Boneless chicken breast should be cooked until it reaches an internal temperature of 165°F (74–75°C) in the thickest part of the meat to be food safe.

Quick Scoop

  • Food-safety “official” answer:
    • Most food-safety agencies and cooking thermometry guides treat chicken (including breast) as done and safe at 165°F / 74°C measured at the center.
  • For juicier breast meat:
    • Many cooks pull the breast slightly earlier (around 158–160°F / 70–71°C) knowing it will rise a few degrees while resting, ending near that 165°F mark while staying moister.
  • Oven temperature vs. internal temperature:
    • You can bake chicken breasts at 350–400°F (175–200°C), but no matter the oven setting, it is done when the internal temp hits about 165°F / 74–75°C.

Why 165°F Matters

  • Chicken commonly carries bacteria like Salmonella, and 165°F is the widely accepted point where these are reliably killed almost instantly.
  • Going much hotter than that, especially with lean breast meat, quickly squeezes out moisture and makes the texture dry and stringy.

Simple How-To

  • Insert an instant‑read thermometer into the thickest part of the breast, avoiding the pan and any bone.
  • Remove from heat once it hits about 160–165°F (71–74°C), then let it rest 5–10 minutes so juices redistribute and carryover heat finishes the cook.

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