Making chicken in a pan comes down to three variables: the cut, the heat level, and when you flip. Each cut — breast, thigh, drumstick, tender — has different fat content, thickness, and cook time. The method below covers all of them with one core technique and a timing chart so you never have to guess.
The universal rule: start skin-side down in a cold-started pan (for skin-on cuts) or in a preheated pan with oil (for boneless). The cold start renders fat slowly, crisping the skin without burning it. Hot oil on boneless pieces creates an immediate sear that locks in juices.
Quick Reference — Pan Cooking Times by Cut
| Cut | Heat | Time per Side | Internal Temp | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boneless Breast | Medium-high | 5–6 min | 165°F / 74°C | Pound to ½” even thickness |
| Bone-in Thigh | Medium | 7–8 min skin + 6 min flesh | 185°F / 85°C | Cold-start for crispiest skin |
| Boneless Thigh | Medium-high | 4–5 min | 175°F / 80°C | Flatten slightly for even cook |
| Tenders | Medium-high | 3–4 min | 165°F / 74°C | Fastest cut, watch closely |
| Drumstick | Medium then low | Sear 3 min, covered 20 min | 185°F / 85°C | Sear + covered finish |
The Universal Pan Chicken Method
- Prep the chicken. Pat completely dry — moisture is the enemy of browning. Season generously with kosher salt and pepper. For boneless cuts, pound to even thickness so every part finishes at the same time.
- Choose your start. Skin-on cuts: place skin-side down in a cold, dry pan. Turn heat to medium. The fat renders out slowly, basting the skin from below while it crisps. Boneless cuts: preheat the pan over medium-high for 2 minutes, add 1 tbsp oil, then place chicken smooth-side down.
- Don’t touch it. Once the chicken hits the pan, leave it alone. The Maillard reaction needs sustained contact with the hot surface. You’ll know it’s ready to flip when it releases from the pan on its own. Forcing a flip tears the crust.
- Flip once. Turn and cook for the second-side time from the chart above. For thick bone-in pieces (drumsticks, large thighs), reduce heat and cover for the final 10–15 minutes to cook through without burning the exterior.
- Rest before cutting. Transfer to a plate and wait 5 minutes. Resting lets the muscle fibers relax and reabsorb the juices that were pushed toward the center during cooking. Skip this step and you lose 20–30% of the juices onto your cutting board.
Pro Tips by Cut
For Bone-in Thighs: The Cold-Start Method
Place skin-side down in a cold, dry cast iron skillet. Turn heat to medium. Cook for 12–15 minutes without flipping. The slow render produces a cracker-crisp skin that shatters when you bite through it. No preheating, no oil needed — the chicken fat does all the work.
For Boneless Breast: The Butterfly or Pound
A raw breast is 2 inches thick at the center and tapers to nothing at the edges. Without flattening, the thin end overcooks by the time the center is safe. Butterfly (cut horizontally) or pound to ½ inch for perfectly even cooking.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Frequently Asked Questions
Dry the surface, match the heat to the cut, flip once, and rest 5 minutes — that’s the full method for chicken in a pan regardless of which cut you’re working with.
Save This Pan Chicken Guide
Pin it for every cut and every weeknight — one technique, perfectly cooked chicken.
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Emma Delacourt
Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox
Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.




