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when to start thawing turkey

Start thawing a frozen turkey several days before you plan to cook it, depending on its weight and your thawing method, so it is fully defrosted but still food‑safe on the cooking day.

Safe thawing basics

For whole turkeys, food safety agencies recommend thawing in the refrigerator whenever possible, because it keeps the bird at a consistently safe temperature while it defrosts. Once fully thawed in the fridge, a turkey is generally safe there for up to 1–2 additional days before cooking, which gives some planning wiggle room.

When to start in the fridge

Use the bird’s weight to count backwards from the day you’ll roast it.

  • General rule: allow about 24 hours in the fridge for every 4–5 pounds of turkey.
  • Typical timelines:
* 4–12 lb: start 1–3 days before cooking.
* 12–16 lb: start 3–4 days before.
* 16–20 lb: start 4–5 days before.
* 20–24 lb: start 5–6 days before.

If you’re aiming for a Thursday meal and have a 16‑pound turkey, you’d usually move it from freezer to fridge on the preceding Saturday or Sunday.

When to start with cold water

Cold‑water thawing is faster but needs more attention.

  • Keep the turkey in its original, leak‑proof packaging and fully submerge it in cold water, changing the water every 30 minutes.
  • Allow about 30 minutes per pound, and cook immediately after it’s thawed.

That means, for example:

  • 12‑lb turkey: start about 6 hours before you need it thawed.
  • 16‑lb turkey: start about 8 hours before cooking.

What to avoid

Leaving a turkey out at room temperature to thaw is unsafe because the outer layers can sit in the “danger zone” where bacteria multiply quickly while the inside is still frozen. Using warm or hot water also risks partially cooking the surface and encourages bacterial growth, so only cold water should be used for the quick‑thaw method.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.