Table of Contents
- Steak Doneness Temperature Chart
- Where to Insert the Probe on a Steak
- Finding the Thermal Center on a Thin Cut
- The Pull-Back Method
- Which Thermometer Type to Use for Steak
- Resting & Carryover Cooking for Steak
- Frequently asked questions
- What temperature should steak be cooked to for medium-rare?
- Where do you put a meat thermometer in a steak?
- How long should you rest a steak before cutting?
- Ready to buy your steak thermometer?
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Steak gives you a small window to get doneness right. A ribeye is a thick cut, but the margin between medium-rare and medium is often just five degrees, and that gap can pass in under a minute on a hot pan. Color and touch tell you almost nothing on a crusted, seared surface. This guide covers the exact pull temps for every doneness level and exactly where to place the probe, because getting one right without the other still ruins the cook. Steak also rewards a fast instant-read over a leave-in probe, and I explain why below.
Steak Doneness Temperature Chart
↑ Return to TOCPull temp is the number you check for. Final temp is what you get a few minutes later, once carryover finishes rising. Steak is a whole-muscle cut, not ground meat, so cooking below the USDA’s 145°F reference point is a personal choice rather than a safety risk.
| Doneness level | Pull temp (°F) | Final resting temp (°F) | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare | 115 to 120 | 120 to 125 | Cool red center, soft to the touch |
| Medium-rare | 125 to 130 | 130 to 135 | Most steakhouses default here |
| Medium | 135 to 140 | 140 to 145 | USDA’s 145°F reference point sits in this band |
| Medium-well | 145 to 150 | 150 to 155 | Firm throughout, thin pink line |
| Well-done | 155 to 160 | 160+ | No pink, noticeably drier on thin cuts |
My own steaks land at medium-rare almost every time, and I pull them at 128°F, not 130, because a hot cast iron pan carries over harder than a grill.
Where to Insert the Probe on a Steak
↑ Return to TOCFinding the Thermal Center on a Thin Cut
↑ Return to TOCInsert the probe from the side, angled toward the center of the thickest part of the steak. Avoid the fat cap on the edge and any bone on a T-bone or bone-in ribeye. Both read hotter than the muscle around them and will give you a false high number.
The Pull-Back Method
↑ Return to TOCPush the probe in until you feel resistance drop as it clears the seared crust and enters the muscle. Then pull it back slowly while watching the display. The lowest number you see on the way out is the true center, since the crust and the surface just under it are always hotter than the core.
I check near the end of the cook, not throughout it. Every extra probe hole lets juice escape, and on a 1-inch steak that adds up fast.
The most common steak-specific mistake: probing straight down through a 1-inch steak often hits the pan or the grill grate underneath, which reads as much as 20°F hotter than the meat itself. Go in from the side instead.
Which Thermometer Type to Use for Steak
↑ Return to TOCAn instant-read beats a leave-in probe for steak. Steak cooks in minutes, not hours, and a leave-in probe’s cord and clip setup is built for a roast in the oven, not a fast sear-and-flip on a hot pan or grill.
Response speed matters more here than on a large cut. A thermocouple-style instant-read reads in two to three seconds, versus five or more for a thermistor model, and on a fast cook that gap is the difference between checking mid-flip and checking after the steak is already overcooked. I own both types, and the thermocouple is the one that stays in my hand for steak night.
If you are shopping for one all-purpose thermometer rather than a steak-specific tool, our full roundup compares every model we tested across every use case in this cluster.
Resting & Carryover Cooking for Steak
↑ Return to TOCA steak’s internal temp keeps climbing for a few minutes after it leaves the heat, typically 3 to 5°F. Pull it 3 to 5°F below your target doneness temp, then rest it 5 minutes tented loosely in foil.
Thickness changes the math. A thin steak under an inch carries over less than a thick cut like a tomahawk or porterhouse, which holds more residual heat and can climb closer to 6 or 7°F after resting. Check the chart above and adjust your pull point up slightly on the thicker end of that range. I pull my thick cuts noticeably earlier than I used to, and it consistently pays off once the rest finishes.
Frequently asked questions
↑ Return to TOCWhat temperature should steak be cooked to for medium-rare?
↑ Return to TOCPull medium-rare steak at 125 to 130°F. It will climb another 3 to 5°F during a 5-minute rest, landing in the 130 to 135°F range most steakhouses use as their definition of medium-rare. I pull mine at 128°F specifically because cast iron carries over harder than a grill, so a few degrees of buffer keeps the center from sliding into medium.
Where do you put a meat thermometer in a steak?
↑ Return to TOCInsert from the side, angled toward the thickest part of the steak, avoiding any fat cap or bone. Push past the seared crust until resistance drops, then pull back slowly while watching the reading. The lowest number on the way out is the true center. Going straight down through a thin steak often hits the pan or grate underneath and gives a falsely hot reading, so side-insertion is the safer approach.
How long should you rest a steak before cutting?
↑ Return to TOCRest a standard steak for 5 minutes, tented loosely in foil, and longer for a thick cut like a tomahawk. This is when carryover cooking finishes, typically adding 3 to 5°F to whatever you pulled at. Cutting immediately releases juice onto the board instead of back into the meat, and skips the last few degrees of cooking the rest is doing for you.
Ready to buy your steak thermometer?
↑ Return to TOCDoneness on steak comes down to seconds and degrees, not guesswork. A fast instant-read and correct side-insertion placement fix the two most common mistakes.





