Food storage guide
Back to Eggs storageCan you freeze eggs?
Yes, but not in the shell. Freeze beaten eggs or separated whites instead.
Eggs storage snapshot
Practical storage answer
Safe window, packaging tips, spoilage signs, and related cooking links in one place.
Direct answer
The short storage answer
Yes, but not in the shell. Freeze beaten eggs or separated whites instead.
Safe storage window
Typical safe time window
- Yes, but not in the shell. Freeze beaten eggs or separated whites instead.
- Eggs baseline guidance: up to 12 months for beaten raw eggs or separated whites when frozen properly.
What affects storage time
What changes the real answer
- Storage time changes with how fresh the food was when you first stored it.
- Storage time changes with whether it stayed consistently cold or dry enough for the location.
- Storage time changes with how well it was wrapped or sealed.
- Storage time changes with how much air stayed in the package and whether the food thawed and refroze.
- Storage time changes with whether raw juices or condensation built up in the packaging.
Best storage method
How to store it well
- Freeze eggs in airtight packaging with as little air as possible.
- Label the package with the date so older portions get used first.
- Keep eggs refrigerated in their carton rather than in the warmest part of the refrigerator door.
- If you freeze eggs, aim for up to 12 months for beaten raw eggs or separated whites when frozen properly and thaw it safely later.
Packaging tips
Containers, wrapping, and setup
- Leave shell eggs in the carton so they stay protected and dated.
- Freeze beaten eggs or separated whites in sealed containers with a little headspace.
- Keep hard-boiled eggs covered in the refrigerator.
Signs it has gone bad
What makes it time to throw it out
- Off odor when cracked, unusual discoloration, or leaking shells are signs to discard eggs.
- Hard-boiled eggs with unpleasant smell or slimy surface should not be kept.
Freezer notes
When freezing is the better plan
- Eggs freezer quality is usually best within up to 12 months for beaten raw eggs or separated whites when frozen properly.
- Wrap tightly, remove excess air where possible, and label the date before freezing.
- Texture and moisture loss matter more after freezing, so smaller portions are often easier to thaw and use well.
Related cooking, storage, reheating, and planning guides
Keep moving through the food lifecycle
These links connect the storage answer back to nearby storage pages and, where relevant, the cooking and reheating pages that usually come before or after the storage question, plus portion-planning and special-case timing pages when that makes more sense.
Editorial guides
Read the broader guide behind the storage answer
These longer guides add context around safe storage, leftovers planning, and the cooking decisions that usually happen before or after this shelf-life page.
FAQ
Common questions
Can you freeze eggs?
Yes, but not in the shell. Freeze beaten eggs or separated whites instead.
What shortens eggs freezer life most?
The biggest factors are how fresh the food was when you first stored it, whether it stayed consistently cold or dry enough for the location, how well it was wrapped or sealed.
What container works best for eggs?
Leave shell eggs in the carton so they stay protected and dated.
Can eggs be frozen in the shell?
No. Freeze beaten eggs or separated whites instead of shell eggs.