Japanese Tea Best-By Dates: What Supermarkets Don't Tell You
Behind The Leaves #26
When the Clock Actually Starts
Why the Best-By Date Is More Conservative Than You Think
Why Where You Buy Matters More Than People Realise
Not All Japanese Green Teas Age the Same Way
Key Takeaways
- The best-by date starts from final retail packaging, not harvest. Before that point, tea is preserved under near-ideal industrial conditions, effectively pausing the aging process.
The printed date assumes room temperature storage. Store your tea at 5°C or below and you can meaningfully extend freshness beyond what the label suggests.
Where you buy matters as much as the date on the package. A supermarket storing Japanese tea at ambient temperature is degrading the product continuously, regardless of what the label says.
Matcha is the most time-sensitive Japanese tea. It can deteriorate before its best-by date under poor storage conditions. Never buy matcha from a retailer that does not refrigerate it.
Hojicha, genmaicha, and bancha are forgiving. Their roasted or blended character means they hold quality well past their best-by dates, and discarding them prematurely is unnecessary.
Insights by Yuki
One key observation is that the best-by date is built around a worst-case assumption: that the tea will sit at room temperature from the moment it leaves the factory. Most consumers do not realize they are reading a conservative estimate, not an absolute expiry.
In personal testing, a hojicha opened approximately two years past its best-by date was not only acceptable but genuinely delicious. This was possible because hojicha does not rely on the volatile compounds that degrade quickly, and it had been kept in reasonable conditions. The recommendation from this experience: for robust teas, try them before discarding them. You may be surprised.
One key observation for matcha buyers specifically is that a supermarket shelf is one of the worst places to buy it. Matcha stored at ambient temperature loses quality continuously, and by the time it reaches a consumer, the damage may already be done regardless of what the best-by date reads.