Smoking Meat Time Calculator
Calculate smoking times and internal temperature targets for brisket, pork shoulder, ribs, chicken, and turkey. Includes stall window, wrap timing, and rest time guidance.
lbs
°F
Estimated Cook Time
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Target Internal Temp —
Rest Time —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
lbs
Cook Time at 225°F
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Stall Window —
Target Temp —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
lbs
°F
Estimated Total Time
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Wrap Timing —
Final Internal Temp —
Rest Time —
Stall Info —
How to Use This Calculator
- Select your meat type from the dropdown.
- Enter the weight in pounds.
- Set your smoker temperature (225°F is classic low & slow).
- The calculator returns estimated cook time, target internal temp, and rest time.
Formula
Brisket / Pork Shoulder: ~1.5 hrs/lb at 225°F
Turkey: ~30 min/lb at 225°F
Ribs: 5–6 hrs flat time regardless of weight
Higher temps (275°F) reduce time by ~25%.
Example
14 lb brisket at 225°F: 14 × 1.5 = 21 hours estimated. Pull at 203°F internal, rest 1–2 hours wrapped.
Frequently Asked Questions
- At 225°F, plan for 1–1.5 hours per pound. A 12-pound brisket takes 12–18 hours. Use internal temperature (203°F) rather than time as the true doneness indicator.
- The stall occurs around 155–165°F when evaporative cooling from the meat slows temperature rise for 2–4 hours. Wrapping in butcher paper or foil helps push through it.
- Pull brisket at 195–203°F for probe-tender results. The probe should slide in like butter. Some pitmasters pull at 200°F and rest, others go to 205°F for very moist slices.
- Rest brisket and pork shoulder for at least 1–2 hours wrapped in butcher paper and a towel in a cooler. Resting allows juices to redistribute throughout the meat.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (4) ▾
- Franklin BBQ — Aaron Franklin
- Meathead – AmazingRibs.com Science of Great Barbecue — AmazingRibs.com
- USDA Meat & Poultry Hotline — USDA FSIS
- ThermoWorks Internal Temperature Guide — ThermoWorks