Cold brew tea is made by steeping loose leaves or tea bags in cold, filtered water inside a sealed container for 4–12 hours in the refrigerator, then straining the leaves and serving chilled — no heat required, and no bitterness.
The secret to iced tea that tastes clean, smooth, and never bitter isn’t a fancy gadget or a secret ingredient — it’s simply skipping the hot water. Cold brewing pulls out flavor compounds slowly, leaving behind the tannins that turn tea harsh when over-steeped with boiling water. A single overnight steep in the fridge gives you a pitcher of concentrate that lasts for days, and you can tailor the strength and steeping time to whatever tea you have on hand. Whether you own a dedicated cold brew bottle or just a Mason jar and a strainer, the process is the same.
The Ratio That Works Every Time
Cold brew needs roughly double the leaf density of hot tea because cold water extracts flavors more slowly. The standard starting point is 1 teaspoon of loose-leaf tea per 6 ounces of water — about 10 teaspoons for a standard 60-ounce pitcher. By weight, that’s roughly 3 grams of tea per 8 ounces of water, or 15 grams per quart (32 ounces). For tea bags, 1 bag per cup of water is a reliable rule. If you’re ready to invest in a dedicated brewing setup, our top cold brew tea picks and gear guide rounds up the best bottles and infusers for every budget.
Steeping Times by Tea Type
The clock starts the moment the vessel goes into the fridge. Delicate teas need shorter steeps; robust teas and herbals can go longer. Use this table as a starting point and adjust by taste on your next batch.
| Tea Type | Refrigerated Steep Time | Flavor Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Green & White | 4–6 hours | Grassy, floral; go shorter to avoid bitterness |
| Black, Oolong, Pu’erh | 8–12 hours | Malty, smooth, full-bodied at 10+ hours |
| Herbal & Rooibos | 4–8 hours | Fruity, earthy; longer steeps deepen sweetness |
| Ball-Rolled Oolong | 10–12+ hours | Unfurls slowly; may need extra time |
| Japanese Teas | 2–4 hours | Umami-forward; overshooting turns it bitter |
Step-by-Step: How to Cold Brew Tea
The whole process takes about two minutes of active work. The fridge does the rest.
1. Measure Your Tea
Add 2–3 tablespoons of loose-leaf tea (roughly 5–6 heaped teaspoons) for a 750ml–1000ml vessel, or 1 teaspoon per 6 ounces of water. If using tea bags, snip the corners and dump the loose leaves into the container for better extraction, or submerge whole bags. For compressed teas like gunpowder green, pour a flash of hot water over the leaves first to “awaken” them, then proceed with cold water.
2. Add Cold, Filtered Water
Fill the vessel with cold, filtered tap or bottled water. Unfiltered tap water carries minerals and chlorine that mute the tea’s flavor — filtration matters here. Shake or stir gently to saturate all the leaves.
3. Seal and Refrigerate
Close the container tightly and place it in the refrigerator. A loose seal lets your tea absorb fridge odors or invite mold. Steep overnight (8–12 hours) for most black and oolong teas, or 4–6 hours for green and white varieties. Set a timer if you tend to forget — over-steeped green tea turns astringent fast.
4. Strain and Decant
Remove tea bags or pour the liquid through a fine-mesh sieve, cheesecloth, or a paint-straining bag reserved for kitchen use. Decant the strained brew into a clean bottle or pitcher, leaving the spent leaves behind. At this point the brew is ready to drink.
5. Serve Cold
Pour over ice and enjoy straight. For an extra trick, freeze some of the steeped tea into ice cubes — they cool the drink without watering it down as the cubes melt.
Common Mistakes and How to Fix Them
Most cold brew problems trace back to three variables: time, ratio, and water quality.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Fix Next Batch |
|---|---|---|
| Bitter or harsh taste | Over-steeped (especially green tea past 6 hours) | Reduce steep time by 1–2 hours; taste at hour 5 |
| Weak, watery flavor | Too little leaf, or steeped under 4 hours | Double the tea to 2 tsp per 6 oz; steep at least 6 hours |
| Musty or off taste | Unsealed container or old tea leaves | Use fresh leaves; seal vessel tightly; rinse bottle with hot water first |
| Cloudy liquid | Mineral-heavy tap water or over-agitation | Switch to filtered water; stir gently instead of shaking |
How Long Cold Brew Tea Keeps
Stored in a sealed container in the refrigerator, cold brew tea stays fresh for 3 to 5 days. After that, flavors fade and the tea can develop a stale or sour note. Some tea brands recommend drinking within 24 hours for peak brightness. Whatever your timeline, don’t leave a cold brew batch at room temperature for more than 2 hours — the cold water method doesn’t have the built-in pasteurization of hot brewing, so refrigeration from start to finish is essential for safety.
FAQs
FAQs
Can you cold brew any type of tea?
Yes — black, green, white, oolong, pu’erh, rooibos, and herbal teas all work beautifully with the cold brew method. The one exception is matcha, which requires whisking with hot or warm water because the powdered leaf doesn’t strain out and won’t dissolve in cold liquid alone.
Do you need a special pitcher or bottle for cold brew tea?
No. Any clean, sealable glass or plastic container works — Mason jars, repurposed juice bottles, or a standard pitcher with a lid. Pitchers with built-in infusers simplify straining but aren’t necessary. The only requirement is a tight seal to keep out fridge odors and contaminants.
Is cold brew tea stronger in caffeine than hot brewed tea?
It can be. Longer steeping times extract more caffeine from the leaves. A 12-hour steep of black or oolong tea produces a higher caffeine concentration than a 3-minute hot steep. Despite the smoother taste, cold brew isn’t automatically low-caffeine — steer daytime batches toward green or white tea if you’re caffeine-sensitive.
Can I reuse the tea leaves for a second cold brew batch?
It’s not recommended. The first cold steep extracts most of the flavor and caffeine. A second steep yields a noticeably weaker, thinner brew that often tastes flat. Fresh leaves give the best results every time.
What’s the fastest way to cold brew tea?
If you’re short on time, use finely broken leaves or tea bags and steep for 4 hours — the minimum window for most teas. Shake the sealed container once or twice during the steep to speed up extraction. For near-instant cold tea, brew hot tea at double strength and pour it over a full glass of ice, but this isn’t true cold brew and carries a different flavor profile.
References & Sources
- Rishi Tea. “How to Cold Brew Tea.” Details the crash method for food safety and exact steep times.
- Artful Tea. “How to Cold Brew Tea.” Standard ratio of 1 tsp per 6 oz and steep duration ranges.
- Cookie and Kate. “Cold Brew Iced Tea.” Storage duration of up to 5 days and practical step-by-step tips.
- Snarky Tea. “Cold Brew Tea at Home.” Green tea-specific ratios and caffeine extraction notes.
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.