Cook turkey to a minimum internal temperature of 165°F (74°C), measured in the thickest part of the breast and the innermost thigh and wing, for safe consumption.
The Safe Internal Temperature for Turkey
The USDA recommends all turkey — whole, parts, ground, and stuffed — reach a minimum internal temperature of 165°F. That number kills harmful bacteria like Salmonella and Campylobacter. For a whole bird, you must check three spots: the thickest part of the breast, the innermost part of the thigh, and the innermost part of the wing. None of these spots can read below 165°F. If you cook stuffing inside the bird, the center of the stuffing must also hit 165°F. For ground turkey patties, insert the thermometer from the side into the thickest part.
Avoid judging doneness by color. Turkey can be fully cooked and still show pink near bones or in the dark meat. The USDA and Butterball both confirm that color is unreliable — only a calibrated thermometer gives you a real answer.
Where to Insert the Thermometer
Insert the probe into the thickest portion of the breast, angling slightly toward the center without touching bone. Next, check the innermost part of the thigh — slide the probe between the drumstick and the body into the deepest muscle. Finally, test the innermost part of the wing. Avoid hitting bone, gristle, or the metal roasting pan, since those produce false readings. For ground turkey patties, approach from the side and push the probe into the center of the patty.
White Meat vs Dark Meat: 165°F vs 175°F
While 165°F is the safety minimum for all parts, optimal texture differs between white and dark meat. White meat (breast) dries out quickly above 165°F, so pull the bird when the breast hits that number. Dark meat (legs and thighs) can taste tough at 165°F. Many cooks aim for 175°F on the thigh for better tenderness and a more pleasant texture. Resting the turkey for 20–30 minutes before carving allows carryover cooking to raise the internal temperature by 10–15°F, so plan for that rise — pull the bird from the oven just before it reaches your ideal target.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
The most frequent mistake is starting with a partially frozen turkey. The turkey must be completely thawed before it goes into the oven, or the outer meat will overcook while the interior remains dangerously undercooked. Another common error is setting the oven below 325°F — the USDA says the oven temperature should be no lower than 325°F for safe cooking. Place the bird breast-side up on a flat wire rack in a shallow roasting pan. If you want the safest route, cook the stuffing outside the bird instead of inside. A stuffed bird requires the stuffing center to reach 165°F, which often forces the breast meat well past that point and dries it out.
For high-risk groups — infants, pregnant women, the elderly, and immunocompromised individuals — there is no room for compromise: all turkey must hit exactly 165°F or higher, with no adjustments for dark meat or carryover. Calibrate your thermometer before use using the ice-point method (32°F in a 50/50 ice-water slush with the stem two inches deep for five minutes) or the boiling-point method (212°F at sea level with the stem two inches deep for one minute, adjusting for altitude).
| Cut | Minimum Safe Temp | Ideal Target for Texture |
|---|---|---|
| Whole turkey (breast) | 165°F | 165°F (pull before carryover) |
| Whole turkey (thigh) | 165°F | 175°F for better tenderness |
| Whole turkey (wing) | 165°F | 165°F |
| Ground turkey patties | 165°F | 165°F |
| Turkey (stuffed) | 165°F (center of stuffing too) | 165°F for stuffing center |
| Oven temperature | 325°F minimum | 325°F or higher |
| Carryover rise during rest | 10–15°F additional | Account for rise |
References & Sources
- USDA FSIS. “Turkey: Are You Done Yet? A Step-by-Step Guide to Cooking Safely.” Provides the official 165°F minimum temperature and measurement guidance.
- Butterball. “How to Check for Doneness.” Explains proper thermometer placement and confirms color is unreliable for determining doneness.
- Michigan State University Extension. “Cooking ground turkey to the proper temperature is a must for consumers.” Details safe handling and temperature requirements for ground turkey.

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