One of the most important questions in life is: What temperature should my cooked chicken reach, and how do I get it there? Below, we share an excerpt from the Food52 cookbook Dynamite Chicken that will answer that question.
Do not take too seriously the cooking advice of anyone who says one part of the chicken is better than another part of the chicken. But chicken parts from the same bird taste and work in different ways in recipes. To get the most out of them, you need to cook them at different times and temperatures. Here’s a guide to chicken cooking temps in general, a breakdown on how I like to cook separate chicken parts, and a bunch of different ways you can cook your chicken to get to the result we all want: flavorful, succulent meat.
Many people love to roast a whole chicken, which makes a juicy, flavorful main dish for family meals and gatherings. But it can be hard to tell if something is done if you don’t know the right internal temperature. As a chicken lover and passionate home cook, I’m often asked, “What temperature is a whole roasted chicken done?”
That’s a great question, because roasted chicken tastes great, but food safety is the most important thing. Undercooked chicken can harbor dangerous bacteria. On the flip side, overcooking leads to dry, rubbery meat. To roast chicken perfectly, you need to get it to the right temperature when it’s done.
This huge guide will teach you everything you need to know about roast chicken temperatures, step-by-step cooking methods, common mistakes, and more. It will help you always cook chicken perfectly. Let’s get cooking!.
What is the Safe Internal Temperature for Roast Chicken?
Whole chickens and chicken parts should reach a safe internal temperature of 165°F (74°C) according to the USDA. This will kill any bacteria that might be present. When poultry is cooked to 165°F, it is safe to eat and keeps its flavor and moisture.
For accuracy, use an instant-read thermometer and check the temperature by inserting the probe into the thickest part of the thigh, avoiding the bone. Chicken breasts and wings cook faster than dark meat, so be sure to check multiple areas.
If you are roasting a stuffed chicken, the center of the stuffing must also reach 165°F, so continue cooking until the stuffing hits the target temp.
Why 165°F is the Magic Number
You may be wondering why health organizations specifically recommend 165°F. Here’s the science behind it:
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Kills bacteria – Salmonella and other dangerous pathogens cannot survive at temperatures above 165°F. Hitting this temp guarantees safety.
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Prevents pink poultry – Undercooked chicken may still have a pinkish hue or red juices, indications that bacteria may be present. 165°F cooks the chicken thoroughly.
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Renders collagen – The collagen in chicken connective tissue melts around 160-165°F, allowing the meat to become tender and juicy.
How Long Does it Take to Roast a Chicken to 165°F?
Cooking times vary based on the size of your chicken, oven temperature, and other factors. Here are general timeframes:
- 350°F oven – Approximately 25 minutes per pound
- 375°F oven – Approximately 20 minutes per pound
- 400°F oven – Approximately 15 minutes per pound
- 425°F oven – Approximately 12 minutes per pound
For example, a 4 lb chicken roasted at 375°F would take around 80 minutes. However, an instant-read thermometer is better than relying on time alone. Begin checking temp about 15 minutes early.
Convection ovens and high altitudes also impact cook times. Get to know your oven’s hot and cool spots for the best results.
Step-by-Step Guide to Roasting Chicken to 165°F
Follow these simple steps for perfectly cooked roast chicken every time:
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Prep – Pat the chicken dry, coat with oil or butter, and season both inside and out with salt, pepper, and herbs. Allow it to rest at room temperature for 30 minutes before roasting.
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Preheat – Heat your oven to 350-425°F. Use lower temps if you want slower roasting for ultra tender meat. Go higher for crisper skin.
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Roast – Place chicken breast-side up on a roasting pan fitted with a rack. Baste occasionally with pan juices for added moisture and flavor.
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Check temp – Insert an instant-read thermometer into the thickest part of the thigh, avoiding bone. Verify it reaches 165°F. For stuffed chicken, check the center of the stuffing as well.
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Rest – Let roast chicken rest 15-20 minutes before carving for juicy meat. The temperature will rise 5-10 degrees during this time.
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Carve and enjoy! – Time for the rewarding moment! Carve the chicken and bask in your roasting prowess.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Even seasoned home cooks can occasionally miss the mark on roast chicken. Here are some pitfalls to steer clear of:
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Not using a meat thermometer – This is the number one mistake. Eyeballing doneness leads to under or overcooking. Invest in an instant-read thermometer.
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Forgetting to rest chicken – Skipping resting causes juices to run out of the meat. Always allow chicken to rest 15+ minutes post-oven.
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Overcrowding pan – Chicken needs space for air circulation. Don’t pack multiple birds tightly in one pan.
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Basting too late – Brush chicken with pan juices early and often for superior moisture. Don’t wait until the end.
Roasting Chicken Breasts, Wings, Thighs, and Legs
The 165°F standard also applies to bone-in chicken parts. Here are a few tips:
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Check temperature in the thickest area of each piece, avoiding bone. Irregular shapes cook unevenly.
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Roast bone-side down first for juicier meat, then flip to brown the skin.
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Small or thin parts like wings may cook faster than thighs. Monitor carefully and remove pieces individually as they reach 165°F.
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Consider pounding chicken breasts to an even thickness so they cook through at the same rate.
Takeaways for Juicy, Safe Roast Chicken
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Target an internal temperature of 165°F for safety and ideal texture.
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Use an instant-read thermometer for accuracy. Check in multiple spots.
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Allow 15+ minutes of resting for tender, juicy meat after roasting.
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Avoid common pitfalls like overcrowding, basting too late, and skipping the thermometer.
Now that you’re armed with expert knowledge on temperatures and techniques, it’s time to enjoy your own juicy, golden roast chicken masterpieces!
But First, Chicken Safety
I’ve cooked hundreds of chickens in my life, and I have never gotten salmonella poisoning. Cross-contamination is probably the main cause of salmonella. This happens when you use a cutting board that was used to cut chicken for something else without cleaning it first. Only cooking kills salmonella, and the government says to cook food to 165°F (75°C) to instantly pasteurize it. Yet, when I cook chicken breasts, I aim for temperatures around 150°F (65°C) and try to keep them there for a few minutes. This extra time at temp also leads to pasteurization, so your chicken breasts are safe to eat and won’t dry out or get a little tough, like at 165°F (75°C)—but more on this below.
Different Cooks for Different Cuts
Chicken breasts are lean, texturally very consistent when cooked properly, and great for quick-cooking recipes. But they don’t have as much collagen and gelatin as the legs do, so if you cook them past about 150°F (65°C), they will dry out and become rubbery. Leave them on the bone if you want to give yourself a buffer on cook time, as this will help preserve moisture. Or cut them small and don’t worry about perfection, as they can add great texture where a tender chicken leg can get lost. I like to sauté or gently poach chicken breasts. Shop the Story.
Chicken legs, on the other hand, excel when cooked for a long time. The fat renders out and they get that juicy, shreddable, pulled-pork appeal. Use chicken legs when a recipe tells you to put the chicken in at the beginning and the dish has a total cooking time of 40 minutes. I find drumsticks and thighs to be pretty interchangeable, as they’re both dark meat wrapped around a bone. The thigh is meatier, and the drumstick has a little more tendon action that you’ll want to remove, but that is easy to do once the drumstick is cooked.
Chicken wings are delicious! They have a high skin-to-meat ratio, which lends itself to crispy roasted or fried preparations or nice charring on the grill. And they tend to be cheap and plentiful. That said, if you buy a whole chicken to cook for a few meals, it’s probably not worth the effort of making just two Buffalo wings. Instead, you can put them in a pot with other chicken parts to make stock, and then they can become any number of things in spirit.
Now, if we’re talking about boneless, skinless chicken, breast and thigh meat are relatively interchangeable. Pounded-out, quick-cooking recipes like chicken schnitzel are great for breasts, whereas the long marinade and lengthier cook of chicken spiedies, while delicious with breasts, go even better with juicier thighs. I wouldn’t necessarily say that the thighs have more flavor, but they have a slightly gamier profile worth keeping in mind.
To roast a 3- to 4-pound (1.4 to 1.8kg) chicken, heat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Check the chicken’s cavity for any bag of neck bones and giblets that might be hanging out in there, removing it if there is one. Then, season the chicken all over with plenty of kosher salt (so the salt can really make its way into the skin and meat), rub extra-virgin olive oil or vegetable oil on the skin (add more salt if it rubs off with the oil), put the chicken in a large roasting pan or on a sheet pan, and cook it in the oven for an hour. If the skin doesn’t get dark enough while roasting, put the chicken under the broiler for a couple of minutes longer. If the chicken needs a little more than an hour to be done, give it an hour and 10 minutes and take note for next time.
All this said: I find it troublesome to gauge a whole-roasted chicken’s doneness using temperature because I have never figured out the correct place to stick a thermometer— when I put it in the breast, the thickest part of the chicken, either it will say 125°F (52°C) and the chicken is super overcooked, or it will say 175°F (80°C) and the chicken is still a little raw. And the juice thing? The juice coming out of a chicken is never clear, at 165°F (75°C) or otherwise. There is just too much biology going on in there. So I say wiggle the leg. Does it feel loose? Is the skin pulling back from the joint where the foot would have been attached? After an hour of cooking, is the skin super dark or is it still a little pale?
Once I’m ready to pull the chicken from the oven, I let it rest for 10 minutes and then slice into the thickest part—just to the side of the breastbone. If the meat is white and not pink, then we win! If it’s not, it’s rested only 10 minutes and the oven won’t take long to heat back up, so back in it goes. I realize that cookbook authors and chefs, of which I am a strange combo, are supposed to give much more precise answers than that, but I am here to tell you guys the truth. And once you get to know how long it takes to cook a 4-pound (1.8kg) chicken at 400°F (200°C) in your oven, then you won’t even need to think about thermometers or juices anymore!
Roasting bone-in, skin-on chicken parts is just like roasting a whole chicken! Heat the oven to 400°F (200°C), season the parts generously with kosher salt, rub with oil, and roast. The breasts should be done in 30 minutes and the legs in 45, so pull them out accordingly—the meat should be fully white in the middle, and not even a little pink. If the parts don’t get brown on the outside, broil them for a few minutes to get extra-crispy and delightful skin.
Poaching chicken is quick and easy and leaves you with super tender meat and a little bit of flavorful stock to use for other things. Put four boneless chicken pieces (about 2 pounds, or 900g) in a pot and just barely cover them with water (about 11 ⁄ 2 quarts, or 1.4L). Add 11 ⁄ 2 teaspoons of kosher salt. Over medium-high heat, bring the water up to a light boil, turn the heat to low, and gently simmer the chicken in the broth until it is just cooked, 7 to 10 minutes. You can add onions, garlic, herbs—whatever you like—but those flavors will shine through more in the resulting broth than in the chicken itself.
Sautéing chicken is the fastest and arguably most delicious way to cook it, because you can get the most intense caramelization in a very short time. Simply heat a sauté pan on high heat with a little vegetable or extra-virgin olive oil until smoking, season chicken well with kosher salt, and place it in the pan, skin-side down (if working with skin-on chicken). Cook the chicken on that side without disturbing it until it is cooked almost all of the way through—5 to 7 minutes for a boneless breast, 18 to 20 minutes for a bone-in breast, and 28 to 30 minutes for thighs or drumsticks—lowering the heat to medium after 5 to 7 minutes for the bone-in pieces. It can be tricky to tell when a bone-in chicken breast is almost cooked, so peek in between the breast and tenderloin and cook it until there’s only a little pink left. Then flip and cook it for another minute or two until there is no more pink.
Broiling chicken is fun and exciting—you get crispy skin and tender meat in an impossibly short time. That said, it’s a pretty aggressive way to cook chicken, so I recommend you keep an eye on it because things happen pretty quickly. Season bone-in, skin-on chicken parts with kosher salt, rub the skin with vegetable or olive oil, put the pieces under the broiler, and flip them pretty regularly so that they don’t burn— every 3 or 4 minutes. Depending on the size and thickness of your chicken, and the seriousness of your broiler, the parts should take between 8 and 12 minutes (or 25 to 30 for bigger pieces) to cook. To see if they’re cooked, check the thickest part of the meat—if it’s pink, it needs some more time, and if it’s white throughout, it’s fully cooked.
Basically any of the preceding cooking preparations make good chicken for shredding, but poaching and broiling are the fastest and easiest ways to get there. First, cook the chicken in any of the ways mentioned. Then, to shred, transfer the cooked chicken to a plate or cutting board and let it cool until it can be handled easily, or ideally to room temperature, 10 to 20 minutes. Use your hands to pull the meat off of the bones and then shred it into small pieces; or using two forks, hold the chicken steady with one fork and scrape the chicken off the bone with the tines of the other to shred. Save or freeze any skin, bones, fat, or cartilage for stock (unless you like those things to be in your chicken salad), and you’re ready to use the delicious shredded meat. Whats your favorite chicken-cooking method? Let us know in the comments.
The Dynamite Chicken cookbook is here! Get ready for 60 brand-new ways to love your favorite bird. Inside this clever collection by Food52 and chef Tyler Kord, youll find everything from lightning-quick weeknight dinners to the coziest of comfort foods.
What is the Safe Temperature to Cook Chicken to?
FAQ
Is chicken done at 165 or 180?
Chicken is typically cooked to an internal temperature of 165°F (74°C). This temperature ensures that any harmful bacteria like Salmonella are killed, making the chicken safe to eat.
What temperature should a whole roasted chicken be when it’s done?
All poultry should reach a safe minimum internal temperature of 165 °F (73. 9 °C) as measured with a food thermometer. A whole chicken must reach this temperature throughout the bird.
What temperature is a whole rotisserie chicken done?
Once the Rotisserie Chicken is done, a meat thermometer should register at 165 degrees F and the juices should run clean. Remember that the cooking time will need to be changed if your chickens are bigger or smaller, so it’s best to have a meat thermometer to make sure they’re done.
Is 180 too much for chicken?
The temperature of the chicken thigh and leg should be at least 170°F (77°C). Dark meat (leg and thigh meat) is safe at 165°F, but it should be cooked to a temperature of at least 170°F (77°C). The chicken’s legs are actively worked muscles, and the meat is tougher because of it.