Matcha is more delicate than most teas. It degrades quickly when exposed to air, light, heat, or moisture. Proper storage keeps it fresh longer.
The Basics
Matcha’s enemies:
- Air — Causes oxidation
- Light — Breaks down color and flavor
- Heat — Accelerates degradation
- Moisture — Causes clumping and spoilage
- Strong smells — Matcha absorbs odors
Protect against all five for best results.
How to Store Matcha
Before Opening
Unopened matcha lasts longest. Store it:
- In its original packaging (if opaque and sealed)
- In a cool, dark place
- Or in the refrigerator (ideal)
- Away from strong-smelling foods
After Opening
Once you break the seal, the clock starts. Best practices:
- Keep it airtight — Use the tin it came in, or transfer to an airtight container
- Minimize air exposure — Open briefly, close quickly, push out excess air
- Store in the refrigerator — Cold slows oxidation
- Keep it dark — Even in the fridge, keep it in an opaque container
- Use it — Don’t save it for “special occasions” — it’s losing freshness every day
Refrigerator Storage Tips
Refrigerating matcha extends freshness, but do it right:
When putting matcha in the fridge:
- Use an airtight container (condensation is the enemy)
- Keep away from strong-smelling foods
- Let the container come to room temperature before opening (prevents condensation)
When removing matcha from the fridge:
- Take out only what you need, or
- Let the whole container warm to room temperature before opening
- Opening cold matcha allows moisture to condense on the powder
Container Options
| Container | Good For | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Original tin | Short-term (1-2 months) | Works if it reseals well |
| Small airtight tin | Short-term | Good option |
| Vacuum-sealed container | Longer term | Best for extending freshness |
| Glass jar | Not recommended | Unless it’s opaque and airtight |
| Zip-lock bag | Temporary only | Push out air, but not ideal |
What Not to Do
- Don’t leave it on the counter — Light and heat will degrade it
- Don’t store near the stove — Too warm
- Don’t leave the lid off — Oxidation starts immediately
- Don’t store in clear containers — Light damage
- Don’t freeze it — Freezing can damage texture; refrigerator is cold enough
- Don’t store near fish, onions, etc. — It will absorb the smells
Signs of Poor Storage
If you notice:
- Faded color — Oxidation
- Weak smell — Losing freshness
- Clumping — Moisture exposure
- Off odors — Absorbed smells or spoilage
…your storage method (or the matcha’s age) is the problem.
Quick Reference
| Storage Location | Unopened | Opened |
|---|---|---|
| Room temp (cool, dark) | 6+ months | 1 month |
| Refrigerator | 1+ year | 1-2 months |
These are guidelines — quality degrades gradually, not suddenly.