Most tubes will drift at first, until the cathode is fully formed. After some tens (or occasionally hundreds) of hours, it's said to be adequate to check the bias once a year. Even used tubes need some initial break-in time, if they have been unused for many years.
The variation in time to fully stabilize is large; I've heard from 10 to 200 hours. It seems to be correlated with the longevity of the cathode. As I recall, trace amounts of silicon in the "melt" of the cathode allow faster stabilization but shorten life. Higher purity cathode alloys will allow longer life, but the material is costly and the initial forming of the cathode at the factory takes much longer, so they are more expensive.