Opened sour cream lasts 1 to 3 weeks in the refrigerator. Unopened sour cream lasts 1 to 3 weeks past the sell-by date when continuously refrigerated. The wide window reflects variation in storage conditions — a container kept at the coldest part of the fridge with a tight-fitting lid will last closer to 3 weeks; one stored on the door and opened frequently may be declining by week 1.
One of the most common questions about sour cream: the watery liquid pooling on top is whey, not spoilage. Stir it back in.
Table of Contents
- How Long Does Sour Cream Last After Opening?
- How Long Does Unopened Sour Cream Last?
- What Is the Liquid on Top of Sour Cream?
- How to Tell If Sour Cream Has Gone Bad
- How to Store Sour Cream Properly
- Can You Freeze Sour Cream?
- Quick Reference Summary
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- References
How Long Does Sour Cream Last After Opening?
Regular sour cream
Refrigerator (After Opening)
1–3 weeks
Light / reduced-fat sour cream
Refrigerator (After Opening)
1–2 weeks
Fat-free sour cream
Refrigerator (After Opening)
1–2 weeks
Crème fraîche (similar product)
Refrigerator (After Opening)
1–2 weeks
Sour cream–based dip (with added ingredients)
Refrigerator (After Opening)
5–7 days
Lower-fat sour cream tends to have a shorter window because fat acts as a mild preservative and moisture barrier. The more water content in a dairy product, the faster bacteria can establish.
How Long Does Unopened Sour Cream Last?
Unopened, before sell-by date
Refrigerator
Until sell-by date
Unopened, past sell-by date
Refrigerator
1–3 weeks past date
Like most cultured dairy, sour cream's own acidity provides some protection against spoilage, which is why it can remain safe past the printed date when stored correctly. The date is a quality guide, not a hard safety cutoff. Always inspect before eating.
What Is the Liquid on Top of Sour Cream?
The liquid that separates and pools on top of sour cream is whey — the water-based portion of milk that naturally separates from dairy fat and protein during fermentation and refrigerated storage. It is:
- Normal: expected in all cultured dairy products including yogurt, sour cream, and cottage cheese
- Nutritious: contains protein, B vitamins, and minerals
- Not a spoilage sign on its own
What to do: stir it back into the sour cream before serving. This restores the product's intended consistency without any waste.
Excessive liquid — more than a few tablespoons in a standard container — may indicate the product is near the end of its window or has been through temperature fluctuations. Assess smell and appearance alongside the amount of whey.
How to Tell If Sour Cream Has Gone Bad
Mold: the clearest sign. Any fuzzy growth — pink, green, black, or white — on the surface or around the rim means discard the entire container. Do not scoop around the mold.
Smell: fresh sour cream smells pleasantly tangy and milky. Spoiled sour cream smells sharply sour (beyond its normal tang), rancid, or has a distinct off-odor that's unpleasant rather than just acidic. Trust your nose — an unusual or strong smell is a reliable signal.
Color: fresh sour cream is bright white. Yellow, gray, or pink discoloration (not from added ingredients) indicates spoilage or mold contamination.
Texture: should be thick, smooth, and creamy. Curdled, excessively lumpy, or slimy texture beyond normal whey separation signals breakdown. Very watery texture throughout (not just surface liquid) is also a sign the product has deteriorated.
How to Store Sour Cream Properly
- Store in the back of the refrigerator, not the door — the door experiences temperature swings with every opening
- Keep at 35–40°F (1.5–4°C)
- Always use a clean spoon — introducing food particles or bacteria from other foods shortens shelf life significantly
- Keep the lid tightly sealed after each use
- Do not return sour cream to the fridge in a bowl or loosely covered container — the original lid or plastic wrap pressed to the surface is best
- Do not leave at room temperature for more than 2 hours
Can You Freeze Sour Cream?
Technically yes, but the texture changes significantly and the result is not ideal for most uses.
Baking (muffins, cakes, sauces)
Suitable?
✅ Yes — texture doesn't matter
Cooked dips and soups
Suitable?
✅ Yes — heat reintegrates it
Dollop on tacos, baked potatoes
Suitable?
❌ No — texture becomes grainy and watery
Dips served cold
Suitable?
❌ No
Freezer duration: up to 2 months.
How to freeze: transfer to a freezer-safe airtight container. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and stir vigorously — the texture will still be looser than fresh. Use immediately after thawing.
Quick Reference Summary
Unopened (past date)
Refrigerator
1–3 weeks past date
Freezer
2 months
Opened, regular
Refrigerator
1–3 weeks
Freezer
2 months
Opened, light/fat-free
Refrigerator
1–2 weeks
Freezer
2 months
Sour cream dip (with add-ins)
Refrigerator
5–7 days
Freezer
Not recommended
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Can I eat sour cream 4 weeks after opening? At 4 weeks after opening, sour cream is past its recommended window. Even if it looks and smells fine, bacterial load may be elevated. For healthy adults, it may still be safe — but for high-risk individuals (pregnant, elderly, immunocompromised), discard at 3 weeks.
Is it okay to eat sour cream with a little mold if I scrape it off? No. Mold in soft, high-moisture dairy products like sour cream grows invisible filaments (mycelium) below the visible surface. Scraping off the mold and eating the rest is not safe. Discard the entire container.
My sour cream has been open for 10 days — is it still good? 10 days is within the 1–3 week window. Check for mold, smell, and color. If it smells normally tangy, looks white, and has no mold, it's almost certainly still good. Stir in any pooled whey before using.
Why does sour cream go bad faster after I add a spoon that touched something else? Cross-contamination introduces new bacteria and food particles into the container. Even on a clean-appearing utensil, microscopic food residue can seed the sour cream with bacteria or mold spores that then multiply. Always use a clean spoon directly from the drawer.
Can I use sour cream past the sell-by date if it's still unopened? Yes. Unopened sour cream that has been continuously refrigerated is typically safe 1–3 weeks past the sell-by date. The date reflects quality, not a hard safety cutoff. Inspect before using.
References
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service. Refrigeration and Food Safety
- FDA. Cold Food Storage Chart
- USDA FoodData Central. Sour cream products
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