For food safety, chicken should reach an internal temperature of 165°F (74°C) at the thickest part before you eat it. This applies whether it’s breast, thighs, wings, or ground chicken.

Quick Scoop: Safe Temps

  • Minimum safe internal temp for chicken: 165°F (74°C).
  • Check the temp at the thickest part of the meat, not touching bone.
  • Let it rest a few minutes after cooking so juices redistribute and the temp evens out.

Different Cuts, Best Practice

  • Chicken breasts :
    • Safe at 165°F (74°C).
    • Many cooks pull them around 158–160°F (70°C–71°C) and let carryover heat bring them up to about 165°F so they stay juicier.
  • Thighs, legs, drumsticks, wings (dark meat) :
    • Safe at 165°F (74°C).
    • Often taste better cooked higher, around 175–185°F (79–85°C) , because the extra heat melts fat and breaks down connective tissue for more tender meat.
  • Whole chicken :
    • Aim for at least 165°F (74°C) in the breast.
    • Many guidelines recommend about 180–185°F (82–85°C) in the thickest part of the thigh for fully done, tender dark meat.

Why 165°F matters

  • 165°F (74°C) is the temperature at which harmful bacteria like Salmonella are rapidly killed, making the chicken safe to eat.

Simple Step‑by‑Step Check

  1. Insert an instant‑read thermometer into the thickest part of the piece (or breast/thigh on a whole bird).
  2. Avoid touching bone, pan, or grill grates with the probe.
  3. When it reads 165°F (74°C) or higher , you’re safe to serve.
  4. If it’s under, keep cooking and recheck in a couple of minutes.

TL;DR: Cook chicken until the internal temp hits 165°F (74°C) ; go a bit higher on dark meat if you like it extra tender and juicy.