Steak Grill Time Calculator: Perfect Every Time

🥩 Steak Grill Time Calculator

Get exact grilling times by cut, thickness, and preferred doneness level

Quick Presets
🧮 Calculator
Time Per Side
--
minutes
Total Grill Time
--
minutes (flips included)
Target Temp
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°F internal
Rest Time
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minutes before cutting
🌡 Doneness Guide (1-inch steak)
4 min
Rare
125°F
6 min
Medium Rare
135°F
8 min
Medium
145°F
10 min
Medium Well
155°F
12 min
Well Done
165°F
📊 Grill Times by Cut and Doneness (1-inch thick, gas grill)
CutRareMedium RareMediumWell Done
Ribeye4 min6 min8 min12 min
Sirloin4 min6 min8 min12 min
Filet Mignon5 min7 min9 min13 min
T-Bone4 min6 min9 min13 min
New York Strip4 min6 min8 min12 min
Flank Steak3 min5 min7 min10 min
Skirt Steak2 min4 min6 min9 min
Flat Iron4 min6 min8 min11 min
🥩 Grill Times by Thickness (Medium Rare, Gas Grill)
4 min
0.75 inch
6 min
1 inch
9 min
1.5 inch
12 min
2 inch
📋 Internal Temperature Reference
DonenessPull TempFinal Temp (after rest)Description
Rare120°F125°FCool red center
Medium Rare130°F135°FWarm red center
Medium140°F145°FWarm pink center
Medium Well150°F155°FSlightly pink center
Well Done160°F165°FNo pink, fully cooked
🔥 Grill Temperature Guide
Grill TypeHeat LevelTemp RangeBest For
Gas GrillHigh450–500°FAll steaks, consistent heat
Charcoal GrillHigh500–550°FSear crust, smoky flavor
Cast IronHigh / Medium-High450–475°FPerfect crust, stovetop finish
Reverse SearLow then High250°F then 500°FThick steaks 1.5"+
💡 Tip: Always var your steak rest for at least 5 minutes after grilling. During rest, carryover cooking raises the internal temperature by about 5°F and the juices redistribute throughout the meat for a juicier steak.
💡 Tip: For steaks thicker than 1.5 inches, consider the reverse sear method: cook low and slow in a 250°F oven or indirect grill heat until 10°F below target temp, then sear on high heat for 1–2 minutes per side to develop a crust.
💡 Tip: Preheat your grill for at least 10–15 minutes before placing steaks. A properly preheated grill creates a better sear, reduces sticking, and gives you more accurate cook times.

 

Steak is made up of sliced meat cut along the muscle fibers, and it sometimes carries bone. Usually one Grill or fry it, although one can chop or cook in sauce also. Most steaks come from cows even so one cuts them from bisons, buffalo, camels, goats, horses, kangaroos, sheep and ostriches.

That diversity surprises many folks.

Steak Cuts and How to Cook Them

Big differences exist between the cuts. Cuts of beef with less use tend to be more tender, but they lack flavor. Bits from tenderloin, as filet mignon or chateaubriand, are very soft, however their beef taste is softer than in fatter meat.

Steak ribeye, especially if it is well matured, offers rich set of flavors and stays very juicy. Cuts from chuck rib, that comes close to the ribeye, give strong beefy taste for much more low cost. One cooks them in high heat.

More tough bits, as flank, skirt and hanger, differ entirely.

Marinades one commonly uses to soften more rugged cuts, for instance flank, chuck, round and skirt steaks. Tender bits as T-bone escape marinades. Sirloin answers well for marinade, because if one only Grill it simply, it risks to become chewy and tuff.

Cooking, burn in pan with melted butter makes Steak with caramelized surface outside and juicy interior. To reach good crust, one preheats the meat and covers it with butter. Carry steaks from the fridge at least for half an hour before cooking.

Dry them with paper and salt freely along with pepper. Use very hot iron pan with oil of high smoke point, as grapeseed oil, for the searing. Method of reverse searing is another favorite way: one cooks the middle first in low heat, later ends with strong searing.

Also a cast iron pan, heated in high flame, works well indoors.

Debate happens between oiling of the Steak itself or of the pan. Oiling of the meat apparently results in less fat outflow and less smoke when one sears.

About serving sizes, standard portion of beef is three ounces, similar to a deck of playing cards. For Steak itself, good base is eight ounces each person. If one serves it with sides, the amount can drop to six ounces roughly.

In a group, one chooses a big cut and serves it style for the wholefamily.

Steak is a plate where personal taste truly matters. Some like it very rare, while others want it fully cooked without any trace of raw. Even most steakhouses do not use USDA Prime beef.

Good Steak starts with good meat, but one does not need a fancy cut to reach a result that matches restaurant level.

Steak Grill Time Calculator: Perfect Every Time

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