**There are no data** that I am aware of that suggests that a 48 hour delay (or any other delay, for that matter) is optimal. The statistics at the top of the page on SO (and all other SE sites that I checked) show that **the questions with bounties are a minor fraction of all questions**. This suggests that removing the delay for all bounties, or for large bounties, or for bounties posted by users with at least X rep, will have little effect on the rest of the questions. **The best way to answer this question is by doing experiments** to measure the positive and negative effects of varying the bounty delay. Without the data, this conversation is limited to the exchange of opinions and case studies (with limited *N*). Possible effects/metrics to measure: - **Quality of the bountied questions and answers**: question score, answer score, top answer score, % questions with accepted answers, % questions with no answers). - **Percent questions voted to close or flagged** (as off topic, as very low quality, for moderator intervention). - **Number of views per question for non-bountied questions** (to measure the degree to which attention is drained from non-bountied questions to bountied ones). **FAQs:** > An experiment would take a lot of work and risks introducing bugs. Why do it? The current system uses a somewhat arbitrary delay of 48 hours for all users. Until these 2 days pass, all questions are considered equal in the sense that answering any of them, the rep per upvote/downvote and accepted answer is the same across all questions. **But all questions are not created equal!** Some are harder than others and would just sit there for 2 days doing nothing, because of the sheer effort required to answer them.