Building a kegging setup
What you need to switch from bottle-conditioning to keg-conditioning, how to force-carbonate, and how to pour without foaming everywhere.
Estimated time: Half a day to assemble; ongoing maintenance is minimal
Why keg
Bottling 5 gallons takes 60-90 minutes per batch. Kegging takes 15. After three batches, the cost of the kegging gear pays for itself in your time. Plus:
- Force-carbonation is faster (24-48 hours) than bottle-conditioning (10-14 days)
- No bottle bombs (over-carbonation just means a fizzy pour, not glass shrapnel)
- Easy to top up gas, easy to clean, easy to share
Components of a basic 1-tap setup
| Part | Approx. cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Used 19 L Cornelius keg (“Corny”) | £35-60 | Pre-owned soda kegs; check for working posts and good seals |
| CO₂ tank (5 lb / 2.3 kg) | £40 + ~£15 to fill | A 5 lb tank covers ~6-8 kegs |
| Two-gauge regulator | £40-60 | Reads bottle pressure and serving pressure |
| Gas line + ball-lock disconnect | £15 | |
| Beer line (3/16” ID, ~3 m) | £10 | |
| Faucet (party tap, or proper picnic tap on a kegerator) | £15-200 |
Starter kit total: about £150-200 if you’re patient with used kegs.
Where to put it
A kegerator is a small fridge with a tap mounted in the lid or door. You can either buy a purpose-built kegerator (£300+) or convert any cheap upright fridge by drilling a hole for the tap shank. A second-hand fridge + DIY tap is a popular budget path.
Force-carbonation
Two methods. Both work; pick one and stop reading on the internet.
Set-and-forget:
- Put the keg in the kegerator, hook up gas at ~12 PSI (for 2.4 vol CO₂ at 4 °C — see priming sugar calculator for the volumes-CO₂ math)
- Leave for 7-10 days
- Pour, enjoy
Burst-carbonation (faster but more error-prone):
- Set regulator to 30 PSI
- Shake the keg gently for 60 seconds
- Vent pressure, set regulator to serving pressure (~12 PSI)
- Wait 48 hours
Pouring without foaming
Foaming is almost always not enough beer line resistance. Solution: longer beer line. Most pre-built kegerators ship with 60-90 cm of line; for clean pours you want 2.5-3 m of 3/16” ID line. Cheap fix, big improvement.
Cleaning between kegs
PBW soak, hot water rinse, Star-San fill-and-empty. Disassemble the posts and clean the o-rings. Replace o-rings every 12 months or whenever they look tired.
Suggested products
- Glass Carboy 5 Gallon (23 L)A classic glass carboy for primary or secondary fermentation. Doesn't scratch like plastic, doesn't permeate oxygen like PET, and lets you watch fermentation directly.
- Hopwise 30 L Stainless Boil KettleA 30-litre stainless steel kettle for 5-gallon (19 L) all-grain batches with comfortable headspace. Welded ports, no exposed threads in the boil.