Does Diesel Fuel Go Bad?

Yes. Diesel fuel begins degrading the day it enters your tank. Without proper maintenance, stored diesel can become unusable within 6-12 months — and contaminated fuel is the most common cause of backup generator failures.

Here’s what every facility manager needs to know about diesel fuel shelf life, degradation, and how to prevent it.

How Long Does Diesel Fuel Last?

Under ideal conditions — a clean, sealed, temperature-stable tank — diesel fuel remains usable for 6 to 12 months. In real-world conditions, that timeline is often shorter.

Factor Impact Why
Temperature swingsMajorHot days and cool nights cause condensation inside the tank
Tank breathingModerateOutside air enters carrying moisture as temperature changes
Partial fill levelsMajorMore air space means more condensation surface area
Older tanksModerateRust, scale, and existing contamination accelerate degradation
ULSDModerateModern ultra-low sulfur diesel is more susceptible to microbial growth

The Bottom Line: If your generator's fuel hasn't been tested or treated in the past 6 months, assume it needs attention.

What Causes Diesel Fuel Degradation?

Diesel doesn’t spoil like food — it degrades through four overlapping processes:

1. Oxidation

When diesel is exposed to oxygen, it undergoes chemical oxidation. This produces gums, varnishes, and dark-colored sediment (asphaltenes) that clog filters and injectors. You can see oxidation as fuel darkening from clear amber to brown or black.

2. Water Contamination

Water enters tanks through condensation, seal failures, and delivery. Even small amounts — as little as 200 parts per million — create problems: promotes microbial growth, causes injector corrosion, reduces fuel energy content, and creates ice crystals in cold weather.

3. Microbial Growth (The “Diesel Bug”)

The diesel bug is a collection of bacteria, yeasts, and fungi (particularly Hormoconis resinae) that live at the fuel-water interface in your tank. They feed on the hydrocarbons in diesel and produce biomass that clogs filters, acidic byproducts that corrode tank walls, and biofilm that adheres to surfaces and resists chemical treatment.

Microbial contamination can double every 6 hours in warm conditions. A minor contamination problem becomes a major one fast.

4. Thermal Instability

Repeated heating and cooling breaks down long-chain hydrocarbon molecules in diesel, producing insoluble particles. This is accelerated in tanks exposed to direct sunlight or located in hot environments.

Signs Your Diesel Fuel Has Gone Bad

Visual Signs

  • Dark or cloudy fuel — healthy diesel is clear amber; darkening indicates oxidation
  • Visible particles or sediment — sludge settling at the bottom of sample jars
  • Water layer — clear water visible below the fuel in a sample container
  • Slimy coating on tank surfaces, dipsticks, or fill caps — this is biofilm

Operational Signs

  • Frequent filter changes — your fuel filters clog faster than predicted
  • Hard starting or no-start — contaminated fuel doesn’t atomize properly
  • Reduced power output — degraded fuel has lower energy content
  • Excessive exhaust smoke — incomplete combustion from contaminated fuel
  • Water alarm triggers — tank monitoring detects water accumulation

Lab Test Indicators

  • Particulate count above ASTM D975 limits
  • Water content above 200 ppm (free water) or 500 ppm (total water)
  • Positive microbial test (ASTM D6469 or dip-slide test)
  • Acid number increase indicating oxidation byproducts
  • Fuel stability failure (ASTM D6468)

The Diesel Bug: A Closer Look

Microbial contamination deserves special attention because it’s the most destructive form of fuel degradation — and the hardest to reverse.

How It Starts

Microbes need three things: fuel (carbon source), water, and warmth. Every diesel tank provides the first two. All it takes is a small amount of water accumulation, and microbial colonies begin forming at the fuel-water interface.

How It Spreads

  • Fuel deliveries can introduce new microbial strains
  • Shared equipment (hoses, nozzles) transfers contamination between tanks
  • Biofilm on tank walls continuously recontaminates fresh fuel

Why It’s Dangerous

A severe diesel bug infestation can completely block fuel filters in hours, produce enough acid to pit tank walls, create enough biomass to physically block fuel lines, and survive chemical biocide treatments by hiding in biofilm.

Treatment

Mild contamination can be managed with biocide and fuel polishing. Moderate to severe contamination requires tank cleaning to remove biofilm from surfaces, followed by fuel polishing and ongoing monitoring.

How to Prevent Diesel Fuel Degradation

1. Test Your Fuel Regularly

Lab testing every 6 months tells you exactly what’s happening in your tank before problems become emergencies. A basic fuel quality test costs far less than a generator failure.

2. Schedule Fuel Polishing

Regular fuel polishing — typically every 6-12 months — removes water, particulates, and microbial contamination before they accumulate to dangerous levels.

3. Keep Tanks Full

A full tank has less air space, which means less condensation. If your tank sits at 25% for months, you’re creating ideal conditions for water accumulation.

4. Maintain Tank Integrity

Inspect tank seals, vents, and fill caps annually. A damaged seal is an open door for water and contamination.

5. Schedule Tank Cleaning

Even with regular polishing, contamination accumulates on tank walls over time. Professional tank cleaning every 3-5 years removes biofilm and sediment that polishing can’t reach.

6. Consider a Fuel Monitoring System

Automated water sensors and fuel quality monitors provide continuous data — no more guessing about your fuel condition between tests.

What to Do If Your Fuel Is Bad

Step 1: Test

Get a certified lab analysis. Don’t guess — test. The results determine the right response.

Step 2: Assess

Based on lab results:

  • Marginal degradation, low waterFuel polishing restores the fuel
  • Moderate contamination, microbial present — Fuel polishing + biocide treatment
  • Severe contamination, heavy biofilmTank cleaning first, then fuel polishing
  • Fuel beyond recovery — Full fuel replacement (rare, but sometimes necessary)

Step 3: Prevent Recurrence

After addressing the immediate problem, establish a maintenance schedule: fuel testing every 6 months, fuel polishing every 6-12 months, tank cleaning every 3-5 years, water monitoring between services.

Don't Wait for a Generator Failure to Find Out

The worst time to discover bad fuel is during a power outage. A fuel quality assessment takes one visit — and tells you exactly where you stand.

Frequently Asked Questions

6-12 months under ideal conditions. In practice, tanks with temperature exposure, partial fill levels, or older equipment may see degradation in as little as 3-4 months.
In most cases, yes. Fuel polishing removes water, particulates, and microbial contamination, restoring fuel to ASTM D975 specifications. Only severely degraded fuel needs replacement.
Look for dark or cloudy color, visible sediment, water layer at the bottom, slimy residue on dipsticks, and frequent filter clogging. However, lab testing is the only way to confirm contamination levels.
Fuel stabilizers slow oxidation and can extend shelf life modestly. However, they don’t prevent water accumulation, microbial growth, or thermal breakdown. Stabilizers supplement — not replace — regular testing and polishing.
The diesel bug is bacteria, yeasts, and fungi that grow at the fuel-water interface in diesel tanks. They feed on hydrocarbons, produce corrosive acids, and create biomass that clogs filters. Treatment requires biocide, fuel polishing, and in severe cases, tank cleaning.
Fuel polishing typically costs $0.50-$2.00 per gallon — significantly less than full replacement ($3.50-$5.00/gallon plus disposal). Compare that to a single generator failure event, which can cost tens of thousands.