Grilling

Grilling Temperature Guide: The Complete Chart for Every Protein

By Jim Bob 10 min read
Meat thermometer showing perfect internal temperature on grilled steak

Temperature is the single most important variable in grilling. It does not matter how expensive your grill is, how good your rub is, or how perfectly you seared your steak — if the internal temperature is wrong, the food will not be right.

This guide gives you the target temperatures, grill settings, and estimated cooking times for every common protein. Bookmark it. Print it. Tape it to your grill.

The Golden Rule: Use a Thermometer

Stop guessing. The “hand test,” the “poke test,” and timing alone are unreliable. Internal temperature is the only accurate way to determine doneness.

Invest in two thermometers:

  • An instant-read probe (ThermoWorks Thermapen, ThermoPro TP19) for spot-checking — $20-100
  • A leave-in probe (ThermoWorks Smoke, MEATER+) for monitoring long cooks — $50-100

These are not optional accessories. They are essential equipment.

Beef Temperature Guide

Steak Doneness Chart

DonenessPull Temp*Final TempGrill TempMethodTime (1” thick)
Rare120°F125°F450-500°FDirect2-3 min/side
Medium-rare128°F133°F450-500°FDirect3-4 min/side
Medium135°F140°F450-500°FDirect4-5 min/side
Medium-well145°F150°F450-500°FDirect5-6 min/side
Well-done155°F160°F400-450°FDirect6-7 min/side

*Pull temp = the temperature to remove from the grill. Carryover cooking adds 3-5°F during the rest.

For thick steaks (1.5”+ thick): Use the reverse sear method. Cook indirect at 225-275°F until the internal temp reaches 10-15°F below your target, then sear over direct high heat for 60-90 seconds per side. See our full how to grill steak guide for the complete technique.

Other Beef Cuts

CutTarget Internal TempGrill TempMethodEst. Time
Burgers (ground beef)160°F (USDA)375-400°FDirect4-5 min/side
Smash burgers160°F450-500°F+Direct (flat-top/griddle)2-3 min/side
Tri-tip130-135°F (medium-rare)225°F indirect, then 500°F searReverse sear45-60 min total
Beef tenderloin/filet128-133°F (medium-rare)225°F indirect, then 500°F searReverse sear30-45 min total
Prime rib roast125-130°F (medium-rare)250°F indirectIndirect15-20 min/lb
Brisket200-205°F (probe tender)225-275°FIndirect/smoking1-1.5 hr/lb
Beef ribs200-205°F (probe tender)250-275°FIndirect/smoking6-8 hours

Ground Beef Safety Note

The USDA recommends 160°F for ground beef because grinding can introduce bacteria throughout the meat (unlike a whole muscle steak where bacteria is only on the surface). If you prefer medium-rare burgers, buy whole cuts and grind them yourself, or use a trusted butcher and accept the risk.

Chicken Temperature Guide

CutTarget Internal TempGrill TempMethodEst. Time
Breast (boneless)165°F375-400°FDirect6-8 min/side
Breast (bone-in)165°F350-375°FIndirect then direct25-35 min total
Thighs (boneless)175-180°F400-425°FDirect5-6 min/side
Thighs (bone-in)175-180°F375-400°FDirect + indirect30-40 min total
Drumsticks175-180°F375-400°FDirect + indirect25-35 min total
Wings175-180°F375-425°FDirect20-25 min, turning often
Whole chicken165°F (breast), 175°F (thigh)325-375°FIndirect1-1.5 hours
Spatchcocked chicken165°F (breast), 175°F (thigh)375-400°FIndirect with direct finish35-50 min

Why We Cook Dark Meat Hotter

Chicken breast is done at 165°F, but dark meat (thighs, drumsticks, wings) tastes better at 175-180°F. At 165°F, the connective tissue in dark meat has not fully rendered, leaving a rubbery texture. The extra 10-15 degrees melts the collagen and fat, making the meat juicy and tender.

The Chicken Breast Problem

Chicken breast is the most overcooked protein in America. The USDA’s 165°F is based on instant pasteurization. But if you hold chicken at 150°F for 3 minutes or 155°F for just under a minute, it achieves the same level of safety. Many experienced cooks pull breasts at 157-160°F and let carryover bring them to a safe temperature. This produces noticeably juicier chicken.

Pork Temperature Guide

CutTarget Internal TempGrill TempMethodEst. Time
Pork chops (1” thick)145°F400-450°FDirect4-5 min/side
Pork tenderloin145°F400°F direct, then 350°F indirectSear + indirect20-25 min total
Pork loin roast145°F325-350°FIndirect20-25 min/lb
Baby back ribsBend test / 195-203°F225-250°FIndirect4-5 hours
Spare ribsBend test / 195-203°F225-250°FIndirect5-6 hours
Pulled pork (shoulder/butt)200-205°F (probe tender)225-275°FIndirect/smoking1-1.5 hr/lb
Pork belly200°F (for smoking), 145°F (for grilling)VariesVariesVaries
Bratwurst160°F300-350°FDirect (gentle)15-20 min, turning often
Hot dogs160°F (pre-cooked, heat through)400-450°FDirect5-7 min, turning

The Pork Revolution: 145°F, Not 160°F

The USDA updated its pork cooking temperature recommendation from 160°F to 145°F with a 3-minute rest back in 2011. Many old charts and recipes still list 160°F. At 145°F, pork chops and tenderloin will have a slight blush of pink in the center — this is safe and far juicier than the dried-out pork of decades past.

Rib Doneness

Ribs are done by feel, not just temperature. The classic test: pick up the rack with tongs at the center. If the meat bends and the surface cracks, they are done. Temperature-wise, look for 195-203°F between the bones, where the collagen has fully rendered.

Seafood Temperature Guide

ProteinTarget Internal TempGrill TempMethodEst. Time
Salmon125°F (medium) to 140°F (well)350-400°FDirect, skin-side down4-6 min/side
Tuna steaks115-120°F (rare center)500°F+Direct, hot and fast1-2 min/side
ShrimpOpaque and pink400-450°FDirect2-3 min/side
ScallopsOpaque with golden sear500°F+Direct, hot and fast2-3 min/side
Swordfish140°F400-450°FDirect4-5 min/side
Mahi-mahi137°F375-400°FDirect4-5 min/side
Lobster tails140°F350-375°FDirect, flesh-side down first5-7 min/side
Whole fish145°F (flakes easily)350-400°FDirect or in basket8-10 min/lb

Fish Grilling Tips

  • Oil the fish, not the grate — This prevents sticking better and gives you more control
  • Start skin-side down for salmon — The skin protects the flesh and gets crispy
  • Use a fish basket for delicate fillets that might break apart
  • Do not move the fish until it releases naturally from the grate — if it sticks, it is not ready to flip

Lamb Temperature Guide

CutTarget Internal TempGrill TempMethodEst. Time
Lamb chops (loin or rib)130-135°F (medium-rare)450-500°FDirect3-4 min/side
Leg of lamb (boneless)135°F (medium-rare)325-350°FIndirect20-25 min/lb
Rack of lamb130-135°F (medium-rare)450°F sear, then 325°F indirectSear + indirect20-25 min total
Ground lamb burgers160°F400°FDirect4-5 min/side
Lamb shanks190-200°F (braised tender)275°FIndirect, wrapped3-4 hours

Lamb is best served medium-rare to medium. Overcooked lamb develops a strong, gamey flavor that turns many people off.

Vegetable Grilling Guide

Vegetables do not have target internal temperatures — they are done by texture and char development.

VegetableGrill TempMethodEst. TimeTips
Corn (in husk)350-400°FDirect15-20 min, turningSoak in water first
Corn (husked)400-450°FDirect8-12 min, turningOil and season directly
Asparagus400-450°FDirect3-5 minThick spears only, snap off woody ends
Bell peppers400-450°FDirect4-6 min/sideQuarter them for flat surfaces
Zucchini/Squash400-450°FDirect3-4 min/sideCut lengthwise in 1/2” planks
Onion (sliced)375-400°FDirect4-5 min/side1/2” thick rings, skewer to hold
Portobello mushrooms375-400°FDirect4-5 min/sideGill-side up first to retain juice
Romaine lettuce450°F+Direct1-2 min/sideCut in half, quick char only
Broccolini400°FDirect5-7 minToss in oil, use a grill basket

Understanding Carryover Cooking

When you pull meat off the grill, the internal temperature continues to rise. This is carryover cooking, and it happens because the exterior of the meat is hotter than the center — that residual heat continues to flow inward.

How much carryover to expect:

  • Steaks (1” thick): 3-5°F
  • Thick steaks (2”+) and roasts: 5-10°F
  • Whole chicken/turkey: 5-10°F
  • Pork shoulder/brisket: 2-5°F (less carryover because they cook low-and-slow)

Always pull your meat before it reaches final target temperature by the expected carryover amount, then rest it.

Resting Times

ProteinRest TimeWhy
Steaks5-8 minutesJuices redistribute, carryover finishes cooking
Chicken pieces5 minutesJuices settle, temp equalizes
Whole chicken15-20 minutesLarge mass needs time for carryover
Pork chops5 minutesUSDA requires 3-min rest at 145°F for safety
Ribs5-10 minutesAllows bark to set
Brisket30-60 minutes minimumCollagen continues to tenderize; many rest 2+ hours
Pork shoulder30-60 minutes minimumSame as brisket — longer rest = better texture

Final Tips

  1. Always probe in the thickest part of the meat, avoiding bone (bone conducts heat differently and gives false readings).
  2. Check multiple spots on large cuts — temperature can vary significantly across a brisket or roast.
  3. Calibrate your thermometer regularly. Fill a glass with ice water — it should read 32°F.
  4. Trust the thermometer, not the clock. Times in this guide are estimates. Every grill, piece of meat, and weather condition is different.
  5. Keep a log. Write down what you cooked, the temperatures, and the results. You will dial in your specific grill faster this way.

For technique guides on specific proteins, see our steak grilling guide. For equipment recommendations, check our best charcoal grills, best gas grills, or start with the ultimate grilling guide.

Jim Bob
Jim Bob

BBQ Expert & Writer

Passionate about outdoor cooking, from low-and-slow smoking to high-heat grilling.