Chicken is done when the thickest part reaches 165°F (74°C) on an instant-read thermometer.
Chicken tricks people because looks lie. A breast can turn white before it’s safe. A thigh can look done while meat near the bone still hasn’t hit the right number. The fix is simple: cook to temperature, not to color.
This page gives you the safety target, shows where to measure it, and explains why different cuts feel tender at different temperatures. You’ll also get a practical pull-and-rest plan so chicken stays moist, not stringy.
At What Temperature Do You Cook Chicken? With A Clear Safety Target
The safety target for chicken is 165°F (74°C) in the thickest part of the meat. That minimum shows up across major food-safety authorities. The USDA FSIS safe temperature chart lists poultry at 165°F, and the CDC’s chicken food-safety page tells cooks to use a thermometer and reach 165°F.
In Canada, you’ll see the same minimum written as 74°C (165°F). Health Canada’s safe cooking temperatures lists poultry targets in both units.
Once you lock in that finish temperature, the real cooking game is landing on it without overshooting. That’s where pull temperature, rest time, and cut choice come in.
Why Temperature Beats Color
Color shifts with the bird, freezing, brining, and cooking method. Smoked chicken can stay pink near the bone. Dark meat can hold a rosy tint longer than breast meat. A thermometer gives you one clear number to trust.
What “Thickest Part” Means
It’s the slowest-heating area you plan to eat. On a breast, that’s the center of the thick end. On a thigh, it’s the meaty portion away from the bone. On a whole bird, check both the breast and the inner thigh because they don’t always finish together.
How To Measure Chicken Temperature Without Guesswork
You don’t need fancy equipment. A basic instant-read digital thermometer is enough if you place it well and measure at the right moment.
Probe Placement That Gives A True Reading
- Insert the probe from the side so the tip lands in the center of the meat.
- Keep the tip off bone, which can read hotter than the meat.
- Keep the tip off the pan or grill grates.
Timing That Prevents Overshooting
Start checking before you think the chicken is done, then recheck every minute or two. The last few degrees can arrive fast, especially on thin pieces and on high heat.
What Changes By Cut: Breasts, Thighs, Wings, Ground Chicken
All chicken must hit a safe internal temperature. Taste and texture still vary by cut. Breast meat is lean and tightens quickly. Thighs and drumsticks have more fat and connective tissue, so they stay pleasant at higher temperatures.
Breasts: Pull A Bit Early, Then Rest
Breasts dry out when you push well past 165°F. A simple approach is to pull thick breasts a few degrees under your finish target, then let carryover heat finish the job during a short rest.
Thighs And Drumsticks: Extra Heat Can Help Texture
Dark meat often feels better above the safety minimum because extra heat softens connective tissue. If a thigh feels chewy near the joint at 165°F, keep cooking until it loosens up.
Wings: Crisp Skin Takes Heat
Wings cook fast. They also need enough heat and time for fat to render so skin turns crisp. Check temperature in the meaty section near the joint.
Ground Chicken: Measure The Center
Grinding spreads bacteria through the mixture. Patties can stay a bit pink even when safe, or turn brown early when undercooked. The center temperature is what counts.
Pull Temps, Resting, And Carryover Heat
Carryover heat is the temperature rise after you remove chicken from the heat source. It’s stronger with thick pieces and high-heat cooking. Resting also keeps juices from rushing out the moment you slice.
Rest Times That Work In Real Kitchens
- Boneless breasts: 5 minutes
- Bone-in parts: 5–10 minutes
- Whole chicken: 15–20 minutes
For crisp skin, don’t wrap tightly in foil. A loose tent is fine if you want to keep heat in without steaming the surface.
Temperature Targets By Dish And Cut
The table below gives practical targets that respect the 165°F (74°C) finish while aiming for good texture. Use it as a starting point, then adjust based on thickness and cooking method.
| Chicken Type | Pull Temp | Finish And Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Boneless breast (thick) | 160°F (71°C) | Rest 5 minutes to reach 165°F (74°C) |
| Boneless breast (thin cutlets) | 165°F (74°C) | Little carryover; pull at target |
| Bone-in breast | 162°F (72°C) | Rest 5–10 minutes; keep probe off bone |
| Thighs and drumsticks | 170°F (77°C) | Texture often improves at 175–185°F (79–85°C) |
| Wings | 175°F (79°C) | Higher heat helps crisp skin |
| Ground chicken patties | 165°F (74°C) | Measure center; color can mislead |
| Stuffed chicken breast | 165°F (74°C) | Check both stuffing and meat center |
| Whole chicken | 165°F (74°C) | Check breast and inner thigh; rest 15–20 minutes |
Cooking Methods That Land On The Right Number
Method changes how fast the outside heats compared with the center. Use a method that fits your cut, then start checking temperature before you think you need to.
Pan-sear Then Oven-finish
This works well for boneless breasts. Sear in a hot pan until you get color, then move the pan to the oven to finish more gently. Check the thick end early, pull at your target, then rest.
Sheet-pan Roasting For Parts
For thighs, drumsticks, and wings, roast on a rimmed sheet pan with space between pieces so hot air can circulate. Crowding traps steam and softens skin. Probe the thickest meaty section, not the bone line.
Two-zone Grilling
Set one side of the grill hot and the other side cooler. Brown over high heat, then slide chicken to the cooler side to finish to temperature without scorching the outside.
Handling Steps That Keep Chicken Safe After Cooking
Temperature is the main safety step, yet handling matters too. The CDC warns that raw chicken can carry germs and that washing raw chicken spreads them around the sink area. Cook it instead of rinsing it, and keep raw juices away from ready-to-eat foods. CDC chicken handling advice spells out these points.
If you cook for parties or meal prep, pay attention to holding and cooling. Many local health rules are built from the FDA’s model Food Code, which lays out temperature controls for cooking, holding, and cooling in retail food settings. FDA Food Code 2022 (PDF) is the source document many jurisdictions reference.
- Use one plate for raw chicken and a fresh plate for cooked chicken.
- Wash boards, knives, and hands after touching raw chicken.
- Cool leftovers in shallow containers so the center cools faster.
Why Chicken Dries Out And How To Fix It
Dry chicken usually comes from a small mismatch between cut, heat, and timing. Use this table to diagnose what happened, then change one thing next time.
| What You Notice | Likely Cause | Next Time |
|---|---|---|
| Breast feels chalky | Cooked well past 165°F | Pull at 160–162°F, rest 5 minutes |
| Juices flood the board | Sliced with no rest | Rest 5–10 minutes before cutting |
| Outside is dark, center is low temp | Heat too high for thickness | Finish on gentler heat after browning |
| Thigh is chewy near the joint | Stopped at the safety minimum | Cook thighs closer to 175–185°F for texture |
| Skin is pale and rubbery | Surface stayed wet or crowded pan | Pat dry, space pieces out, use higher heat |
| Wings are safe but soft | Not enough heat for rendering | Roast hotter or finish with a brief high-heat step |
| Center is safe, edges are dry | Uneven thickness | Flatten thick breasts or pick even-sized pieces |
Two Prep Moves That Pay Off
These are small steps, yet they make temperature control easier and results steadier.
Salt Early When You Can
Salting chicken 30–60 minutes before cooking gives salt time to dissolve on the surface. That helps seasoning stick and can improve juiciness once the meat rests.
Make Thickness Even
Boneless breasts often have a thick end and a thin end. A quick pound to even thickness helps the whole piece hit the target temperature at the same time, so you’re not forced to overcook one end to save the other.
Safe Chicken, Better Results
Cook chicken to 165°F (74°C) in the thickest part, then rest it. Use pull temperature for thick breasts, and don’t be shy about cooking thighs past the minimum for a softer bite. Once you start checking internal temperature as a habit, chicken stops being a guessing game.
References & Sources
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Safe Minimum Internal Temperature Chart.”Lists the minimum internal temperature for poultry and other foods.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Chicken and Food Poisoning.”States the 165°F internal temperature target and handling steps that reduce foodborne illness risk.
- Health Canada.“Safe cooking temperatures.”Provides Canadian safe internal cooking temperatures for poultry and other foods.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Food Code 2022: Full Document.”Model code that outlines cooking, holding, and cooling temperature controls in retail food settings.
