Everything You Need To Know To Find The Best Food Thermometer Supplier

03 Mar.,2025

 

The Best Meat Thermometers, Tested and Reviewed - Food & Wine

How We Tested Meat Thermometers

Our editors have tested many meat thermometers over the past few years. We've put them through structured evaluations in our lab and then continued using them at home for several months to see if we would still recommend and use them. 

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For our most recent tests, we tested the meat thermometers for accuracy and responsiveness against ice water, an immersion circulator-controlled water bath, and boiling water. Then we tested them with a grilled pork loin, using a previous winner as a control thermometer, to verify their accuracy in cooked meat. Leave-in thermometers remained in the meat for the entire cooking time, and we tested instant-read thermometers at the point the leave-in models reported the meat was done, noting any discrepancies. We evaluated the the new test population and the legacy winners on the following points.

  • Accuracy: The entire point of a thermometer is to know the temperature of the material or environment you're testing, so accuracy was a key feature in our ratings. Many manufacturers rate their thermometers' accuracy by degrees of variance by temperature range. Because of this we tested the thermometers at low and high ranges in addition to the middle temperatures that most people cook their food.
  • Ease of Use: Most cooks don't need or want lab-quality thermometers that require thick manuals and substantial setup time. They want something that's easy to use. Straightforward directions, easy setup, and a clear display all matter in this cate. Instant-read thermometers should also be easy to hold and read the display simultaneously, while leave-in thermometers should have probes that are easy to insert. Both types should be easy to clean.
  • Design: The two biggest considerations in this area are how easy or comfortable the thermometers and probes are to hold, and how easy it is to read the results. Other factors we considered were durability, quality of construction, and storing the thermometers.
  • Features: Additional features beyond quickly and accurately reporting temperatures were mainly in the purview of leave-in thermometers. We judged apps and connectivity in how easy they were to connect, configure, and use. We also considered app features like timers, presets, historical data, and knowledge bases. High/low threshold alarms, historical highs/lows, and target temperature tracking were key features in thermometers that didn't have app connectivity. We also looked at the distance from the base sending unit a user could get without dropping connectivity for those thermometers that featured Bluetooth or RF connectivity.

Other Meat Thermometers We Tested

Strong Contenders

Meater Pro XL ($350 at Amazon)
I tested the Meater Pro as well as the four-probe Meater Pro XL, and either could hold our spot as Best Overall. The probes are the same, each with five internal sensors, so the choice comes down to whether you want multiple probes or one. This upgraded version, however, also connects to WiFi and lets you program each probe through a small screen built into the bamboo base, which I appreciated in testing.

OXO Good Grips Thermocouple Thermometer ($71 at Amazon)
This is a very accurate, somewhat fast-registering instant-read thermometer. We found it accurate within 1°F and register in two to three seconds in our testing. However, given the price, we found it lacked the construction quality of the Thermpen ONE.

Typhur InstaProbe ($120 at Amazon)
The Typhur InstaProbe is another fold-out instant-read thermometer with a digital readout that displays to the tenth of a degree Fahrenheit. The display took a little damage during testing that comparable models withstood. The damage didn't restrict its functionality, only the display. 

ThermoPro TP25 ($60 at Amazon)
The TP25 was a previous winner in our testing, and we monitored it for six months afterward. We saw the same results in long-term testing as we did in our original round. Unfortunately, innovation happens, and newer multi-probe thermometers surpass the technology.

Cuisinart CSG-200 Infrared and Folding Thermometer ($32 at Amazon)
In addition to being an instant-read, this is a point-and-shoot infrared thermometer, which you can use to assess the surface temperature of your grill or skillet before cooking. As an infrared, it's not as easy to aim as its dedicated competitors, and we found the display more difficult to read than other instant-reads. Still, we like getting two heat-measuring needs met in one device. 

ThermoWorks ChefAlarm ($65 at ThermoWorks)
The ChefAlarm is a simple, compact, single-probe thermometer with high, low, and finished temperature alarms that also tracks current temperature and historic high and low temperatures during the cook. It's operated just as well after six months as it did on day one.

ThermoWorks DOT ($45 at ThermoWorks)
The DOT is a great, compact, wired thermometer for those who don't need large sets of data in their cooking. The simple display lists the current temperature and the target temperature. Six months of continued testing have shown no degradation in performance or accuracy.

What Didn't Make the List

A handful of thermometers we expected to perform well didn't for various reasons and fell off the recommendations list. It could be that the instructions were too limited or the alarm too low to be useful, like the Weber iGrill2 ($103 at Amazon). Or the thermometer could be slow to register and have limited accuracy. Others had design issues that made it difficult to read the displays. Our long-term tests also knocked thermometers off our original list. We really liked the ThermoPro TempSpike ($100 at Amazon) when we first tested it, and we found its app easy to navigate, but it didn't last. The probes need to sync to a dock, but the connection between the devices gave out after a few months.

Factors to Consider

Digital Probe vs. Instant-Read

Choose a thermometer based on your need for one. A digital probe is intended to be left in a piece of food or your oven, smoker, or grill to monitor the temperature over time. This may be the overview you want from long cooking, or you might want more immediate results. An instant-read thermometer is just that. Say you have a piece of chicken in the oven and want to know if it's done. Insert the thermometer, and it tells you the current temperature within a few seconds. Think of the use as quick cooking versus slow cooking and make your decision from there.

Wired vs. Wireless

Wired thermometers aren't necessarily more accurate than wireless, but you're not dependent on as much technology with a wired model. Wireless models provide more freedom, especially should you want to monitor food on a rotisserie, where wires would be tangled in short order, but in those cases, the probes require charging before use to maintain a connection.

Probe Length

Base this decision on two factors: the height of your grill lid and the thickness of the food you'll usually cook. In testing one of the models, the probe was too long to close the grill lid when inserted into a piece of meat. Monitoring chicken wings with a five-inch probe may be excessive, as the probes tend to be top-heavy, but a shorter probe may not be sufficient for monitoring the internal temperature of a pork butt.

Temperature Range

Temperature range is another factor that you should base on your intended use. If you're roasting, grilling, or smoking meats, some wireless thermometers have an upper limit of 212°F, which is perfectly in range for this task. If you're doing something like making candy and need to monitor the temperature closely, you'll need a higher limit.

Speed and Accuracy

If you want to cook meat or vegetables, a couple of degrees of variation can be fine. If you're working with modernist techniques, preserving, or doing confectionary work, that variation can be the difference between success and failure. Along with accuracy, the speed of the reading can be quite important when you're in the middle of a cook. You'll want a thermometer that can quickly give you a steady reading of your food's internal temperature rather than one that takes a minute or two to rise. For the fastest results, you'll want an instant-read thermometer, although standard probe thermometers are usually only a few seconds behind.

Interface

Some of the models we tested are completely app-dependent, while others have a display on the base or thermometer themselves. Find something that suits you in those areas, and then look for a model that displays the information you consider most important at a size you find comfortable reading. If you prefer not to be completely dependent on an app or wireless connectivity, then you'll want to find a model that comes with a native display.

Our Expertise

The 12 Best Meat Thermometers, According To Online Reviews

As a trained chef, I get asked about kitchen gadgets a lot, and I have two that I recommend to almost everyone. If you're a home baker, the baking tool you need is a kitchen scale, and if you're serious about cooking, you should buy a meat thermometer. In fact, you should actually buy two for your kitchen. 

Instant-read thermometers are the kind you poke into your meat from time to time to see if it's done. They're great for things like steaks and seafood. The other kind is a leave-in thermometer, which is heatproof and stays in from start to finish. Most leave-in thermometers now have a probe connected to a digital display, safely away from the heat, through a wire or a wireless connection. You'll use those in your oven or smoker, or on your grill if you're doing a reverse sear.

There are lots of meat thermometers available in both categories with a range of price points and features. Here are a dozen of the very best, according to reviews from online experts and actual home cooks.

I'm going to start with the ThermaPen One because if you have the budget for it and use your thermometer a lot, it is the best out there. ThermoPens are what you'll see chefs using more often than not, and serious foodies love them just as much.

First, they're fast. The term "instant-read" is a misnomer because most models can take four to six seconds, or even up to 10, to get a reading. The ThermaPen takes as little as one second. It's also highly accurate, certified to be within half a degree Fahrenheit. The big, backlit display is easy to read and auto-rotates, so the numbers always face the right way up. It's also waterproof, has outstanding build quality, and comes with a five-year warranty.

So, are there any downsides to this consensus top brand? A few Amazon reviewers point to what sounds like manufacturing defects, and some grumble that it won't always give a reading in one second. Aside from those edge cases, its only real downside is that it (deservedly) commands a premium price.

Buy the ThermaPen One on Amazon for $115.

There's a big gap between the ThermaPen One ' at the top ' and all of those inexpensive instant-read models for $10 or less. Most of us are okay with something between those extremes and would happily choose a mid-priced model from a good manufacturer.

If that's you, Thermoworks' ThermoPop 2 is a great option. It's a bit smaller and slower than its higher-priced sibling, requiring two to three seconds for a reading and boasting a 1-degree Fahrenheit accuracy rather than half a degree, but those are still great numbers for a thermometer at its price point. It shares the quality engineering of the ThermaPen, and its big, backlit round screen autorotates for easy reading from any angle (even inside a dark oven). It uses a coin-type lithium battery that can last for up to 4,000 hours' use and carries a two-year manufacturer's warranty.

Like the ThermaPen, the ThermoPop 2 is a big favorite with product reviewers, outperforming a lot of more costly competitors in rigorous hands-on testing. Regular users seem to love it just as much.

Buy the ThermoPop 2 on Amazon for $41.

Top thermometers like the ThermaPen use a sensing device called a thermocouple, a technology originally created for industrial use. This Oxo product, which lives up to the company's reputation for solid, sensible design, also uses thermocouple.

It's rated as accurate to within .9 of a degree Fahrenheit and reading within two to three seconds, which puts it among the leading products. The probe rotates a full 225 degrees, so it's not just usable but identically usable if you're left-handed. The big display takes the uncommon tack of using illuminated numbers on a black background, so it's unusually easy to read in any lighting. Good hygiene is also baked into the design, which I appreciate as a former food safety instructor: The probe opens and closes with a dial-type thumb pad, so you don't have to touch it, and the slot the probe rests in is wide enough for easy cleaning. This is especially important when you're making fresh mozzarella or homebrewing beer, where any contamination can spoil your whole batch (or potentially make you sick).

Oxo actually shows a similar star rating to ThermaPen One. It's an excellent product, and the only real downside is that its list price puts it in direct competition with the ThermaPen. You're more likely to find the Oxo on sale, though, which can make it a great bargain.

Buy the Oxo Good Grips Thermocouple Thermometer on Amazon for $71.56.

For casual cooks, the speed and accuracy of a thermocouple thermometer aren't such a big deal. "Good enough" is good enough as long as the price and performance line up.

That's where this Venigo comes in. With a starting price of under $10, this isn't going to give you lab-quality results, but that's not the point. It's accurate to within a degree Fahrenheit or so, its response time is surprisingly good (claimed to be within three seconds), and it has a nice, big, backlit display. It even looks like a thermocouple model, for what that's worth.

There are also some nicely considered features here. It has a magnetic back so you can keep it on the fridge (or even your vent hood or oven door) for easy access, and the handle also has a built-in loop for hanging it from a hook or a lanyard. Its high rating on Amazon is pretty impressive for such an inexpensive tool.

Buy the Venigo Digital Meat and Food Thermometer on Amazon for $7.99, depending on color.

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Like the Oxo thermocouple thermometer already recommended, the Javelin Pro Duo from Lavatools comes very close to the ThermaPen in performance. The big difference is that the Javelin Pro Duo comes at a price closer to the ThermoPop.

With the Javelin, you'll get readings in just one to two seconds that are accurate to within half a degree Fahrenheit. The Javelin also has a "hold" button, so you can reach your hand into a hot oven to get the reading of a stabilized temperature and then pull the thermometer out to look at it. Just be sure to wait until the temperature stabilizes and the numbers stop changing before you press the hold button. Otherwise, the reading won't be accurate (this holds true for any thermometer with a hold button, but at least it won't take long with the Javelin).

Like the Venigo, the Javelin has a magnetic back and a loop for a hook or lanyard for convenient storage. Overall, it doesn't offer quite the same build quality or warranty as a ThermaPen (three years rather than five), but it's arguably the best product at the price point ' Amazon reviewers agree.

Buy the Lavatools Javelin Pro Duo on Amazon for $49.99.

This is another great option for a cook on a budget. ThermoPro is a respected brand in the meat thermometer market, with solid products and a wide range of price points.

This one's at the lower end of the range, so you can't expect all the bells and whistles, but you'll still get ThermoPro accuracy (within .9 of a degree Fahrenheit); you'll just have to wait a bit longer (four to six seconds) to get a reading. Aside from its accuracy, the biggest factor (literally) that makes this model stand out at the price point is its probe. Most low-end instant-read thermometers have a probe about 3 to 4 inches long, but the TP-01A has an extra-long 5.3-inch probe. That puts its electronics (and your hand) that much farther from heat, steam, and spatters of hot oil. You'll get niceties like a lock button and a backlight for the display, as well.

This isn't a professional's tool by any stretch, but that's fine: At this price point, it just has to offer good value for the dollar, and it absolutely does that. Users agree on Amazon.

Buy the ThermPro TP-01A Long-Probe Thermometer on Amazon for $9.99.

Let's move on from instant-read thermometers to the leave-in variety. Here, speed isn't a concern because your probe stays in the food from start to finish. Basic features include a display to show your food's temperature, as well as the ability to use presets or choose a target temperature manually. You'll also get an alarm to let you know when you hit that target.

If all you want is a solid, reliable leave-in thermometer, you can't go wrong with this model from Polder. It's a classic in its low-key way, and it ticks all of the boxes I've just mentioned. It's gone mostly unchanged for 20 years or so, besides the periodic upgrades like the silicone-coated wire to the probe. It's very compact, easy to operate, and also includes a timer that you can use with or without the thermometer. Replacement probes are available if you need one. I owned an older version of this thermometer until I lost it in a move, and I wouldn't hesitate to own one again.

There are more advanced thermometers out there, but this one will fit the bill for most home cooks. Users on Amazon seem to agree. Note that the Polder only goes down to negative 32 degrees and up to 392 degrees Fahrenheit, so it's not suitable for extremely high or low-temperature uses.

Buy the Polder Classic Digital Thermometer and Timer on Amazon for $22.99.

We've already listed a couple of instant-read thermometers from ThermoWorks, and their leave-in models are equally competitive. This one is a relatively basic model, but it's a nice upgrade from the Polder.

Most leave-ins are accurate to within 2 degrees Fahrenheit or less (that's a default on the ChefAlarm as well), but you can manually calibrate the ChefAlarm to be accurate within less than 1 degree Fahrenheit. It also lets you set an upper and a lower temperature target, so the thermometer will alert you if the temperature rises or falls beyond your target. That's great for long, slow cooks on a charcoal grill or smoker, where temperatures can fall as the fuel is used up, or to alert you when your food hits (or leaves) the food safety "danger zone." The probe is good to well over 500 degrees Fahrenheit, and its connecting cable can withstand up to 700 degrees Fahrenheit.

ThermoWorks' alarm volume is adjustable up to busy commercial kitchen levels, and its probes are built with commercial use in mind, so they're much more durable than consumer-focused thermometers. The ChefAlarm is consistently a top pick in professional hands-on reviews.

Buy the ThermoWorks ChefAlarm from ThermoWorks for $65.

Most "wireless" thermometers actually have a wired probe running from your food to a separate transmitter, which relays readings to a larger display or sometimes to your . Those are great ' you don't have to hover near your food as it cooks ' but you'll still need to fuss with running that wire to the transmitter.

Recently, a few companies have managed to cram sophisticated electronics directly into the probe itself, creating truly wireless designs like the Meater Pro. It's an impressive-looking product that comes in a bamboo holder/display block that's also the charger. The probe contains six separate sensors, giving surface and interior temperatures for your food as well as the ambient temperature in your oven, grill, or smoker.

You'll control the thermometer from your through an app, where you can set a truly amazing number of alerts and timers. It gives the kind of fine-grained control serious cooks appreciate for grilling, sous vide, and long, slow "cooks" on a smoker. The Meater Pro gives you a single probe, though you can buy more. There's also a Meater Pro XL model, which includes four probes in a money-saving bundle. Be aware that while roughly two-thirds of Meater users on Amazon give it five stars, you can expect sporadic software and connectivity issues.

Buy the Meater Pro Smart Wireless Thermometer on Amazon for $129.95 or the Meater Pro XL on Amazon for $349.95.

The leave-in thermometers we've talked about so far come with a single probe, and that's fine for most purposes. But what if you want to monitor the white and dark meat separately? Or multiple steaks at the same time? Or be sure that your whole roast is cooking at the same rate?

For those situations, you'll want a meat thermometer like this one from ThermoPro, with four separate probes. They're color-coded so you can tell at a glance which probe (or steak) corresponds to the temperature you're seeing, and the thermometer has the usual range of timers and temperature-setting options. It also transmits those temperatures wirelessly to the display, which can be up to 1,000 feet away, through a direct radio frequency connection.

That's an upside/downside scenario. Unlike Bluetooth or Wi-Fi-enabled thermometers, you won't be able to monitor it from your , but it also means you won't need to worry about hackers or privacy issues. Overall, it's a very solid offering from a reliable company, ideal for aspiring grill masters and pitmasters. Home cooks like it as much as professional reviewers, with a solid ranking on Amazon.

Buy the ThermoPro TP829 Wireless Meat Thermometer on Amazon for $47.49.

People who are serious about traditional barbecuing (or grilling, for that matter) want serious tools. That's what this is. The ThermoWorks Smoke X looks much like the four-probe ThermoPro TP829 model we've already recommended, but it's a significant upgrade in a lot of ways.

Like the ThermoPro, it supports up to four color-coded probes ' one for the ambient temperature in your oven, grill, or smoker and three for your meat. Like the ChefAlarm, it can send an alert if your cooking temperature drops below its target (important for long cooks), and the thermometer can connect to ThermoWorks' Billows Temperature Control Fan (sold separately) to automatically provide more oxygen to your charcoal-burning smoker or grill and goose the heat back up to where it should be. Its range is superior as well, providing a direct radio frequency connection good for up to 6,562 feet (about 1¼ miles) of range.

One quibble to be aware of is that while the device supports up to four probes at a time, it comes with just three at the time of purchase. That's not necessarily a deal-breaker, but you'll need to shell out for an additional probe to maximize its potential.

Buy the ThermoWorks Smoke X Long-Range Remote BBQ Alarm Thermometer from ThermoWorks for $199.

If you're the kind of tech-forward cook who embraces the latest technology (or you need a gift for someone like that), then Combustion Inc. has the thermometer you're looking for. Like the Meater thermometer we've already recommended, Combustion's Predictive Thermometer is truly wireless, and its slender probe is packed with sensors and a wireless transmitter.

The Combustion product takes things a few steps further, though. To begin, it uses a low-power Bluetooth 5.4 spec ' released in ' to maximize range (up to 330 feet). You can also add a booster (sold separately) to double that range and monitor temperatures on either the receiver or your . It's accurate to within .4 of a degree Fahrenheit, which is outstanding. It also supports data logging, so if you're trying to dial in a perfect brisket or pork shoulder, you'll have detailed data to work from for the next time.

The really big deal with this thermometer, though, is its ability to predict your time to doneness from the information reported by its sensors. It's not always spot-on, but you'll always know whether you have time for another beer (or a trip to the bathroom). I have several acquaintances who own this thermometer and love it, though they do acknowledge occasional frustrations with software bugs. Amazon reviews reflect that experience, with recurring complaints of software "bugs," but the company is highly responsive and pushes out bug fixes through remote software updates.

Buy the Combustion Inc. Predictive Thermometer on Amazon for $199.99.

I drew on several sources to compile this list of recommendations. One is competitive online reviews from sites where people with technical, food science, or professional cooking experience conduct hands-on tests of the various models to see how their specs and marketing copy translate into practice (and where paid sponsorships don't skew the outcomes).

A second important source is Amazon's user ratings and reviews, where the average buyer shares their own experiences with the products. Although many factors come into play with these reviews, they're useful as a way to differentiate products that make a good first impression versus those that hold up in the long term. Finally, I've drawn on my own experience as a chef as well as feedback that I've gotten from colleagues and dedicated home cooks.

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