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You are here: Home / Helpful Kitchen Tips / Meat Temperature Guide: Safe Internal Temps for Every Protein

Meat Temperature Guide: Safe Internal Temps for Every Protein

Last Updated June 26, 2026

The quick answer

Use 165°F for all poultry, 145°F for whole cuts of beef, pork, and lamb (with a 3-minute rest), and 160°F for ground meat. Fish is done at 145°F. These are USDA safe minimums — for preferred doneness in beef, most cooks target 130–135°F for medium-rare regardless of official guidance.

A meat thermometer is the single most reliable way to know whether meat is safe to eat and cooked to the texture you want. Timing and colour are unreliable guides. Temperature is not. This guide gives you the numbers you actually need, for every protein, with the context to use them confidently. If you need a thermometer recommendation, our tested guide to the best Bluetooth meat thermometers covers the top five picks.

Internal temperatures are measured at the thickest part of the meat, away from bone, fat, and the pan. Bone conducts heat differently from muscle; measuring near bone gives a false reading.


Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Safe internal temperatures by protein
  • Beef doneness guide
  • Pork and lamb doneness
  • Fish and seafood
  • Low-and-slow: smoking temperatures
  • Common mistakes
  • Related guides

Safe internal temperatures by protein

ProteinUSDA Safe MinimumRest TimeNotes
Chicken & turkey (whole)165°F (74°C)None requiredWhite and dark meat; juices should run clear
Chicken breast (boneless)165°F (74°C)None requiredPull at 160°F — carries over to 165°F while resting
Ground chicken / turkey165°F (74°C)None requiredNo carry-over allowance for ground poultry
Beef, pork, lamb — whole cuts145°F (63°C)3 minutesSteaks, roasts, chops — see doneness guide below
Ground beef / pork / lamb160°F (71°C)None requiredBurgers, meatballs, meatloaf
Pork — whole cuts145°F (63°C)3 minutesNow same as beef since USDA revision; slight pink is safe
Fish & shellfish145°F (63°C)None requiredFlesh should be opaque and flake easily
Tuna / salmon (sushi-grade)OptionalNone requiredMany chefs target 125°F for medium; preference-based
Eggs / egg dishes160°F (71°C)None requiredQuiche, frittata, casseroles
Stuffing (inside bird)165°F (74°C)None requiredMust reach safe temp independently of bird
Leftovers / reheated food165°F (74°C)None requiredAll reheated food to this temperature
Important: The 3-minute rest time for whole cuts is part of the USDA safety standard, not optional. During rest, the temperature continues to rise and pathogens are destroyed by sustained heat. For steaks: tent with foil, rest 3–5 minutes before cutting.

Beef doneness guide

The USDA safe minimum for beef whole cuts is 145°F, but most cooks target lower internal temperatures based on preferred doneness. Medium-rare beef at 130–135°F is safe for whole cuts because the surface (where bacteria live) reaches much higher temperatures during searing. Ground beef is different — bacteria are mixed throughout, which is why 160°F is required.

DonenessPull TempFinal Temp (after rest)Texture
Rare120–125°F125–130°FVery red centre, soft, juicy
Medium-rare (most popular)125–130°F130–135°FRed-pink centre, tender, maximum juiciness
Medium135–140°F140–145°FPink centre, firmer, less juicy
Medium-well145–150°F150–155°FSlight pink, noticeably firmer
Well done155°F+160°F+No pink, firm, less forgiving of poor cuts

Pull the meat from the heat 5–10°F below your target. Carry-over cooking (the temperature rise during resting) accounts for the difference. Thick cuts (over 1.5 inches) carry over more than thin ones.


Pork and lamb doneness

The USDA updated its pork guidelines in 2011 to align with beef: 145°F with a 3-minute rest. This means properly cooked pork can be slightly pink in the centre — something many home cooks were incorrectly taught to avoid. The pink colour at 145°F is safe. Overcooked, grey, dry pork is not a sign of safety; it is a sign of overcooking.

ProteinTarget TempNotes
Pork loin / tenderloin145°F (63°C)Slight pink at centre is fine and preferred
Pork chops145°F (63°C)3-minute rest; carry-over applies
Pulled pork (shoulder)195–205°F (91–96°C)High temp needed for collagen breakdown and pull texture
Lamb chops / rack130–145°F (54–63°C)Personal preference; medium-rare at 130–135°F is most common
Leg of lamb (whole)145°F (63°C)Or 130–135°F for pink centre — preference-based

Fish and seafood

Fish is done at 145°F per USDA guidelines, but the practical test is whether the flesh is opaque and flakes easily with a fork. Fish overcooks quickly — the window between underdone and overdone is narrow. A thermometer is more valuable for fish than for almost any other protein because the visual cues are unreliable until it is already too late.

SeafoodTarget TempNotes
Salmon125–145°F125°F for silky/medium; 145°F for fully cooked
White fish (cod, halibut, tilapia)145°F (63°C)Flakes easily; opaque throughout
Tuna steak125–130°FSashimi-grade; higher if preferred well-done
Shrimp120°F (49°C) or pink/opaqueOvercooked shrimp becomes rubbery instantly
Scallops130°F (54°C)Translucent centre acceptable; over 145°F is rubbery

Low-and-slow: smoking temperatures

Smoking and low-and-slow cooking target much higher final temperatures than standard roasting. The goal is collagen breakdown — turning tough connective tissue into gelatin — which requires sustained heat above 190°F for an extended period. This is why brisket, pulled pork, and ribs are cooked well beyond the 145°F safety minimum.

ProteinTarget TempApproximate Time at 225°F
Brisket (flat + point)195–205°F (91–96°C)12–18 hours
Pulled pork (shoulder / butt)195–205°F (91–96°C)10–14 hours
Ribs (spare or baby back)190–203°F (88–95°C)5–6 hours (3-2-1 method)
Chicken whole165°F (74°C)3–4 hours
Turkey whole165°F (74°C)6–8 hours
Beef short ribs200–205°F (93–96°C)8–10 hours
Lamb shoulder195–200°F (91–93°C)8–10 hours

Common mistakes

Checking temperature too early. The internal temperature rises slowly at first, then stalls (especially in large cuts and brisket — this is the ‘stall’ at around 160–170°F), then rises again. Check at the expected time but don’t panic if it’s lower than expected.

Measuring near bone. Bone conducts heat differently. Always measure in the deepest part of the muscle, at least half an inch from any bone.

Not accounting for carry-over. Pull meat earlier than your target. A 2-inch thick steak can rise 10°F during a 5-minute rest. A large roast can rise 15°F or more.

Using a thermometer with a slow response time. A thermometer that takes 20 seconds to register gives you a reading that reflects where the temperature was, not where it is. Faster is better for thin cuts. For long cooks and roasts, response time matters less.

Testing in one spot only. Temperature varies across a piece of meat. Check the thickest point and avoid the centre of any cavity. For large birds, check both the breast and the innermost thigh — they finish at different times.


Related guides

Related: Best Bluetooth Meat Thermometer 2026
Related: MEATER Plus vs MEATER Pro Duo
Related: How to Calibrate a Meat Thermometer
Related: Guide to Buying Outdoor Cooking Equipment

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Glenn

About Glenn

Glenn is the founder of Kitchenware Compare and has spent years researching, testing, and reviewing kitchen appliances, cookware, and gadgets. A lifelong home cook raised in a family that treated every meal as an occasion, Glenn started this site to cut through the noise of conflicting product reviews and give readers honest, practical guidance. When he is not testing the latest air fryer or digging into the specs of a new espresso machine, he can usually be found experimenting with new recipes or hunting for the perfect cast iron skillet at a flea market.

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