The single most important number in BBQ isn’t the time on the clock — it’s the temperature inside the meat. Internal temperature is what tells you when a brisket is actually done, when a chicken is actually safe, and when a steak has finally reached medium-rare instead of medium-overcooked.
This is the lookup chart we keep printed and taped to the side of the smoker. Every cut, every target temp, every wrap point, every rest time. Bookmark it, print it, send it to anyone who’s ever served you dry pork.
| Meat | Pull Temp | Wrap At | Pit Temp | Rest | Texture |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brisket (whole packer) | 203°F | 165°F | 225–250°F | 1–4 hr | Probe-tender, jiggle like jello |
| Beef short ribs / Dino ribs | 203°F | 165°F | 250°F | 30–60 min | Probe slides in like butter |
| Pork shoulder / Boston butt | 203°F | 165°F | 225–250°F | 1–2 hr | Bone wiggles free, pulls easily |
| Pork ribs (St. Louis / Spare) | 195°F | Optional 165°F | 225°F | 15–30 min | Bend test: cracks but doesn’t break |
| Pork ribs (Baby Back) | 198°F | Optional 165°F | 225°F | 15–30 min | Toothpick slides in easily |
| Pork belly (smoked) | 200°F | No wrap | 225°F | 20 min | Probe-tender, jiggly fat |
| Pork tenderloin | 145°F | No wrap | 225°F | 5–10 min | Slight pink center, juicy |
| Pork chops | 145°F | No wrap | 300°F | 5 min | Juicy with faint pink center |
| Whole chicken | 165°F (breast) / 175°F (thigh) | No wrap | 275–325°F | 10 min | Juices run clear, crispy skin |
| Chicken thighs / wings | 175°F | No wrap | 275–325°F | 5 min | Skin bite-through tender |
| Whole turkey | 165°F (breast) / 175°F (thigh) | No wrap | 275–325°F | 20–30 min | Skin crisp, juices clear |
| Salmon (smoked) | 140–145°F | No wrap | 180–200°F | 5 min | Flakes with gentle press |
| Trout / White fish | 140°F | No wrap | 180–200°F | 5 min | Opaque, easily flaked |
| Sausage (fresh) | 160°F | No wrap | 225–250°F | 5 min | Firm bite, juicy interior |
| Beef tri-tip | 130°F (med-rare) / 135°F (med) | No wrap | Reverse sear: 225 → 500°F | 10 min | Pink center, crisp crust |
| Beef ribeye / strip steak | 130°F (med-rare) / 140°F (med) | No wrap | 225 → sear 500°F+ | 5 min | Rosy pink center, charred crust |
| Lamb leg / shoulder | 203°F (pulled) / 145°F (sliced) | For pulled | 225–250°F | 20–30 min | Probe-tender for pulled |
| Game (venison roast) | 135°F (med-rare) | No wrap | 225°F | 10 min | Pink, just past bloody |
| Burgers (smoked) | 160°F | No wrap | 225 → sear | 0 min | No pink, juicy |
| Meatloaf | 160°F | No wrap | 275°F | 10 min | Firm slice, no pink |
How to Use This Chart
Three things this chart tells you that most charts don’t:
- Pull temp, not “done” temp. Meat continues cooking after you pull it off the smoker (carryover cook). The pull temps in this chart account for that — pull at 203°F for brisket, and after rest the meat will settle at the actual eating temperature.
- Wrap temp matters for collagen-heavy cuts. Brisket, pork shoulder, and dino ribs all hit “the stall” around 165°F where evaporative cooling stops the temperature climb dead. Wrapping in butcher paper or foil at this point pushes through the stall in 1–3 hours instead of 5–8.
- Probe-tender beats temperature for low-and-slow cuts. A brisket might be done at 198°F or 207°F depending on the specific cow. The pull temps here are starting points — the real test is when a probe slides in with zero resistance, like room-temp butter.
USDA Safe Internal Temperatures (Food Safety)
The chart above lists the temperatures BBQ pitmasters actually pull at. The USDA publishes minimum safe internal temperatures, which are sometimes higher than what serious cooks aim for (especially on whole-muscle pork and steaks, where the USDA is conservative). Both numbers matter — here’s the side-by-side:
| Meat | USDA Minimum | Pitmaster Pull | Why the difference? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole-muscle beef (steaks, roasts) | 145°F | 130–135°F | Surface contamination only — interior is sterile |
| Whole-muscle pork (chops, tenderloin) | 145°F | 145°F | USDA updated in 2011 — old 160°F number is obsolete |
| Ground meat (beef, pork, lamb) | 160°F | 160°F | Surface bacteria mixed throughout — must reach 160°F |
| Ground poultry | 165°F | 165°F | Same reasoning as ground beef |
| Whole poultry (breast) | 165°F | 157°F + hold | USDA chart shows 157°F kills salmonella if held 47 sec |
| Whole poultry (thigh, dark meat) | 165°F | 175–185°F | Connective tissue needs higher temp to break down |
| Fish | 145°F | 125–145°F | Salmon at 145°F is dry; 130°F medium-rare is safe and far better |
Doneness by Feel: When You Don’t Have a Thermometer
You should always cook with a thermometer — but knowing what doneness feels like is what separates good cooks from great ones. Three field tests every pitmaster needs:
The Probe-Tender Test (for low-and-slow cuts)
For brisket, pork shoulder, and beef ribs: insert a probe (or skewer, or toothpick) into the thickest part. If it slides in with zero resistance — like pushing through warm room-temp butter — it’s done. If it pushes in but feels like there’s still some give, give it another 30–60 minutes.
The Bend Test (for ribs)
Pick up the rack with tongs from one end. The other end should bend over and the surface bark should crack but not break apart. If the rack is rigid, it’s underdone. If it falls apart at the bend, it’s overcooked (still tasty, but technically past the competition standard).
The Hand Test (for steaks)
Touch the pad of your thumb with your index finger and feel the meaty part of your palm just below your thumb. That’s rare. Touch middle finger to thumb: medium-rare. Ring finger: medium. Pinky: well-done. Press a steak — when it feels like the corresponding finger position, that’s the doneness. Imperfect but useful when you’re at someone else’s grill without a thermometer.
The Stall: Why Temperature Stops Climbing
Around 150–170°F internal, large cuts of meat hit “the stall” — the temperature plateaus for hours and won’t budge. New smokers panic at this. There’s nothing wrong with your fire.
What’s actually happening: the meat has reached the temperature where surface moisture evaporates as fast as the smoker can add heat. The meat is essentially sitting in a self-made evaporative cooler. Three responses:
- Wait it out. The stall ends naturally after 4–8 hours. This produces the best bark but takes the longest.
- Wrap in butcher paper. Stops most evaporation while letting some moisture escape. Bark stays mostly intact. Pushes through the stall in 1–3 hours. Most pitmasters’ default.
- Wrap in foil (“Texas crutch”). Stops all evaporation. Fastest stall break (1–2 hours). Bark softens. Best for when time matters more than bark perfection.
Carryover Cooking: Why You Pull Early
After you remove meat from the smoker, the internal temperature continues to rise for 5–20 minutes as heat from the outer layers transfers inward. This is carryover cooking, and how much it matters depends on the cut size:
- Steaks and chops: 5–10°F carryover. Pull at 125°F for 130°F medium-rare service.
- Whole chickens and roasts: 5–10°F carryover. Pull at 158°F for 165°F service on chicken breast.
- Briskets and pork shoulders: 0–5°F carryover. The cut is so thick that the temperature gradient is small. The pull temps in this chart already account for it.
- Thin fish fillets: 2–5°F carryover. Pull at 138°F for 140°F medium.
Where to Probe: Get an Accurate Reading
The probe placement matters as much as the temperature you’re targeting. Five rules:
- Probe the thickest part. The thinnest part of any cut hits target temp first. The thickest part is what governs doneness.
- Avoid bones. Bones conduct heat differently and read 5–10°F higher than surrounding meat. Bone-adjacent readings will trick you into pulling early.
- Avoid fat caps. Fat reads cooler than muscle. A probe lodged in the fat cap of a brisket will read 10°F low and you’ll overcook waiting for it to climb.
- Probe from the side, not the top. The probe should sit lengthwise inside the meat for the most accurate read. Top-down probes often slip into pockets of fat or bone.
- For whole birds, probe both breast and thigh. Breast hits 165°F before thigh hits 175°F. The thigh is the gating measurement on dark-meat doneness.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the safe internal temperature for pork?
The USDA updated this in 2011. Whole-muscle pork (chops, tenderloin, roasts) is safe at 145°F with a 3-minute rest. The old “cook pork to 160°F” rule is obsolete and produces dry meat. Ground pork still requires 160°F because surface bacteria gets mixed throughout.
Why do you pull brisket at 203°F when steaks are done at 130°F?
Two different mechanisms. Steaks are tender muscle that just needs to reach a target temperature. Brisket is full of collagen — connective tissue that needs sustained temperatures above 180°F to break down into gelatin. Without that breakdown, brisket eats like shoe leather even if it’s “done” by temperature.
Can I rely on time instead of temperature?
No. Time-based cooking guesses fail constantly because every cut is different — a 12 lb brisket might take 10 hours one weekend and 16 hours the next, depending on fat content, meat density, smoker behavior, and weather. Temperature is the only reliable measurement. A $30 wireless thermometer pays for itself in saved meat.
Why is my chicken breast dry at 165°F?
Two reasons. First, your thermometer might be off — verify by sticking it in boiling water (should read 212°F at sea level). Second, you’re probably overshooting because of carryover. Pull at 158°F internal and let carryover bring it to 165°F. Result: juicy.
What if my smoker temp probe disagrees with my meat probe?
Almost always trust your meat probe over your built-in smoker probe. Built-in probes measure ambient air temperature, often near a heat source, and most are factory-calibrated for low accuracy. Place a separate probe at grate level near the meat to know your actual cook temperature.
Do I need a separate thermometer for each meat?
No — but a multi-probe thermometer is genuinely useful when smoking multiple cuts at once, or when cooking a cut where breast and thigh need different target temps (turkey, chicken). 4-probe units start around $50.
Where to Go Next
This chart is the lookup. For deeper dives on specific cuts, see our guides on how to smoke a brisket, pork shoulder, whole turkey, and salmon. If you’re shopping for the thermometers that make this all possible, our pick of the best wireless meat thermometers covers MEATER, ThermoPro, Inkbird, and the gold-standard ThermoWorks Smoke. And if you’re trying to dial in wood selection alongside temperature, our smoking wood pairing chart is the companion reference.
And if you need to plan when to actually start your smoker, our BBQ smoking times chart has a built-in calculator that converts weight + serve time into an exact start hour.
Last updated: April 2026. Bookmark and print — we keep this current as USDA guidance and pitmaster consensus evolve.