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How Long Can Eggs Last? | Storage Dates That Make Sense

Refrigerated shell eggs usually stay usable for weeks, while boiled, cracked, or mixed eggs need a much shorter fridge window.

Eggs are easy to forget until you spot the carton in the back of the fridge. Then you’re stuck doing the sniff-test math in your head. Let’s make it simple.

How long eggs last depends on two things: how cold they’ve been kept and whether the shell is still intact. A clean, uncracked shell buys you time. Once you crack an egg or cook it, the timeline tightens.

What Egg Carton Dates Mean

Cartons often show a “sell-by” or “best by” date. Those labels help stores rotate stock and help you shop. They don’t flip eggs from safe to unsafe on a single day.

A more useful habit is to treat the day you put the carton in your fridge as your starting point. Write that date on the lid. If you buy eggs often, keep the older carton in front so it gets used first.

How Long Can Eggs Last? Real Storage Timelines

When eggs stay cold and the shells stay intact, they keep their quality for a while. Once the shell is broken, the clock moves faster.

Raw shell eggs in the refrigerator

A common home range is about three to five weeks in the fridge. The USDA’s refrigerated egg storage guidance notes that eggs may be refrigerated three to five weeks from the day they’re placed in the refrigerator, which matches how many households use a carton over time.

Older eggs can still cook fine. They’re often easier to peel after hard cooking, and they work well in baking.

Hard-cooked eggs in the refrigerator

Cooked eggs don’t last as long as raw shell eggs. The FDA’s egg-safety guidance uses a one-week refrigerator window for hard-cooked eggs (in the shell or peeled).

Store cooked eggs in a covered container. If you peel them, keep them sealed so they don’t dry out and pick up fridge odors.

Cracked eggs, separated eggs, and beaten eggs

The moment you crack an egg, you remove the shell’s protection. Store cracked eggs, yolks, whites, and beaten eggs in sealed containers and plan to use them soon. If you’re meal-prepping breakfast burritos or egg sandwiches, treat that bowl of beaten eggs like a short-life perishable.

Storage Moves That Add Days, Not Drama

You don’t need special gear. You need steady cold and a few habits that cut temperature swings and cross-contact.

Keep eggs in the carton, not the fridge door

Cartons slow moisture loss and protect eggs from odors. They also help prevent cracks. The FDA’s egg safety advice also advises storing eggs at 40°F (4°C) or below and keeping them in their original carton.

Use a steady spot in the fridge

The back of a main shelf is usually steadier than the door. If your fridge runs warm, a simple thermometer removes the guesswork.

Skip washing eggs before storage

Store eggs clean and dry. If a shell has a small smear, wipe gently with a dry paper towel and keep the egg cold.

Quick Ways To Tell If Eggs Are Still Good

Dates help, but your senses help too. When you’re unsure, crack the egg into a small bowl first. That way one bad egg won’t ruin a whole batch of batter.

Smell test

A spoiled egg gives off a strong sulfur smell. If you get that odor, toss the egg and wash the bowl, your hands, and any surfaces it touched.

Look test

Fresh eggs often have a thicker white that holds its shape. Older eggs tend to spread more. That’s a quality change, not a safety alarm by itself.

  • If the egg white looks pink or has unusual discoloration, discard it.
  • If you see dark specks or mold inside a raw egg, discard it.
  • If the shell is slimy, sticky, or has dried leakage, discard it.

Float test

Put an egg in a bowl of water. If it sinks and lies flat, it’s fresher. If it stands upright, it’s older. If it floats, it has a larger air cell, which often means it’s old. Floating alone isn’t a verdict, so pair it with smell and look after cracking.

Table: Egg Storage Times By Form

The chart below lines up with widely used public guidance, including the FoodSafety.gov cold storage chart and FDA egg storage tips.

Egg Type Refrigerator Freezer
Raw shell eggs 3–5 weeks Not in shell
Hard-cooked eggs (in shell or peeled) Up to 1 week Not recommended
Raw egg whites 2–4 days Up to 12 months
Raw egg yolks 2–4 days Up to 12 months (treat with sugar or salt)
Beaten eggs (whole, out of shell) 2 days Up to 12 months
Egg dishes (quiche, frittata, casseroles) 3–4 days 2–3 months
Leftover yolks or whites (covered) 2–4 days Up to 12 months
Pasteurized liquid eggs (opened) Use by label Use by label

When Eggs Go Bad: Red Flags That Mean Toss It

Egg spoilage can be obvious, like odor, or subtle, like a damaged shell that lets bacteria in. When you see any of these, don’t try to salvage the egg.

  • Rotten smell when cracked.
  • Cracked shells with dried residue.
  • Slime on the shell or a sticky film that returns after wiping.
  • Odd colors inside the egg.

If someone in your household is more vulnerable to foodborne illness, be stricter with timelines and choose pasteurized egg products for recipes that keep eggs runny or raw.

Cooking And Holding: How Long Egg Dishes Last

Once eggs are cooked into a dish, treat the dish like leftovers: cool it fast, store it covered, and use it within a few days. Reheating the same pan again and again dries it out and can leave it sitting warm on the counter longer than it should.

FoodSafety.gov’s egg handling notes say eggs and foods containing eggs should be refrigerated within two hours after cooking, or within one hour if they sit in hot conditions like a warm car.

Hard-cooked eggs for meal prep

Cool hard-cooked eggs quickly, then store them in the shell until you need them. Label the container with the cook date, and plan to use them within a week.

Deviled eggs and egg salad

These warm up fast at parties. Keep them cold until serving. Put out a small tray, then refill from the fridge so the food on the table doesn’t sit out for hours.

Baked egg dishes

Quiche and breakfast casseroles store well when cooled and covered. Slice, chill, then reheat only what you plan to eat.

Freezing Eggs The Right Way

Freezing works well for eggs, as long as you do it before they age out. Don’t freeze eggs in the shell, since the shell can crack.

How to freeze whole eggs

  1. Crack eggs into a bowl and beat until the yolks and whites are blended.
  2. Portion into freezer-safe containers or an ice cube tray, then transfer cubes to a bag.
  3. Label with the date and the number of eggs per portion.

How to freeze yolks without a gummy texture

Yolks can thicken when frozen. Stir in a pinch of salt for savory cooking, or a bit of sugar for baking, then freeze in small portions.

Room Temperature Eggs And Other Real-Life Scenarios

If you buy refrigerated eggs in the U.S., keep them refrigerated. Leaving them out for long stretches raises risk. Use time and temperature to decide what to do.

Eggs left out on the counter

A short sit while you unload groceries is fine. A long sit is not. If refrigerated eggs sat out for more than two hours, discard them. If the room is hot, shorten that window.

Cracked egg in the carton

Don’t store it “until later.” Either cook it right away or discard it.

Table: Fast Decisions For Common Egg Questions

This table is built for the moment you’re standing in front of the fridge, carton in hand, trying to decide what to do next.

What You See What It Often Means What To Do
Carton has been refrigerated under 3 weeks Quality is often still strong Use for any recipe
Carton has been refrigerated 3–5 weeks Often still okay if kept cold Crack into a bowl first, then cook well
Egg stands upright in water Older egg with larger air cell Use soon, cook fully
Egg floats in water Older egg, quality may be poor Crack separately, rely on smell and look
Shell is cracked or leaking Higher risk of contamination Discard
Strong sulfur odor after cracking Spoiled egg Discard and wash tools
Hard-cooked eggs are past 7 days Past common fridge window Discard

Small Habits That Cut Egg Waste

If you toss eggs often, it’s usually a planning issue. A few habits help you use the carton fully.

  • Write the purchase date on the carton lid.
  • Cook older eggs into hard-cooked eggs or use them in baking.
  • Freeze eggs you won’t use soon by beating and portioning them.
  • Keep one “use next” spot in the fridge so the older carton stays visible.

Keep eggs cold, track time, and trust your senses when you crack one open.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.