Fermentation appears to have halted before reaching target final gravity
highGravity stops dropping above the expected FG. Confirm by reading three days apart; if unchanged for 72 hours, fermentation is genuinely stuck.
Likely causes
| Cause | Process article | Ingredient | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fermentation temperature dropped, putting yeast into hibernation | Fermentation control — temperature, schedule, packaging | — | Raise temperature 2-3 °C and wait 48 hours before any other action. |
| Underpitched yeast tapped out early | Fermentation basics | Fermentis SafAle US-05 | Repitching a fresh sachet of US-05 will finish almost any stuck ale. |
| Mash temperature too high produced unfermentable wort | Mashing — controlling sugar profile and body | — | A mash at 70 °C+ produces dextrins that no yeast can ferment. Target FG will be higher than expected. |
| Wort exceeded yeast's alcohol tolerance | Choosing a yeast for your beer | — | Most ale strains tap out at 9-10% ABV. Switch to champagne yeast or a saison strain to finish. |
First, confirm
Take a hydrometer reading. Take another 72 hours later. If unchanged, fermentation is stuck. If it moved 2-3 points, you’re not stuck — you’re slow. Slow is fine.
Diagnostic order
In our experience the causes break down roughly:
| Cause | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Cold fermentation, yeast dormant | ~40% |
| Underpitched at start | ~30% |
| Unrealistic FG expectation (high mash temp) | ~20% |
| Alcohol tolerance limit | ~10% |
Always rule out cold fermentation first because the fix (raising temperature) is free and risk-free.
Recovery
- Raise temperature to mid-range for the strain
- Wait 48 hours; confirm with gravity reading
- If still stuck: gently rouse the yeast (swirl the fermenter, no splashing/oxygenation)
- Wait 48 hours more
- If still stuck: pitch a fresh sachet of US-05 directly into the fermenter (no rehydration needed)
- If your beer is above 9% ABV and still stuck, pitch champagne yeast — it’ll handle the rest
Related learn articles
- Stuck fermentation — diagnosis and rescueWhen fermentation halts before reaching target FG, what to check first, and how to restart safely.
- Fermentation control — temperature, schedule, packagingWhy fermentation temperature is the single most important brew-day variable, and how to manage it on a homebrew budget.
- Choosing a yeast for your beerHow to think about yeast strains by attenuation, flocculation, temperature range and flavour profile.