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Meat Temperature Chart & Doneness Guide

Last updated: June 2, 2026

🌡️ Meat Internal Temperature Chart

USDA safe cooking temperatures for chicken, beef, pork, fish, and lamb. Enter your thermometer reading below to check doneness in seconds.

USDA Guidelines °F & °C Free

🔍 Is my food done? Check it here.

Select your meat type, enter the temperature your thermometer reads, and get an instant safety verdict.

At-a-glance safe temperatures
🍗
Chicken & Turkey
165°F
(74°C)
🥩
Beef Steak (min)
145°F
(63°C) + 3 min rest
🍔
Ground Beef
160°F
(71°C)
🐷
Pork (min)
145°F
(63°C) + 3 min rest
🐟
Fish & Seafood
145°F
(63°C)
🍳
Leftovers
165°F
(74°C)
What Temperature Is My Meat Done?

Direct answers to the most searched meat temperature questions — each one USDA-verified.

What temperature is chicken done?

Chicken must reach 165°F (74°C) internal temperature to be safe — no exceptions, no undercooking. This applies to every cut: breast, thighs, wings, drumsticks, and ground chicken. There is no safe pink chicken. Check the thickest part of the meat, away from the bone. Juices running clear is a secondary sign — only a thermometer is definitive.

What temperature is beef steak done?

Steak doneness by internal temperature: Rare = 125°F, Medium-rare = 135°F, Medium = 145°F (USDA minimum), Medium-well = 150°F, Well-done = 160°F. Always let steaks rest 3–5 minutes after cooking — temperature rises 5°F during rest, so pull the steak 5°F early for your exact target. Ground beef must always reach 160°F regardless of color.

What temperature is pork done?

Pork chops, tenderloin, and roasts are done at 145°F (63°C), followed by a 3-minute rest. Ground pork and sausage must reach 160°F. In 2011 the USDA lowered the safe whole-muscle pork temperature from 160°F to 145°F — so pork that is slightly pink inside at 145°F is now completely safe. Color is not a reliable indicator; only a thermometer is accurate.

What temperature is fish done?

Fish is done at 145°F (63°C) internal temperature — when it flakes easily with a fork and the flesh is opaque throughout. Shrimp and lobster are done when they reach 145°F and turn opaque. Scallops are done when the center turns opaque, around 125–130°F for best texture (USDA minimum is 145°F). Clams, oysters, and mussels are done when their shells open wide.

What temperature is turkey done?

Turkey must reach 165°F (74°C) in the thickest part of the thigh, closest to the joint — not in the breast, which cooks faster and reaches 165°F first. The stuffing inside a whole turkey must also reach 165°F, even after the bird is done. Let a whole turkey rest 30 minutes before carving — it continues to cook and the juices redistribute.

🥩 Beef Steak Doneness Guide

Rare125°FCool red center
Med-Rare135°FWarm red center
Medium145°FPink center (USDA min)
Med-Well150°FSlight pink
Well Done160°FNo pink

Always let steaks and roasts rest 3–5 minutes after cooking — the temperature rises another 5°F as it rests. Ground beef must always reach 160°F regardless of color.

Complete Meat Temperature Reference Chart (USDA 2024)

All temperatures are in Fahrenheit (°F). Celsius equivalents are shown in parentheses. Source: USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service guidelines.

🍗 Chicken & Poultry
CutMin Temp (°F)Min Temp (°C)Rest TimeNotes
Chicken breast (boneless)165°F74°C3 minCheck thickest part. Juices run clear.
Chicken thighs (boneless)165°F74°C3 minThighs stay juiciest cooked to 175°F+.
Chicken thighs (bone-in)165°F74°C3 minInsert thermometer away from bone.
Chicken wings165°F74°CCheck thick section of wing.
Whole chicken165°F74°C10–15 minCheck inner thigh near joint.
Ground chicken / turkey165°F74°CHigher than ground beef — poultry safety rule.
Turkey (whole)165°F74°C30 minCheck thigh + thickest part of breast.
Turkey breast165°F74°C10 minInsert from side into thickest part.
Duck165°F74°C5 minUSDA same as all poultry.
🥩 Beef
Doneness / CutTemp (°F)Temp (°C)Rest TimeNotes
Beef steak — Rare125°F52°C3 minBelow USDA min. Consumer choice for whole-muscle cuts only.
Beef steak — Medium-Rare135°F57°C3 minBelow USDA min. Widely accepted for whole-muscle cuts.
Beef steak — Medium145°F63°C3 minUSDA minimum for steaks & roasts.
Beef steak — Medium-Well150°F66°C3 minSlight pink in center.
Beef steak — Well-Done160°F71°C3 minNo pink. May be drier.
Ground beef / Burgers160°F71°CUSDA: 160°F always — no undercooking ground beef.
Beef roast145°F63°C5–10 minUSDA minimum. Let rest before slicing.
Meatballs160°F71°CGround beef rules apply.
Hot dogs (reheating)165°F74°CPre-cooked — reheat to steaming hot.
🐷 Pork
CutMin Temp (°F)Min Temp (°C)Rest TimeNotes
Pork chops145°F63°C3 minSlight pink = safe since USDA 2011 update.
Pork tenderloin145°F63°C3 minCheck thickest section. Most tender at 145°F.
Pork roast / loin145°F63°C5 minRest before slicing.
Pork ribs145°F63°CFor fall-off-bone texture: aim for 190–200°F.
Ham (fresh)145°F63°C3 minCheck thickest part away from bone.
Ham (pre-cooked, reheating)140°F60°CAlready fully cooked — just reheat.
Ground pork / Sausage160°F71°CSame as ground beef — 160°F, no exceptions.
Bacon145°F63°CCook until crispy to preference. Use visual cue.
🐟 Fish & Seafood
TypeMin Temp (°F)Min Temp (°C)Visual DonenessNotes
Fish (all — salmon, tilapia, cod…)145°F63°CFlakes easily with forkFlesh turns opaque. Insert thermometer from side.
Shrimp145°F63°CPink and C-shapedIf curled into an O = overcooked.
Lobster / Crab145°F63°COpaque white fleshShell turns bright red.
Scallops125°F52°COpaque, slightly firmBest texture at 125–130°F. USDA min 145°F.
Clams / Oysters / MusselsShells open wideDiscard any that don’t open after cooking.
🐑 Lamb
Doneness / CutTemp (°F)Temp (°C)Rest TimeNotes
Lamb chops / roast — Medium-Rare135°F57°C3 minBelow USDA min. Widely consumed for whole-muscle lamb.
Lamb chops / roast — Medium (USDA min)145°F63°C3 minUSDA minimum for lamb chops and roasts.
Ground lamb160°F71°CSame rule as ground beef.
♻️ Leftovers & Reheating
FoodReheat Temp (°F)Reheat Temp (°C)Notes
All leftovers (any meat)165°F74°CUSDA standard for all reheated foods.
Casseroles & mixed dishes165°F74°CCheck center of the dish.
Stuffing (cooked inside bird)165°F74°CEven when bird itself is done, stuffing may lag behind.

🌡️ How to use a meat thermometer correctly

  1. Insert the probe into the thickest part of the meat — not touching bone, fat, or gristle.
  2. For whole poultry, check the inner thigh near the joint — it’s the last part to reach safe temp.
  3. For roasts, insert the probe from the side so it reaches the true center.
  4. Wait 15–20 seconds for an instant-read thermometer to stabilize. Digital thermometers are faster and more accurate than dial types.
  5. Check multiple spots on large cuts. The lowest reading is the one that matters.
  6. After cooking, let meat rest before slicing — temperature continues to rise 5–10°F during rest. Remove from heat slightly early for roasts.

Frequently Asked Questions

Meat temperatures, food safety, and doneness explained.

What temperature is chicken done?+
Chicken must reach 165°F (74°C) to be safe — all cuts, no exceptions. Breast, thighs, wings, drumsticks, and ground chicken all require 165°F. Check the thickest part, away from bone. Juices should run clear.
What should steak internal temperature be?+
Rare: 125°F, Medium-rare: 135°F, Medium: 145°F (USDA minimum), Medium-well: 150°F, Well-done: 160°F. Always let steaks rest 3–5 minutes after cooking — temperature rises another 5°F during rest. Ground beef must always reach 160°F.
What temperature is pork done?+
Pork chops, tenderloin, and roasts are done at 145°F (63°C), followed by a 3-minute rest. Ground pork must reach 160°F. Since 2011 the USDA lowered safe whole pork from 160°F to 145°F — pork at 145°F may be slightly pink inside, and that is now considered safe.
Can I eat pink pork?+
Yes. Since 2011, the USDA confirmed that pork cooked to 145°F is safe even if slightly pink inside. Color alone is not a reliable indicator of doneness — only a thermometer is accurate. Ground pork must still reach 160°F.
What temperature is fish done?+
Fish is safe at 145°F (63°C), or when it flakes easily with a fork and the flesh is opaque throughout. Shrimp are done when pink, opaque, and C-shaped. Scallops are done when the center turns opaque (about 125–130°F for best texture).
Is medium-rare beef safe?+
For whole-muscle steak cuts (not ground), medium-rare (135°F) is widely considered acceptable because the surface — where bacteria lives — is seared at high heat. The USDA minimum for steaks is 145°F. Ground beef must always reach 160°F because grinding mixes surface bacteria throughout the meat.
How do I use a meat thermometer correctly?+
Insert the probe into the thickest part of the meat, away from bone, fat, or gristle. For poultry, check the inner thigh near the joint. Wait 15–20 seconds for the reading to stabilize. Check multiple spots on large cuts — the lowest reading is what matters for safety.

All temperatures follow USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) guidelines. Always use a calibrated instant-read meat thermometer for accurate readings — color, texture, and juices are not reliable indicators for food safety. The only exception is shellfish (clams, oysters, mussels) where the USDA guideline is “cook until shells open wide.”