Smoking Meat

Smoker Temperature Guide: Every Meat, Every Time, Every Cut

By Jim Bob 11 min read
Digital thermometer probe inserted into smoked meat on a smoker grate

TL;DR: For most smoked meats, run your smoker at 250°F and cook to internal temperature targets as a starting point — but always prioritize probe tenderness over a specific number. Brisket and pork shoulder are done when a thermometer probe slides in like butter (usually 195-205°F internal). Poultry is done at 165°F in the thigh. Ribs are done when they pass the bend test. The chart below covers every common cut.

Last tested/updated: March 2026. Every temperature in this guide is based on our real-world testing across offset, pellet, kamado, and charcoal smokers. We use Thermoworks Thermapen One and Thermoworks Smoke probes for all measurements.

Temperature control is the single most important skill in smoking meat. Get it right, and tough cuts transform into tender, juicy barbecue. Get it wrong, and you end up with dry, tough, or undercooked food.

This guide gives you the numbers for every common cut, but remember the golden rule: cook to doneness, not to temperature or time. These numbers are starting points and guidelines, not rigid rules. Every piece of meat is different.

The Master Smoker Temperature Chart

Beef

CutSmoker TempTarget Internal TempEstimated TimeDoneness Test
Brisket (whole packer)250°F195-205°F1-1.5 hr/lbProbe tender — slides in like butter
Brisket (flat only)250°F195-203°F1-1.5 hr/lbProbe tender (less forgiving than packer)
Beef ribs (plate/short ribs)250-275°F200-210°F6-8 hoursProbe tender, jiggly, pullback from bone
Beef back ribs250°F195-205°F4-6 hoursProbe tender between bones
Chuck roast250°F195-205°F5-8 hoursProbe tender, shreddable
Tri-tip225-250°F130-135°F (med-rare)1.5-2.5 hoursInternal temp — this is not a collagen-heavy cut
Beef tenderloin225°F125-130°F (med-rare)1-2 hoursInternal temp only
Prime rib roast225-250°F125-130°F (med-rare)3-5 hoursInternal temp, rest 30+ min

Pork

CutSmoker TempTarget Internal TempEstimated TimeDoneness Test
Pork shoulder/butt250°F195-205°F1-1.5 hr/lbProbe tender, bone pulls clean
Spare ribs250-275°F195-203°F5-7 hoursBend test, toothpick test
Baby back ribs250-275°F190-200°F4-5 hoursBend test, pullback from bones
Pork belly250°F195-200°F4-6 hoursProbe tender, jiggly
Pork loin225-250°F145°F2-3 hoursInternal temp — lean cut, do not overcook
Pork tenderloin225°F145°F1.5-2 hoursInternal temp — very lean, watch closely
Pork chops (thick cut)225-250°F145°F1-1.5 hoursInternal temp
Ham (fresh, bone-in)250°F195-200°F5-7 hoursProbe tender

Poultry

CutSmoker TempTarget Internal TempEstimated TimeDoneness Test
Whole chicken275-325°F165°F (thigh)2-3 hoursThigh temp, juices run clear
Chicken thighs275-325°F175-180°F1.5-2 hoursThigh temp — higher temp renders fat
Chicken wings275-325°F175-180°F1.5-2 hoursSkin should be rendered and crispy
Turkey (whole)275-325°F165°F (thigh)2.5-3.5 hours (12 lb)Thigh temp
Turkey breast275°F160°F (carry-over to 165°F)2-3 hoursInternal temp, pull 5°F early
Spatchcocked chicken300-325°F165°F (thigh)1.5-2 hoursFastest whole chicken method

Seafood

CutSmoker TempTarget Internal TempEstimated TimeDoneness Test
Salmon fillet200-225°F135-140°F1-2 hoursFlakes with fork, slightly translucent center
Trout200-225°F135-140°F1-1.5 hoursFlakes easily
Shrimp225°F120°F30-45 minPink, firm, opaque
Scallops225°F120°F30-45 minOpaque throughout

Other

ItemSmoker TempTarget Internal TempEstimated TimeNotes
Sausage (fresh)225-250°F165°F2-3 hoursLow temp to avoid casing burst
Meatloaf250°F160°F2-3 hoursGreat vehicle for smoke flavor
Cheese60-90°F (cold smoke)N/A1-3 hoursMust stay below melting point
Nuts200-225°FN/A1-2 hoursToss with oil and salt first
Bacon (from belly)200°F150°F2-4 hoursThen slice and fry to serve
Jerky160-180°F160°F4-6 hoursDry but still pliable

Understanding the Numbers

Smoker Temperature vs. Internal Temperature

These are two completely different measurements, and confusing them is a common beginner mistake.

  • Smoker temperature is the air temperature inside the cooking chamber at grate level. This is what you set and maintain (e.g., 250°F). Measure it with a grate-level probe, not the lid thermometer.
  • Internal temperature is the temperature inside the thickest part of the meat. This tells you how done the meat is. Measure it with an instant-read thermometer like the Thermoworks Thermapen One.

Why 250°F Is the Sweet Spot

At 250°F, you get the ideal balance of:

  • Time — Long enough for smoke absorption and bark development, but not so long that the meat dries out
  • Collagen conversion — Enough heat to efficiently convert tough collagen into tender gelatin
  • Fat rendering — Enough heat to render intramuscular fat without it running out too quickly
  • Bark formation — The Maillard reaction and surface dehydration create proper bark at this temp

Running at 225°F works but extends cook times by 15-25%. Running at 275°F works for ribs and poultry but can be too fast for brisket and large shoulders.

Higher Temps for Poultry

Poultry is the exception to the 250°F rule. We recommend 275-325°F for all poultry because:

  1. Chicken and turkey do not have the collagen that benefits from ultra-low temps
  2. Higher temperatures render subcutaneous fat and crisp the skin
  3. At 250°F, poultry skin stays rubbery and unpleasant
  4. Faster cook times reduce the risk of drying out lean breast meat

The Probe Tender Philosophy

The temperature chart above gives you targets, but the experienced pitmaster’s truth is this: temperatures are signposts, not finish lines.

For collagen-heavy cuts (brisket, pork shoulder, beef ribs, chuck roast), internal temperature tells you roughly where you are, but tenderness tells you when you are done.

How to Probe Test

  1. Insert your Thermapen One or any instant-read thermometer into the thickest part of the meat
  2. Note the resistance. Is the probe sliding in effortlessly, like warm butter? Or is there resistance?
  3. Check multiple spots — different areas of the same cut can finish at different rates
  4. If there is any resistance, it is not done. Put it back and check again in 20-30 minutes.

As the saying goes: “Don’t go by temp. Each piece of meat is different. Go by probe tender.”

What Probe Tender Feels Like

  • Not done: The probe meets resistance, like poking a raw potato
  • Almost done: The probe goes in but with some drag, like poking a baked potato
  • Done: The probe slides in with zero resistance, like poking room-temperature butter
  • Overdone: The meat feels mushy and offers no structure when probed

Essential Thermometer Gear

You need two thermometers. No exceptions.

Instant-Read Thermometer

Our pick: Thermoworks Thermapen One (~$100)

This is the universally recommended thermometer in the BBQ community. It reads in under 1 second, is accurate to +/- 0.5°F, and has a 5-year warranty. Every serious pitmaster we know owns one. It is used for spot-checking internal temp and performing the probe tenderness test.

Leave-In Probe Thermometer

Our pick: Thermoworks Smoke (~$100)

A dual-channel thermometer with one probe for meat internal temp and one for grate-level ambient temp. The wireless receiver has a range of 300+ feet, so you can monitor from inside. The Thermoworks Signals (~$230) is the WiFi-enabled upgrade with 4 probe channels.

Skip the Lid Thermometer

The thermometer on your smoker lid reads dome temperature, not grate temperature. It can be 25-50°F higher than actual grate temp. Use a probe at grate level for accurate smoker temperature readings.

Carry-Over Cooking

When you pull meat off the smoker, the internal temperature continues to rise as residual heat migrates from the outer layers to the center. This is carry-over cooking, and you need to account for it.

CutExpected Carry-OverPull Temp Adjustment
Brisket3-5°FNot a concern (cooking to tenderness)
Pork shoulder3-5°FNot a concern (cooking to tenderness)
Turkey breast5-8°FPull at 157-160°F
Pork loin5-7°FPull at 140°F
Tri-tip5-10°FPull at 125-130°F for med-rare
Prime rib5-10°FPull at 120-125°F for med-rare

For cuts where you are cooking to probe tenderness (brisket, pork shoulder), carry-over is less of a concern because you are already at the point of maximum tenderness. For lean cuts where you are targeting a specific internal temp, pull 5-10°F early to account for carry-over.

Resting: The Most Overlooked Step

Resting is when the magic happens. Juices redistribute, collagen continues to break down, and the meat reaches its final texture.

CutMinimum RestIdeal RestMethod
Brisket1 hour2-4 hoursWrapped in towels, in a cooler
Pork shoulder30 min1-2 hoursWrapped in towels, in a cooler
Ribs10 min15-30 minLoosely tented with foil
Chicken10 min15-20 minUncovered or loosely tented
Turkey20 min30-45 minTented with foil
Tri-tip10 min15-20 minTented with foil

Plan to hold the finished product warm for at least several hours — this advice applies especially to brisket and pork shoulder. A quality cooler (even a cheap Igloo) with towels wrapped around the meat will hold it above 140°F (safe serving temp) for 6-8 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

What temperature should I set my smoker to?

250°F is the best all-purpose smoker temperature. It works for brisket, pork, ribs, and sausage. For poultry, increase to 275-325°F for crispier skin. For cold smoking (cheese, fish), stay below 90°F. Check our chart above for cut-specific recommendations.

How do I know when smoked meat is done?

For collagen-heavy cuts (brisket, pork shoulder, beef ribs), cook to probe tenderness — a thermometer should slide into the thickest part like butter. For lean cuts (poultry, pork loin, tri-tip), use internal temperature as your guide. Always use a quality instant-read thermometer.

Why is my smoked meat tough but at the right temperature?

The meat is at target temperature but the collagen has not fully converted to gelatin. This happens when the smoker ran too hot (the outside cooked faster than the inside) or when you pulled at a temperature without checking tenderness. Keep cooking until it is probe tender, regardless of what the thermometer says.

Should I go by time or temperature when smoking?

Neither — go by tenderness and feel. Time is a rough planning guide (1-1.5 hours per pound for most cuts at 250°F). Temperature is a signpost that tells you roughly where you are. But the actual indicator of doneness for tough cuts is how the meat feels when probed. Cook to doneness, not to temperature or time.

Do I need an expensive thermometer?

A quality instant-read thermometer is the single most important tool in smoking. The Thermoworks Thermapen One ($100) is the industry standard for good reason — it is fast, accurate, and durable. Cheaper options like the Thermoworks ThermoPop ($35) work well too. What you cannot rely on is the dial thermometer on your smoker lid.

Jim Bob
Jim Bob

BBQ Expert & Writer

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