How Long Can You Freeze Food? A Category-by-Category Guide
Last updated: April 6, 2026
Food stored at 0°F is safe indefinitely from a microbial standpoint — but quality degrades over time regardless of temperature. The storage times in this guide represent when quality (flavor, texture, moisture) begins to decline noticeably, not when food becomes unsafe. Knowing the difference helps you use your freezer strategically rather than treating it as a long-term storage guarantee for everything.
Why Quality and Safety Are Different Questions
Bacteria do not grow at 0°F. Food held continuously at 0°F will not develop foodborne illness from storage time alone. But several other processes continue slowly at freezer temperatures:
- Oxidation — fat in meat and fish oxidizes over time, producing off-flavors. This is the primary quality limiter for fatty proteins stored without vacuum sealing.
- Enzyme activity — natural enzymes in fruits and vegetables continue to work at freezer temperatures, gradually degrading texture and color. Blanching before freezing deactivates most of these enzymes in vegetables.
- Dehydration (freezer burn) — moisture migrates from food to the drier freezer air, leaving dry, discolored patches. Packaging quality is the primary defense against this.
All three processes accelerate with poor packaging, frost-free cycling, and temperature fluctuations. The storage times below assume proper freezer-grade packaging and a consistent 0°F temperature.
Meat and Poultry
| Item | Quality Maintained | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Beef steaks and roasts | 6–12 months | 12–18 months vacuum sealed; fat trims oxidize faster |
| Ground beef | 3–4 months | Higher surface area accelerates oxidation; use quickly or vacuum seal |
| Pork chops and roasts | 4–6 months | Fattier cuts (shoulder, ribs) toward the shorter end |
| Whole chicken or turkey | 12 months | Whole bird holds better than cut pieces; giblets 2–3 months |
| Chicken pieces (bone-in) | 9 months | Bone-in cuts hold slightly longer than boneless due to moisture retention |
| Boneless chicken breast | 6–9 months | Prone to dehydration; vacuum seal extends quality significantly |
| Lamb | 6–9 months | Chops 6 months; roasts up to 9 months |
| Sausage (raw) | 1–2 months | High fat content and spices accelerate quality decline |
| Sausage (cooked) | 1–2 months | Same limitations; freeze in meal-size portions |
| Hot dogs and deli meat | 1–2 months | High sodium content helps but texture suffers noticeably after 2 months |
| Bacon | 1 month | Fat oxidizes quickly; smoke flavor fades; use within 4 weeks for best results |
| Ham (cooked) | 1–2 months | Whole: 1–2 months; slices: 1 month |
Fish and Seafood
| Item | Quality Maintained | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Lean fish (cod, halibut, tilapia) | 6–8 months | Lean fish freezes better than fatty fish; texture is the primary limiter |
| Fatty fish (salmon, mackerel, tuna) | 2–3 months | High fat content oxidizes faster; 6 months vacuum sealed |
| Shrimp (raw) | 6–12 months | Shell-on holds slightly better than peeled |
| Shrimp (cooked) | 3 months | Texture degrades noticeably after 3 months |
| Scallops | 3–6 months | Freeze in a single layer before packaging to prevent clumping |
| Crab and lobster (cooked) | 2–3 months | Texture suffers significantly after 3 months; use soon |
| Oysters, clams (shucked) | 3–4 months | Freeze in their liquid; shell-on does not freeze well |
Wild Game
| Item | Quality Maintained | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Venison (deer) | 8–12 months | Vacuum sealed: 12–18 months; trim silver skin before freezing to reduce gaminess |
| Elk and moose | 8–12 months | Similar to venison; lean cuts hold better than fatty sections |
| Wild boar | 6–9 months | Higher fat than venison; fat oxidizes faster |
| Waterfowl (duck, goose) | 6 months | High fat content; skin-on holds moisture better but fat oxidizes |
| Upland birds (pheasant, quail) | 6–9 months | Lean birds; wrap well to prevent dehydration |
| Wild fish (trout, walleye, bass) | 6–9 months | Varies by fat content; lean species hold longer |
Fruits and Vegetables
| Item | Quality Maintained | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Blanched vegetables (most types) | 8–12 months | Blanching before freezing deactivates enzymes that degrade color and texture |
| Unblanched vegetables | 1–2 months | Quality declines rapidly without blanching; see freezing vegetables guide |
| Corn on the cob (blanched) | 8–10 months | Blanch 7–11 minutes depending on ear size before freezing |
| Berries (strawberries, blueberries) | 8–12 months | Freeze on a sheet pan first to prevent clumping; no blanching needed |
| Stone fruits (peaches, cherries) | 8–12 months | Peel and slice before freezing; toss with lemon juice to prevent browning |
| Citrus (juice or segments) | 3–4 months | Juice freezes well; whole citrus texture suffers |
| Avocado (mashed or pureed) | 3–4 months | Whole or halved avocados do not freeze well; puree with lemon juice |
| Herbs (most types, chopped) | 4–6 months | Freeze in ice cube trays with water or oil; works for cooking, not garnishing |
Prepared and Cooked Foods
| Item | Quality Maintained | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Soups and stews | 2–3 months | Potato-based soups lose texture; leave 1 inch headspace in liquid containers for expansion |
| Cooked grains (rice, pasta) | 1–2 months | Freeze in individual portions; pasta softens noticeably after 2 months |
| Casseroles and baked dishes | 2–3 months | Freeze before baking or after fully cooling; foil trays work well for easy reheating |
| Pizza (homemade) | 1–2 months | Wrap tightly; crust quality declines after 2 months |
| Bread (baked) | 2–3 months | Slice before freezing for easy portioning; toasting restores much of the texture |
| Unbaked dough (bread, cookies) | 1–3 months | Cookie dough balls freeze very well; bread dough 1 month |
| Butter | 6–9 months | Freezes well; wrap tightly to prevent absorbing freezer odors |
| Hard cheeses (grated) | 3–4 months | Block hard cheese becomes crumbly after freezing but is fine for cooking |
| Eggs (out of shell, beaten) | 12 months | Do not freeze in shell; freeze beaten whole eggs or separated yolks/whites |
| Ice cream (commercially made) | 2–4 months | Quality best within 2 months; ice crystals develop and texture degrades after that |
Temperature Consistency and Storage Time
All times above assume a consistent 0°F. Every time food warms up above 0°F — due to door openings, power interruptions, or a struggling compressor — quality declines faster. In frost-free uprights, the defrost cycle causes minor temperature fluctuations several times per day that are not significant for short storage but add up over many months.
If your freezer runs warmer than 0°F (check with a thermometer left inside for 24 hours), reduce expected storage times proportionally. A freezer that holds 5°F instead of 0°F may reduce effective storage quality life by 20–30%.
Food Storage Time FAQ
Can I eat food that has been frozen longer than the recommended time?
From a safety standpoint, yes — if the food has been held at 0°F continuously. From a quality standpoint, it depends on how much the quality has declined. Meat frozen for two years will be safe but may be noticeably less flavorful and more prone to dry texture. Taste a small amount after thawing and decide from there.
Does the original packaging affect how long food lasts in the freezer?
Significantly. Grocery store packaging (standard cryovac wrapping, thin plastic bags) is not designed for long freezer storage. Items in original packaging begin to develop freezer burn and off-flavors faster than items rewrapped in freezer-grade bags or vacuum sealed. If you plan to store something for more than two months, repackage it.
Do storage times reset if I refreeze thawed food?
No. The clock on storage quality does not reset — it continues from where it was before thawing. Refrozen food also experiences an additional quality hit from the thaw-refreeze cycle. Factor in remaining storage life from the original freeze date, not the refreeze date.
How does vacuum sealing change these times?
Vacuum sealing removes the oxygen and moisture contact that drives most quality degradation. For meat, vacuum sealing typically doubles the quality storage time. For fatty fish and ground meat, the improvement is somewhat less dramatic but still significant. The investment in a vacuum sealer pays for itself over time if you regularly store large quantities.