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I wanted to get a better understanding of what the bounty system was and how it worked so I read the Help Page for bounties.

It says "there is a "grace period" of 24 hours to manually award the bounty".

What purpose does this "grace period" serve? Is it different to the original 7 days you have to award the bounty? Do you get other options for the bounty in these 24 hours?

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    Simply so that, once the bounty period has ended, you can take the time to choose the best answer, rather than needing to be online as the last minutes count down waiting for an even better answer like this was an eBay auction.
    – jonrsharpe
    May 26, 2016 at 6:19
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    @RobertLongson: You can manually award a bounty at any time after the first 48 hours; however, as jonrsharpe mentions, this may not be ideal, given the possibility of late-arriving better answers. May 26, 2016 at 6:23
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    It was added in 2011 after a lot of whi^H^H^Hvalued feedback from the community. Not so sure the "it can't hurt" assumption was accurate, the odds today you'll get an answer in less than 6 days are rather low. Good Q+A does require the active participation of the questioner, at least a few back-and-forths to arrive at the correct solution. But bounties are not exactly intended to produce good Q+A, they merely produce A's. May 26, 2016 at 8:38
  • Someone answered my question after the grace period had expired. Can I file an appeal to award that person the bounty?
    – FractalBob
    Oct 4, 2019 at 13:21

1 Answer 1

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What purpose does this "grace period" serve?

After the bounty ends, there is a grace period of 24 hours to manually award the bounty.

Is it different to the original 7 days you have to award the bounty?

No, it gives you some extra time to choose the best answer.

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