How Long Does Juice Last? | Fresh Taste, No Guesswork

Most opened pasteurized juices stay drinkable for about 7–10 days in the fridge, while fresh, untreated juice is best within 24–72 hours.

You open a bottle, pour a glass, and toss it back in the fridge. A few days later you’re staring at it like it might be plotting something. That “Is this still okay?” moment is normal. Juice sits in a weird zone: it looks harmless, it smells sweet, and it can still go off fast.

This article gives you a clear way to judge juice by type, packaging, and storage. You’ll get time ranges that match food-safety basics, plus easy checks that keep you from sipping something that’s turned.

What Makes Juice Go Bad Faster

Juice spoilage comes down to microbes, air, and temperature. Once a container is opened, air and backwash risk enter the chat. Warmth speeds up growth, and a fridge door shelf runs warmer than the back of the fridge.

Pasteurized Versus Untreated Juice

Pasteurized juice has been heat-treated (or treated another way) to cut down harmful microbes. Untreated juice has a shorter safe window, even when it’s kept cold. The FDA’s juice safety guidance spells out why untreated juice carries higher risk, especially for some people.

Acid Level And Ingredients

Acidic juices (like citrus) often hold quality longer than low-acid vegetable blends. Sugar content, pulp, dairy add-ins, and protein (think smoothies sold as “juice”) can shorten the clock.

Fridge Temperature And Placement

A fridge that hovers closer to 4°C / 40°F keeps juice in better shape than a warmer one. The door shelf is convenient, but it gets hit with warm air each time you open the fridge. If you want juice to last longer, park it on an inner shelf toward the back.

Clean Pouring Habits

Drinking straight from the bottle adds saliva and speeds spoilage. Pour into a clean glass. Cap it right away. Small habits buy you days.

How Long Does Juice Last? By Type And Storage

Here’s the practical part. These ranges assume the juice is kept cold right after purchase or opening and stored in a sealed container. If it sat on the counter for hours, treat the clock as shorter.

Store-Bought Refrigerated Juice

Refrigerated juices in the chilled section are often pasteurized, but not always. Some are treated with high-pressure processing (HPP). Either way, once opened, quality drops each day from air exposure. Taste changes usually show up before real safety issues in pasteurized products, yet you still don’t want to stretch it too long.

Shelf-Stable Juice Boxes And Bottles

Unopened shelf-stable juice can sit in a pantry until the “best by” date, since it’s packaged to stay stable at room temperature. Once opened, it acts like any other juice: refrigerate it and use it within about a week.

Fresh-Squeezed And Juice-Bar Juice

Fresh juice is the most time-sensitive. Even when it’s kept cold, it can start fermenting quickly. If it’s untreated, the safety window is short. The USDA notes on storing unpasteurized juice highlight how quickly risk can rise when fresh-squeezed juice is held too long or left out.

Homemade Juice

Homemade juice sits in the same category as fresh juice unless you pasteurize it at home. You can keep it safer by washing produce well, using clean equipment, and chilling it fast. Still, don’t treat it like a store-bought carton.

Frozen Concentrate

Frozen concentrate stays high quality for months in the freezer. After it’s mixed with water and opened, it follows the “opened juice” rules and should be kept cold and used within about a week.

Food safety charts give broad fridge and freezer timelines for many foods. The FoodSafety.gov cold storage charts explain why short fridge timelines help prevent spoilage and safety problems.

Juice Storage Times At A Glance

The table below is a practical cheat sheet. “Unopened” assumes the item is stored the way the package says. “Opened” assumes it’s capped and refrigerated promptly.

Juice Type Unopened Opened In The Fridge
Refrigerated pasteurized orange juice Until date on package (kept cold) 7–10 days
Refrigerated pasteurized apple juice Until date on package (kept cold) 7–10 days
Shelf-stable carton (unopened pantry) Until date on package 7 days
Fresh juice-bar juice (untreated) Not a safe “store for later” item 24–72 hours
Homemade citrus juice Make in small batches 2–3 days
Homemade vegetable juice (low-acid) Make in small batches 24–48 hours
Smoothie-style “juice” with dairy/protein Follow label; keep cold 1–2 days
Frozen concentrate (unmixed) Freezer: best quality within 3–6 months After mixing: 7 days
Frozen juice (already liquid) Freezer: best quality within 2–3 months After thawing: 1–3 days

How To Tell If Juice Has Turned

Dates help, but your senses matter too. Juice can spoil in two main ways: it ferments (yeasty, fizzy, sharp) or it grows mold (usually visible). Pasteurized juice tends to go “flat” and off-tasting first. Untreated juice can shift fast.

Smell And Taste Changes

If it smells sour, boozy, or like vinegar, skip it. If it tastes sharp in a way it didn’t before, skip it. A tiny sip to check is fine. A full glass “to see what happens” is not the move.

Fizz, Bubbles, Or A Hiss On Opening

Some juices are sold sparkling, so use common sense here. For plain juice, new bubbles often mean fermentation. Pressure when you open the cap can be a hint too.

Texture Shifts

Pulp settling is normal. Clumps, ropey strings, or a gel-like pour are red flags. A new layer that looks slimy is also a no.

Mold Or Floating Bits

Mold can show up around the lid or surface. If you see it, toss the whole container. Scooping it out does not fix the rest of the juice.

Storage Moves That Add Days Without Weird Hacks

You don’t need tricks. You need clean handling and steady cold storage.

Chill Fast After Opening

Open the juice, pour, recap, and put it back in the fridge right away. Don’t let it linger on the counter while you cook or eat.

Use A Clean Pour Routine

  • Pour into a clean glass.
  • Don’t drink from the bottle.
  • Wipe drips off the rim before recapping.
  • Keep the cap threads clean so the seal stays tight.

Pick The Right Container For Leftovers

If a container is half empty, there’s more air sitting above the juice. That speeds flavor loss and can speed spoilage. If you’re storing a small amount, transfer it to a smaller clean jar with a tight lid.

Keep It Off The Fridge Door

Put juice on an inner shelf. The temperature swings in the door can shave off shelf life.

Freezing Juice The Right Way

Freezing is a solid option when you know you won’t finish a bottle in time. It won’t restore freshness, yet it can keep juice safe and drinkable for later.

What Freezing Does And Doesn’t Do

Freezing slows microbial growth to a crawl. It does not erase germs that were already present. So freeze fresh juice early, not after it has started smelling off.

How To Freeze Without A Mess

  • Leave headspace. Liquids expand when frozen.
  • Use freezer-safe containers. Glass can crack if it’s overfilled.
  • Label with the date and juice type.

Thawing Rules That Keep Quality Up

Thaw juice in the fridge, not on the counter. After thawing, treat it like fresh juice. Drink it within 1–3 days, sooner for untreated blends.

When Juice Safety Matters More Than The Taste

For many adults, spoiled juice is mostly a “this tastes awful” issue. For others, it can be a bigger risk. Untreated juice can carry germs that cause serious illness.

Groups That Should Skip Untreated Juice

Kids, older adults, pregnant people, and anyone with a weakened immune system are safer with pasteurized juice. The CDC’s safer food choices guidance explains why unpasteurized drinks are a higher-risk pick for those groups.

Counter Time Rule

If juice has been sitting out at room temperature for more than two hours, toss it. If it was left in a hot car or sunlit counter, toss it sooner. That two-hour limit also shows up in the USDA’s notes on unpasteurized juice storage.

Common Juice Situations And The Best Call

Real life gets messy. Here are quick, practical calls that keep you out of trouble.

You Drank From The Bottle

If you took a sip straight from the bottle, treat the remaining juice as shorter-life. Plan to finish it within a couple of days.

The “Best By” Date Passed Yesterday

“Best by” is a quality marker, not a safety promise. If the juice is unopened and has been kept cold, it may still taste fine for a short stretch. Open it, smell it, and judge it. Once opened, use the same opened-juice windows above, not the printed date.

The Cap Was Left Loose Overnight

Loose cap means more air and more exposure. If it smells normal and looks normal, you can decide based on taste, yet don’t stretch it. If it’s fresh juice or untreated, toss it.

You Bought Cold-Pressed Juice At A Market

Cold-pressed can be pasteurized with pressure, or it can be untreated. Read the label. If you don’t see “pasteurized” or another treatment note, treat it as untreated and drink it within 24–72 hours.

Spoilage Checks You Can Do In Under A Minute

This table helps you decide fast. When in doubt, toss it. A bottle of juice costs less than a rough stomach.

What You Notice What It Often Means Best Move
Sour, boozy, or vinegar smell Fermentation Discard
New fizz in still juice Fermentation and gas build-up Discard
Mold spots near lid or surface Fungal growth Discard entire container
Ropey strands or gel-like pour Microbial spoilage Discard
Pulp settled, mixes back in when shaken Normal separation Use normal time window
Flavor tastes flat or “off,” no visible mold Oxidation or early spoilage Discard if taste is unpleasant
Container is bulging or sprays on opening Gas from fermentation Discard without tasting

A Simple Routine That Keeps Juice Reliable

If you want juice that tastes right and stays safe, stick to a repeatable routine. It takes no extra gear.

Buy What You’ll Finish

If you buy a huge jug and drink one glass every few days, you’ll keep rolling the dice. Smaller containers cost a bit more per ounce, yet they cut waste and stress.

Date It When You Open It

Write the open date on a bit of tape. This stops the “Was this from last week?” spiral. It also helps you avoid sniff-testing five different bottles.

Keep Two Rules

  • Pasteurized juice: plan for about a week in the fridge after opening, up to 10 days if it still smells and tastes normal.
  • Fresh or untreated juice: plan for 24–72 hours.

Once you match the timeline to the type of juice, the guesswork fades. You’ll waste less, and you won’t end up drinking something that’s quietly turned.

References & Sources

  • U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“What You Need to Know About Juice Safety.”Explains treated vs. untreated juice and why untreated juice carries higher food-safety risk.
  • FoodSafety.gov (U.S. Government).“Cold Food Storage Charts.”Provides refrigerator and freezer storage guidance and explains why short fridge limits help prevent spoilage and illness.
  • USDA Ask (Food Safety and Inspection Service).“How should I store unpasteurized fruit juice?”Covers handling and time-at-room-temperature limits for unpasteurized juice and why fresh-squeezed juice can carry harmful bacteria.
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Safer Food Choices.”Lists higher-risk foods and explains why unpasteurized drinks are safer to avoid for higher-risk groups.