Knowing how to cook London broil in the oven correctly separates a genuinely satisfying dinner from a frustrating chew-fest. I’ve watched this cut intimidate home cooks for years — and it shouldn’t. London broil (most commonly top round or flank steak) is an economical, protein-dense cut with a bold, beefy flavor that rewards the right technique with exceptional results. The wrong technique produces something tough enough to re-sole a boot. The difference comes down to three things: oven temperature, internal temperature at pull, and how you slice it after resting. Get those three right and this becomes one of the best weeknight beef dinners in your rotation.
Why You’ll Love This Oven Method
The oven broiler is the ideal environment for London broil — it replicates the intense, direct-radiant heat of a professional grill at 500–550°F (260–288°C), which is exactly what this cut needs. Unlike low-and-slow methods that work for fatty braising cuts, London broil benefits from high heat applied fast. The goal is to cook the exterior quickly enough to trigger Maillard browning before the lean interior has time to overcook and tighten.
This method is a weeknight lifesaver: 12 minutes active cook time, 10 minutes rest, and you’re serving a beautifully seared, medium-rare beef dinner that cost a fraction of a ribeye. It’s the technique, not the cut, doing the work.
What You Need — Equipment & Ingredients
- 2 lbs (900g) London broil — top round or flank steak, 1–1.5 inches thick
- 1 full batch of London broil marinade — applied overnight before cooking
- 1 tsp kosher salt — additional surface seasoning after patting dry
- ½ tsp black pepper, freshly cracked
- 1 tbsp neutral oil — avocado or canola, high smoke point for broiler
- 2 tbsp unsalted butter — for finishing; added during rest for richness
- Fresh thyme sprigs — optional, for aroma during rest
Equipment you need: A broiler-safe rimmed baking sheet or broiler pan, a wire rack that fits inside it, an instant-read thermometer (non-negotiable for this recipe), and a very sharp carving knife or slicing knife. A dull knife drags through the grain rather than cutting cleanly, and dragging damages the muscle fibers you just spent 8 hours carefully tenderizing.
How to Cook London Broil in the Oven — Step by Step
- Before you start — marinade is not optional. If you haven’t marinated yet, begin with a London broil marinade applied overnight. Top round is too lean and too densely grained to cook successfully without the pre-tenderizing work a marinade does. Cooking unmarinated London broil in the oven at high heat produces a tough, dry result regardless of technique. Make the marinade — it takes 5 minutes and the overnight work is passive.
- Position your oven rack and preheat. Set your oven rack 4–5 inches below the broiler heating element. This distance is precise: too close (2–3 inches) and the exterior burns before the interior cooks through; too far (6–8 inches) and you lose the intense radiant heat that creates the crust. Set broiler to HIGH and preheat for a full 10 minutes — most oven broilers take this long to reach full operating temperature.
- Prepare the meat. Remove London broil from the marinade and pat completely dry with paper towels — work methodically across both sides and all edges. Discard the used marinade. Season the dry surface with a light additional pinch of kosher salt and cracked pepper. Brush both sides very lightly with neutral oil (avocado or canola — never olive oil under a broiler, its smoke point is too low). Place on a wire rack set inside a rimmed baking sheet.
- Broil — first side. Slide the pan under the preheated broiler. Cook undisturbed for 5–6 minutes without opening the oven. You’ll hear an active sizzle — that’s the Maillard reaction building the crust. The surface should develop a deeply browned, mahogany char with some caramelization at the edges from the marinade’s residual sugars. Resist opening the oven; each opening drops broiler temperature by 50–75°F.
- Flip and broil — second side. Using tongs, flip the meat and return to the broiler for 4–5 minutes. The second side cooks faster because the meat has already begun warming internally. This is where your thermometer becomes essential — start checking internal temperature at the 4-minute mark of the second side.
- Pull at the right internal temperature. For London broil, the optimal pull temperature is 130–135°F/ 54–57°C for medium-rare, which carries over to 135–140°F/ 57–60°C during rest. At this temperature, the muscle proteins have set enough to hold the juices but haven’t contracted tightly enough to squeeze them out. Pulling at 145°F+ (63°C) — the USDA minimum for beef — produces a noticeably drier, tougher result in this lean cut.
- Rest — this step is not optional. Transfer the London broil to a cutting board. Place 2 tablespoons of butter on top and tent loosely with foil (not tightly sealed — steam under tight foil softens the crust). Rest for a minimum of 10 minutes. During this period, the temperature gradient across the meat equalizes, and the muscle fibers that contracted under heat begin to relax, allowing the juices that were pushed to the center to redistribute. Cutting immediately wastes everything you just built — the juices run out onto the board rather than staying in the meat.
- Slice against the grain — the single most important step. Identify the direction of the muscle fibers running through the meat — they run in long, parallel lines. Cut perpendicular to these lines (at 90°, or at a 45° angle for a more dramatic presentation) in slices ¼ inch thick. Cutting against the grain shortens the muscle fiber lengths you’re biting through from 2–3 inches to ¼ inch — this is the mechanical explanation for why identical meat tastes dramatically more tender sliced one direction versus the other.
During cooking, the protein network in muscle fibers contracts and squeezes moisture toward the center of the meat — the same way wringing a wet cloth forces water to one end. This moisture is under pressure. Cut immediately and it sprays onto your cutting board as “lost juice.” Rest 10 minutes and the proteins gradually relax, allowing the pressurized liquid to flow back outward through the full cross-section of the meat. A properly rested London broil retains 30–40% more moisture on the plate than one sliced immediately.
Pro Tips — Temperature, Timing & The Slicing Secret
Internal Temperature Doneness Guide
49–52°C
54–57°C
60–63°C
71°C+
Timing by Thickness
| Thickness | Side 1 (broil) | Side 2 (broil) | Pull Temp |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¾ inch (2cm) | 4 minutes | 3 minutes | 130°F / 54°C |
| 1 inch (2.5cm) | 5 minutes | 4 minutes | 130°F / 54°C |
| 1.25 inches (3cm) | 6 minutes | 5 minutes | 130°F / 54°C |
| 1.5 inches (4cm) | 7 minutes | 6 minutes | 130°F / 54°C |
Never rely on timing alone for London broil. Every oven broiler runs at slightly different temperatures, and thickness varies even within the same cut. An instant-read thermometer is the only reliable way to hit the 130°F target that makes this cut tender. Insert it horizontally through the side of the thickest part of the meat — not from the top — for the most accurate reading of the true center temperature.
Recipe Variations
🥩 Slow Cooker (Braised)
Sear in a hot skillet first, then braise in 1 cup beef broth + marinade on LOW 6–7 hours. The result is fork-tender and shredded rather than sliced. Completely different texture, equally delicious. Ideal for tacos or sandwiches.
🔥 Cast Iron + Oven Method
Sear in smoking-hot cast iron 3 minutes per side on the stovetop, then finish in a 400°F (204°C) oven for 5–8 minutes to target internal temp. Produces a deeper, more even crust than the broiler-only method.
🌮 London Broil Tacos
Use the Asian-inspired marinade variation. Slice against the grain into thin strips. Serve in warm corn tortillas with pickled red onion, cilantro, avocado, and a lime crema. One of the best value beef taco preparations.
🥗 Salad Topper / Meal Prep
Cook to medium-rare, slice thin, refrigerate. Layer over arugula, roasted cherry tomatoes, shaved Parmesan, and balsamic glaze for a protein-packed lunch bowl. Holds 4 days in the fridge — flavor actually improves by Day 2.
What to Serve With London Broil
London broil’s lean, intensely savory profile calls for sides that provide either fat, starch, or brightness — or ideally all three across a full plate.
- Garlic herb roasted potatoes — Cubed Yukon Golds roasted at 425°F (220°C) until crispy-edged. The potato starch absorbs the meat juices pooling on the cutting board — don’t waste them. Spoon the juices over the potatoes as a natural pan sauce.
- Roasted broccolini with lemon — Slightly bitter greens roasted at high heat until the tips are charred. The bitterness resets the palate between bites of savory beef, and the lemon lifts the whole plate with brightness.
- Caramelized onions — Slow-cooked for 35–40 minutes in butter until deeply amber and sweet. The caramelized sugars in the onions mirror the Maillard browning on the beef, creating a cohesive flavor story across the plate.
- Beef broth pan sauce — Pour ½ cup low-sodium beef broth into the baking sheet after removing the meat. Place the baking sheet over a burner, scrape up any fond, add a splash of balsamic vinegar, reduce by half, swirl in 1 tablespoon of cold butter off heat. A 4-minute sauce that elevates the whole dish.
Storage & Meal Prep
Nutritional Information
Per serving (approx. 5 oz cooked London broil, broiled, no sauce), approximate values:
| Nutrient | Amount | % Daily Value |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 295 kcal | — |
| Protein | 40g | 80% |
| Total Fat | 12g | 15% |
| Saturated Fat | 4.5g | 23% |
| Carbohydrates | 2g | <1% |
| Sugar | 1g | — |
| Sodium | 410mg | 18% |
| Iron | 4.2mg | 23% |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
London broil cooked in the oven without a marinade is tough — full stop. Top round has virtually no intramuscular fat, which means there’s nothing to self-baste or lubricate the muscle fibers during cooking. A marinade is not optional for this cut; it’s the structural prerequisite for tenderness.
At 160°F+ (71°C), the muscle proteins in top round have fully contracted and squeezed out almost all retained moisture. The result is dry, chewy, and tough — exactly what people complain about with London broil. Pull at 130–135°F (54–57°C) and rest. This is the single most impactful change you can make. USDA safe handling guidelines for beef note that whole muscle cuts like top round are safe at lower temperatures than ground beef.
This is the mistake most responsible for tough London broil — even perfectly cooked meat sliced with the grain requires tearing through 3–4 inch muscle fiber lengths. Sliced against the grain at ¼ inch thickness, those same fibers are only ¼ inch long. The tenderness difference is dramatic and requires zero additional cooking skill.
Most home oven broilers require 8–12 minutes to reach full operating temperature. Adding meat to a partially heated broiler means the first 3–4 minutes of “broiling” are actually just warm-air cooking — no Maillard reaction, no sear, no crust. Always preheat at least 10 full minutes.
Cutting London broil straight from the broiler wastes the resting period’s moisture redistribution. You’ll see a pool of juice flood your cutting board — that’s the liquid that should have stayed inside the meat. Ten minutes of patience produces measurably juicier results every time.
FAQs
Once you understand how to cook London broil in the oven — marinade overnight, broil hot and fast, pull at medium-rare, rest ten minutes, slice thin against the grain — this becomes one of the most reliable and impressive-to-serve weeknight beef dinners possible. It rewards planning, not skill. Do the prep work, respect the temperatures, and this cut will never disappoint you again.
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How to Cook London Broil in The Oven (Juicy & Never Tough)
A recipe for cooking London broil in the oven, resulting in a tender and flavorful dish
- 2 lbs pounds London broil (top round or flank steak) 1-1.5 inches thick
- 1 full batch batch London broil marinade
- 1 tsp teaspoon kosher salt
- 0.5 tsp teaspoon black pepper freshly cracked
- 1 tbsp tablespoon neutral oil avocado or canola
- 2 tbsp tablespoon unsalted butter for finishing
Step 1: Prepare the Meat
Remove London broil from the marinade and pat completely dry with paper towels
Season the dry surface with a light additional pinch of kosher salt and cracked pepper
Brush both sides very lightly with neutral oil
Step 2: Broil the Meat
Slide the pan under the preheated broiler
Cook undisturbed for 5-6 minutes without opening the oven
Flip and broil for 4-5 minutes
Step 3: Rest the Meat
Transfer the London broil to a cutting board
Place 2 tablespoons of butter on top and tent loosely with foil
Rest for a minimum of 10 minutes
Step 4: Slice the Meat
Identify the direction of the muscle fibers running through the meat
Cut perpendicular to these lines in slices 1/4 inch thick
- Broiler-safe rimmed baking sheet
- Wire rack
- Instant-read thermometer
- Sharp carving knife
Marinade overnight, broil hot and fast, pull at medium-rare, rest ten minutes, slice thin against the grain
Did You Try Our Recipe ?
Scrumptious
My husband (who is extremely picky) loved the liver & onions so much!! I didn’t have any beef broth or Sherry so I used about a tbl of Worcestershire and 1/4 c of white wine …..it was scrumptious
Response from MeatRecipesBox
Oh wow, I’m so happy to hear that!! 😍 I love that you made it work with what you had on hand — Worcestershire and white wine sound like a delicious twist. So glad your husband enjoyed it, especially being picky! Thank you for sharing your version, it makes me smile knowing it turned out scrumptious!
This was amazing
This recipe turned out really amazing! It’s juicy and spiced deliciously. I definitely would use less of the spicy pepper next time, but it really was delicious and I don’t think I’ll make chicken legs any other way from now on.!
Response from MeatRecipesBox
Thank you for taking the time to leave such a thoughtful review. I’m really glad to hear the recipe turned out juicy and full of flavor for you. That’s exactly what I was hoping for when putting it together. Good call on the spicy pepper as well. Adjusting the heat level to your own taste is always the best approach, and using a little less next time should make it just right for you. I really appreciate you trying the recipe and sharing your experience. It’s great to know it worked so well for you.
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One skillet. A handful of simple ingredients. Thirty minutes on the clock. And somehow… I ended up with the crispiest, most comforting cornbeef hash recipe I’ve made in years.
I wasn’t expecting much—just a quick, no-fuss meal. But that first bite? Crispy edges, tender potatoes, smoky corned beef, a little kick of pepper. It tasted like something straight off a cozy diner griddle.
Honestly, it caught me off guard—in the best way. Here’s why this simple skillet completely won me over.

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.



