Decode the date code on your Black and Mild pack and calculate the freshness window for your cigarillos. Enter the manufacture date to see exactly when they go stale.
Black and Mild products, made by Middleton (a subsidiary of Altria/Philip Morris), use a date stamp that is typically found on the bottom of the box or on the foil/cellophane wrapper of the pack. The format is usually a Julian date code — a compact way of expressing the day of the year alongside the year itself.
The most common format you will encounter is YYDDD, where YY is the last two digits of the year and DDD is the day of the year from 001 to 365. For example, a code reading 26176 means the 176th day of 2026, which is June 25, 2026.
| Product | Optimal Freshness | Acceptable (Sealed) |
|---|---|---|
| Black & Mild Original | 6–12 months | Up to 2 years |
| Black & Mild Wine | 6–12 months | Up to 18 months |
| Black & Mild Apple | 6–12 months | Up to 18 months |
| Black & Mild Cream | 6–12 months | Up to 18 months |
| Black & Mild Jazz | 6 months | Up to 12 months |
A stale Black and Mild will usually show some obvious signs before you even light it. The tobacco will feel dry and crumbly when you roll the cigarillo between your fingers. The wrapper may crack. When lit, the smoke will taste harsh, bitter, or dusty compared to a fresh product. A cigarillo stored in a dry environment degrades faster than one kept with some ambient humidity.
Unlike premium cigars, Black and Mild products are not typically kept in humidors — they come in sealed packs that provide moderate moisture retention. Once the seal is broken, the freshness window shortens considerably.