Sanitation — keeping the bugs out
How to clean and sanitise your brewing equipment, what each product is for, and where infections actually come from.
Last updated 18 February 2026 · 8 min read
The two-step rule
Sanitation is two steps that get confused with each other constantly:
- Cleaning removes physical residue — proteins, hop matter, dried yeast. Done with alkaline cleaners like PBW or oxiclean-style products. Hot water and contact time do the work.
- Sanitising kills micro-organisms on already-clean surfaces. Done with acid sanitisers (Star-San is the homebrew standard). Cold contact, no rinsing needed for food contact.
You can’t sanitise something that isn’t clean. Yeast colonies hide in the protein gunk. Skip cleaning and your sanitiser does nothing useful.
When to sanitise
| Stage | Clean? | Sanitise? |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-boil (mash tun, kettle, mash paddle) | Yes | Optional — the boil sanitises |
| Cooling and beyond | Yes | Always |
| Fermenter, airlocks, transfer tubing | Yes | Always |
| Bottling/kegging equipment | Yes | Always |
The pivot point is the moment your wort drops below 80 °C. After that, anything that touches it needs to be sanitised. Before that, the boil takes care of it.
Common Star-San questions
- Does the foam matter? No. “Don’t fear the foam” is the slogan. The acid sanitiser is food-safe at recommended dilution.
- Does it expire? Mixed solution lasts 1-2 weeks at pH < 3. Once pH rises above 3, throw it out.
- What about chlorine bleach? Works for cleaning, but rinse exhaustively or you’ll get chlorophenol off-flavours from any residual chlorine reacting with malt phenols. Star-San is easier and less risky.
Where infections actually come from
In the 100+ infections we’ve helped diagnose in the shop:
| Source | Approximate frequency |
|---|---|
| Bottling/kegging equipment not fully clean | ~40% |
| Worn-out plastic fermenters with scratches | ~25% |
| Wet/damp grain stored too long | ~10% |
| Cold-side air contact (e.g. open transfers) | ~10% |
| Truly random wild contamination | ~15% |
Replacing scratched plastic fermenters every 2-3 years (or just using glass) and cleaning bottling wand needles thoroughly addresses the bulk of common cases.
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Troubleshooting
Used in these guides
- Your first brew — a beginner's walkthroughA practical end-to-end walkthrough of brewing your first beer, from kit selection to packaging day.
- Building a kegging setupWhat you need to switch from bottle-conditioning to keg-conditioning, how to force-carbonate, and how to pour without foaming everywhere.