:
Diacetyl reabsorption. Diacetyl is a butter or butterscotch flavour compound produced as a normal by-product of yeast metabolism during fermentation. Healthy, active yeast reabsorbs and metabolises diacetyl in the late stages of fermentation, removing it from the beer. If you package the moment gravity stabilises, you may capture the beer before this reabsorption is complete. The result is a buttery off-flavour that fades with time in the bottle but is unpleasant in a fresh pour. Allowing an extra few days in the fermenter at fermentation temperature after gravity stabilises gives the yeast time to clean up diacetyl completely.
Acetaldehyde reduction. Acetaldehyde, which smells and tastes of green apple or fresh paint, is another normal fermentation by-product that the yeast reduces given adequate time and temperature. Like diacetyl, it is most effectively removed while the yeast is still in contact with the beer in the fermenter.
Yeast and protein drop-out. After fermentation completes, yeast cells flocculate and sediment to the bottom of the fermenter. Proteins from the grain and hop material also coagulate and drop out over time, especially when the fermenter is moved to a cooler location. This natural clarification produces a cleaner, better-looking beer in the glass. Rushing to bottle means carrying more of this material into the bottles and into your glass.
How long is long enough? For a standard ale kit at normal gravity, three to four days of rest after the gravity stabilises is a reasonable minimum before packaging. For stronger beers, lagers, or anything where you detected any diacetyl in a taste sample, a week of conditioning in the fermenter is worthwhile. The longer the better your brew will probably be. If you are a beginner brewer, trust this. Let your brew rest just a little bit longer than you have the patience for.
Brewing is a game of patience, and those who wait are rewarded with good-tasting, clear beer. The few days you save by bottling early will cost you weeks of conditioning time in the bottle trying to achieve the same result. Do the waiting in the fermenter, where the yeast is still doing useful work, not in the bottle, where it cannot.
The summary version of everything above is this: watch the fermenter for the first 48 hours, note the visual signs of activity, then stop watching and let the yeast do its job. When you think it's probably done, take a gravity reading. Take another one two days later. If they match, taste the beer for diacetyl and acetaldehyde, give it a few more days of rest, then package with confidence.
That sequence takes patience but it removes guesswork completely. You will never bottle too early if you follow it, and you will never wonder whether your beer has fermented properly again.




