trust your tongue

When Is Kombucha Ready to Drink or Bottle?

The honest answer: when it tastes done to you. Here's how to develop that judgment fast — and why pH strips can't make this call for you.

How to Know When Your Kombucha is Done · Watch on YouTube

at a glance
  • Start tasting around day 5–6 (day 7 once you know your rhythm).
  • You're listening for a pleasant acidic ting that isn't overpowering.
  • Too sweet? Wait longer. Too tart? Bottle now with sweeter flavorings.
  • pH measures acidity, not doneness — taste is the only real gauge.

The taste test

Slide a straw past the SCOBY, cover the top with your finger, and pull a sip (Ange prefers a wine thief, mostly for the joy of announcing "there's a thief in the house!"). Skip tasting in the first few days — it'll just taste like sweet tea, and that's prime SCOBY-forming time anyway.

Day by day, sweetness falls and tartness rises. Where you stop is pure preference: bottle early for a sweeter, gentler brew; let it ride for something drier and more assertive. Both are correct. There is no single right way.

Reading the signals

What you tasteWhat it meansWhat to do
Sweet tea, barely tangyFermentation is youngWait 2–3 more days, taste again
Pleasantly tart, a little sweetThe classic bottling windowFlavor & bottle it
Sour, vinegar-forwardWent long — still totally usableBottle with sweeter fruit, or bank it as strong starter tea

Why pH strips can't tell you

pH tells you the brew is acidifying safely — useful as a health check — but it doesn't measure sugar, flavor or balance. Two brews at the same pH can taste wildly different. Use pH if you enjoy the data (Ange has a whole video on kombucha & pH); use your palate to decide when to bottle.

Good news for the impatient

After just 4–5 days, kombucha is already drinkable and already full of the good stuff — it's just sweeter than most people prefer. There's no "unsafe middle" you need to wait through.