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How long does sourdough need to rise?

Sourdough bulk fermentation typically takes 4–6 hours at 75°F (24°C), then 12–18 hours cold proof in the fridge. Total: ~18–24 hours from feed to bake.

The full answer

Sourdough rise time depends on three things: starter activity, dough temperature, and hydration. The classic "stretch and fold" recipe runs bulk fermentation for 4–6 hours at room temperature (75°F / 24°C). After bulk, the dough cold-proofs in the fridge for 12–18 hours, which improves flavor and makes scoring easier.

If your kitchen is colder (65°F / 18°C), bulk can stretch to 8–10 hours. Warmer kitchens (80°F+) speed it to 3 hours but risk over-fermentation. The dough is ready for cold proof when it shows ~50% volume increase and bubbles on the surface.

A reliable test: a small piece dropped in water should float. If it sinks, fermentation isn't complete.

Cold proofing isn't strictly necessary — same-day bakes work — but most published bakers (Forkish, Robertson, Hamelman) include 8–18 hours cold proof for flavor and structure.

Time ranges by condition

ConditionDurationNote
65°F (18°C) kitchen8–10 hours bulk + 12–18 hours cold proof
75°F (24°C) kitchen (typical)4–6 hours bulk + 12–18 hours cold proof
80°F (27°C) kitchen3 hours bulk + 8–12 hours cold proofWatch closely; risk of over-fermentation rises

What changes the time

Common questions

Can I let sourdough rise overnight at room temperature?

Generally no — overnight at 70°F+ over-ferments the dough. Cold proof (fridge) is the overnight strategy. If your kitchen is below 60°F, overnight room-temperature works.

How do I know if my sourdough is over-fermented?

Over-fermented dough is slack, sticky, and tears easily. The float test fails (it just falls apart in water). The crumb after baking is gummy or dense.

Why is my sourdough rising so slowly?

Most common: starter not active enough, or kitchen too cold. Feed your starter and wait until it doubles within 4–6 hours before using. Move the dough to a warmer spot (oven with light on).

Sources

We cite primary research, expert practice, and authoritative reference. Higher-tier sources weighted heavier. See methodology.

  1. Ken Forkish, "Flour Water Salt Yeast" (2012)4–5 hours bulk at 78°F; 12–14 hours cold proof
  2. Chad Robertson, "Tartine Bread" (2010)3–4 hours bulk at 80°F; 8–12 hours cold proof
  3. Jeffrey Hamelman, "Bread" (2004)Industrial reference; 4 hours bulk at 76°F standard
  4. King Arthur Baking sourdough guideBeginner-friendly published reference
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Last verified: 2026-05-20 · Published 2026-05-20

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