Pork Pull Temperature guide
Pull Temperature advice for pork with attention to doneness, carryover, and measurement accuracy.
Pull Temperature for pork works best when you treat the thermometer reading as part of a complete process, not the only variable.
Best use case
This profile is useful when pork can overshoot, rest unevenly, or cook faster at the surface than in the center.
- •Pull temperature matters because carryover heat keeps cooking the food after it leaves the heat source.
- •Larger cuts rise more after cooking than thin pieces do.
- •Resting and tenting decisions change how much carryover you actually get.
What changes results
Cut size, thickness, and heat source all change how closely the number matches the final finish.
- •Thicker cuts carry over more.
- •Direct heat increases overshoot risk.
- •Rest timing is part of accuracy, not optional.
Relevant categories
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Frequently asked questions
How should you use pull temperature for pork?
Use it together with correct probe placement and a realistic rest plan.
What is the common miss?
Most misses come from checking the wrong spot or waiting too long after the target is already reached.
More guides
Carryover cooking guide
How carryover heat changes the final result after food leaves the heat source.
Thermometer mistakes guide
Common probe-placement and reading errors that make a correct chart look wrong.
Resting mistakes guide
Common mistakes that make a correct final temperature still eat drier or less evenly than it should.