Meat Temperature Chart: The Complete Guide to Internal Temps for Every Cut
Whether you're grilling a ribeye, smoking a brisket, or roasting a whole chicken, internal temperature is the only reliable way to know when your meat is done. Not time. Not color. Not "the poke test." Temperature.
This guide covers every major protein — beef, pork, poultry, lamb, seafood, and ground meats — with USDA-safe minimums, recommended pull temperatures, and rest times so you hit your target doneness every single time.
Pro tip: A wireless meat thermometer like the CulinaMeter™ lets you monitor internal temp in real time without opening the grill or oven — so you never miss the perfect pull window.
How to Use This Chart
Two important concepts before we get into the numbers:
Pull temperature vs. final temperature. Meat continues cooking after you remove it from heat. This is called carryover cooking. For thick cuts like roasts and whole birds, the internal temp can rise 5–10°F during rest. The temperatures below include both the pull temp (when to remove from heat) and the target temp (final internal temperature after resting).
Where to measure. Always insert your thermometer probe into the thickest part of the meat, away from bone, fat, or gristle. Bone conducts heat faster than muscle, so measuring near bone gives a falsely high reading. With a dual-sensor probe like the CulinaMeter, you can track both the internal meat temperature and ambient cooking environment simultaneously.
Beef Temperature Chart
| Doneness | Pull Temp | Final Temp | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare | 120°F / 49°C | 125°F / 52°C | Cool red center, very soft |
| Medium-Rare | 128°F / 53°C | 135°F / 57°C | Warm red center, firm exterior |
| Medium | 135°F / 57°C | 145°F / 63°C | Warm pink center, firmer texture |
| Medium-Well | 145°F / 63°C | 155°F / 68°C | Slightly pink, mostly gray |
| Well Done | 155°F / 68°C | 165°F / 74°C | No pink, firm throughout |
| Brisket (smoked) | 195°F / 91°C | 203°F / 95°C | Probe-tender, collagen rendered |
| Short Ribs (braised) | 195°F / 91°C | 203°F / 95°C | Fall-off-the-bone tender |
Note: The USDA recommends a minimum internal temperature of 145°F (63°C) for whole cuts of beef with a 3-minute rest. Many chefs and home cooks prefer medium-rare (135°F), which is below the USDA minimum — this is a personal choice based on your comfort level with quality-sourced meat.
Pork Temperature Chart
| Cut | Pull Temp | Final Temp | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chops & Tenderloin | 138°F / 59°C | 145°F / 63°C | Slightly pink center is safe and juicy |
| Loin Roast | 140°F / 60°C | 145°F / 63°C | Rest 10–15 min for even doneness |
| Pulled Pork (shoulder) | 195°F / 91°C | 203°F / 95°C | Collagen breaks down, shreddable |
| Ribs (baby back) | 190°F / 88°C | 200°F / 93°C | Meat pulls from bone cleanly |
| Ribs (spare) | 195°F / 91°C | 203°F / 95°C | Longer cook, more connective tissue |
| Ham (pre-cooked) | 135°F / 57°C | 140°F / 60°C | Just reheating, already safe |
Note: The USDA updated its pork guidelines in 2011 — whole cuts of pork are now safe at 145°F (63°C) with a 3-minute rest. You no longer need to cook pork to 160°F unless it's ground.
Poultry Temperature Chart
| Cut | Pull Temp | Final Temp | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken Breast | 157°F / 69°C | 165°F / 74°C | Pull early to avoid drying out |
| Chicken Thigh | 175°F / 79°C | 180°F / 82°C | Dark meat needs higher temp for best texture |
| Whole Chicken | 160°F / 71°C | 165°F / 74°C | Measure in thickest part of thigh |
| Turkey Breast | 157°F / 69°C | 165°F / 74°C | Same as chicken breast — don't overcook |
| Whole Turkey | 160°F / 71°C | 165°F / 74°C | Check thigh and breast separately |
| Duck Breast | 130°F / 54°C | 135°F / 57°C | Served medium-rare like steak |
Note: The USDA minimum for all poultry is 165°F (74°C). There is no safe "medium-rare" for chicken or turkey. Duck breast is the exception — it's commonly served medium-rare due to its dense, steak-like texture, though this is below the USDA guideline.
Lamb Temperature Chart
| Doneness | Pull Temp | Final Temp | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare | 120°F / 49°C | 125°F / 52°C | Cool red center |
| Medium-Rare | 128°F / 53°C | 133°F / 56°C | Warm red center — most popular for lamb |
| Medium | 135°F / 57°C | 140°F / 60°C | Pink center, fuller flavor |
| Medium-Well | 145°F / 63°C | 150°F / 66°C | Slight pink, starting to firm |
| Well Done | 155°F / 68°C | 160°F / 71°C | No pink, not recommended for chops/rack |
| Leg of Lamb (roast) | 135°F / 57°C | 145°F / 63°C | Rest 15–20 min, slice against grain |
| Shanks (braised) | 190°F / 88°C | 195°F / 91°C | Low and slow until fork-tender |
Seafood Temperature Chart
| Type | Pull Temp | Final Temp | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salmon | 120°F / 49°C | 125°F / 52°C | Translucent center, silky texture |
| Tuna (seared) | 110°F / 43°C | 115°F / 46°C | Rare center — classic preparation |
| White Fish (cod, halibut) | 135°F / 57°C | 140°F / 60°C | Flakes easily, opaque throughout |
| Shrimp | 120°F / 49°C | 120°F / 49°C | Curls into C-shape, no carryover needed |
| Lobster Tail | 135°F / 57°C | 140°F / 60°C | Opaque and firm, don't overcook |
| Scallops | 115°F / 46°C | 120°F / 49°C | Translucent center is ideal |
Note: The USDA recommends 145°F (63°C) for fish. Many chefs pull salmon and tuna well below that for texture. Use quality, fresh-sourced seafood if cooking below USDA minimums.
Ground Meat Temperature Chart (USDA Minimums)
| Type | Minimum Safe Temp | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ground Beef | 160°F / 71°C | No pink — surface bacteria gets mixed throughout |
| Ground Pork | 160°F / 71°C | Same as ground beef |
| Ground Chicken | 165°F / 74°C | Higher risk — always cook through |
| Ground Turkey | 165°F / 74°C | Dries out fast — pull right at 165°F |
| Ground Lamb | 160°F / 71°C | Treat like ground beef |
Why ground meat is different: When meat is ground, bacteria from the surface gets mixed throughout. Whole cuts only need the surface cooked (which happens naturally), but ground meat must reach safe temps all the way through.
Understanding Carryover Cooking
Carryover cooking is the reason you pull meat before it hits your target temperature. Here's what to expect:
| Cut Thickness | Expected Carryover | Rest Time |
|---|---|---|
| Steaks (1–1.5") | 3–5°F / 2–3°C | 5–8 minutes |
| Roasts (3–5 lbs) | 5–10°F / 3–5°C | 10–15 minutes |
| Whole Birds | 5–10°F / 3–5°C | 15–20 minutes |
| Brisket / Pork Butt | 5–10°F / 3–5°C | 30–60 minutes (wrapped) |
| Thin Cuts (fish, shrimp) | 0–2°F / 0–1°C | Serve immediately |
A wireless thermometer makes carryover easy to manage — you can watch the temperature continue to climb after pulling the meat and know exactly when it peaks. The CulinaMeter's real-time monitoring and smart alerts are built for exactly this.
Frequently Asked Questions
What temperature kills bacteria in meat?
Most harmful bacteria (Salmonella, E. coli, Listeria) are killed at 165°F (74°C) instantly. However, lower temperatures also kill bacteria if held for longer — for example, 145°F (63°C) held for 3 minutes achieves the same safety level for whole cuts. This is why the USDA minimum for whole beef, pork, and lamb is 145°F with a 3-minute rest.
Is pink pork safe to eat?
Yes. The USDA confirmed in 2011 that whole cuts of pork cooked to 145°F (63°C) with a 3-minute rest are safe, even if slightly pink. Pink color in pork can persist due to myoglobin and doesn't indicate rawness. Ground pork still needs to reach 160°F (71°C).
Why does dark meat chicken need a higher temperature?
Chicken thighs and drumsticks have more connective tissue and fat than breast meat. While they're technically safe at 165°F, the texture is much better at 175–180°F where the collagen breaks down into gelatin, making the meat tender and juicy rather than chewy.
Do I really need a meat thermometer?
Yes. Studies from the USDA and food safety researchers consistently show that visual cues (color, firmness, juices "running clear") are unreliable indicators of doneness. A meat thermometer is the only way to know with certainty that your food is both safe and cooked to your preferred doneness.
What's the difference between instant-read and wireless thermometers?
An instant-read thermometer gives you a snapshot — you open the oven or grill, probe the meat, read the number, and close up. A wireless thermometer like the CulinaMeter stays in the meat throughout the cook and streams temperature data to your phone in real time, so you never have to open the lid and lose heat. Wireless is especially valuable for long cooks like smoking and roasting where maintaining consistent temperature matters.
Can I use the same temperatures for air fryers?
Yes. Internal meat temperatures don't change based on cooking method — the same target temps apply whether you're grilling, smoking, baking, roasting, sous vide, or air frying. What changes is cooking time and how fast the exterior develops a crust.