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Food & Cooking

Is it safe to eat pink chicken?

Pink chicken can be safe if it reaches 165°F internally — color alone is not a reliable indicator of doneness. Here's what actually makes chicken safe to eat.

2 min read · Updated 2026-04-14

Is it safe to eat pink chicken?
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General information only. This article may include AI-assisted content. While we aim for accuracy, verify important details before acting on them.

Short answer

Pink chicken can be safe — internal temperature is the only reliable measure of safety, not color. Chicken cooked to 165°F (74°C) is safe even if it still looks pink near the bone or in the center. However, pink chicken that hasn't reached 165°F is not safe to eat.

Why chicken can be pink and still safe

Several factors cause pink color in cooked chicken that has nothing to do with doneness:

Myoglobin: Young chickens have more myoglobin (the protein that gives meat color) near the bones. This can stay pink even after full cooking.

Nitrates: If the chicken was near vegetables high in nitrates during cooking, or if it was previously frozen, it can retain a pink hue when cooked.

Smoking or grilling: Smoked chicken and chicken cooked on a grill often has a pink "smoke ring" that's completely safe — this is a chemical reaction with the smoke, not undercooking.

Marinating: Certain marinades can affect the color of the meat.

The only reliable test: a thermometer

Insert a meat thermometer into the thickest part of the chicken, away from bone:

  • 165°F (74°C): Safe for all chicken — breasts, thighs, wings, ground chicken
  • 160°F (71°C): Safe if allowed to rest 3 minutes (carryover cooking)

Don't rely on:

  • ❌ Color (can be misleading)
  • ❌ Juices running clear (not always accurate)
  • ❌ Time alone (ovens and chicken sizes vary)

What unsafe (undercooked) chicken looks like

Undercooked chicken typically:

  • Has a rubbery, slimy texture (not just pink color)
  • Has translucent or gelatinous areas near the bone
  • Feels soft and squishy when pressed
  • Has juices that are deep red or bloody, not just pink-tinged

Food safety risks of undercooked chicken

Raw or undercooked chicken can contain:

  • Salmonella — symptoms appear 6 hours to 6 days after eating
  • Campylobacter — most common poultry-related pathogen
  • Clostridium perfringens — found in improperly cooled cooked chicken

Symptoms include diarrhea, stomach cramps, vomiting, and fever. See a doctor if symptoms are severe or last more than 3 days.

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