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Chicken Drumsticks Recipe – Crispy & Juicy Baked Perfection

E
By Emma Delacourt · February 23, 2026 · 12 min read
chicken drumsticks recipe

Chicken drumsticks are the most forgiving cut in the kitchen. They have enough fat and collagen to stay juicy even if you overshoot the oven time by 10 minutes — something that would destroy a chicken breast. The method below uses a two-temperature bake: moderate heat to cook through, then a high-heat blast to crisp the skin without drying out the meat.

The key most recipes skip: pat the skin completely dry and bake uncovered on a wire rack. A sheet pan alone traps moisture under the drumstick, steaming the skin soggy on the bottom half. A rack lifts the chicken, lets hot air circulate 360 degrees, and produces evenly crispy skin on all sides.

Prep10 min
Cook45 min
Total55 min
Servings6
Calories290

Why This Baked Chicken Drumsticks Recipe Works

  • Two-temperature method. 35 minutes at 400°F cooks the meat through. A 10-minute blast at 450°F crisps the skin without drying out the interior. This split approach solves the classic oven drumstick problem: crispy outside, raw near the bone.
  • Wire rack baking. Elevating the drumsticks means hot air hits the skin from all angles. No soggy bottom, no flipping needed.
  • Simple spice rub. Garlic powder, smoked paprika, onion powder, salt, pepper, and a drizzle of oil. The oil helps the spices stick and promotes browning. No marinating time needed.
  • Budget-friendly. Drumsticks cost $1–2/lb — a fraction of breast or thigh. This recipe feeds 6 for under $8 total. For more oven techniques, see our complete drumsticks in oven guide.

Ingredients

Ingredients — Serves 6
  • 12 chicken drumsticks (about 3 lbs total)
  • 2 tbsp avocado oil or olive oil
  • 1½ tsp kosher salt
  • 1 tsp black pepper
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • ½ tsp dried thyme
  • ½ tsp cayenne pepper (optional)
Dry-brine for crispier skin. Salt the drumsticks the night before and refrigerate uncovered on a wire rack. The salt draws surface moisture out, and the fridge air dries the skin. This produces noticeably crispier skin than seasoning right before baking.

How to Bake Chicken Drumsticks

  1. Prep the drumsticks. Pat each drumstick completely dry with paper towels. This is the most important step for crispy skin — any surface moisture creates steam in the oven, which softens the skin instead of crisping it.
  2. Season. Toss drumsticks with oil, then sprinkle the spice mix evenly on all sides. The oil serves two purposes: it helps the spices adhere to the skin, and it conducts heat more efficiently than dry skin alone, accelerating the Maillard reaction.
  3. Arrange on a wire rack. Set a wire cooling rack inside a rimmed sheet pan lined with foil (for easy cleanup). Place drumsticks on the rack with space between each one. The air gap underneath is what prevents soggy bottom skin.
  4. Bake at 400°F for 35 minutes. This moderate heat cooks the drumsticks through to 185°F / 85°C internal temperature. Dark meat needs to reach this temp for the collagen to convert to gelatin — pulling at 165°F leaves the meat chewy near the bone.
  5. Blast at 450°F for 10 minutes. Increase the oven temperature for a final high-heat phase. The skin tightens, the rendered fat sizzles, and the surface develops a deep golden color. Watch closely — the window between perfectly crispy and burnt is about 3 minutes at this temp.
  6. Rest 5 minutes. The internal temp continues climbing 5–10°F during rest. Cutting immediately causes the juices (which are mostly rendered collagen) to run out instead of redistributing through the meat.
Why dark meat needs 185°F, not 165°F. The USDA says chicken is safe at 165°F, and that is true for pathogen reduction. But drumsticks contain far more connective tissue (collagen) than breast meat. Collagen begins converting to gelatin at 160°F and finishes around 185°F. Pulling drumsticks at 165°F leaves intact collagen near the bone — the meat is safe but tough and chewy. At 185°F+, that collagen has melted into gelatin, giving drumsticks their signature juicy, pull-off-the-bone texture. Reference: Serious Eats dark meat temperature guide.

Pro Tips

Score the Skin for Even Crisping

Make two shallow cuts through the skin on each drumstick before seasoning. The cuts let rendered fat escape during baking instead of pooling under the skin, and they create more surface area for the spice rub to contact.

Use a Thermometer, Not a Timer

Drumstick size varies widely. A small drumstick (3 oz) finishes 8–10 minutes before a large one (5 oz). Insert the probe into the thickest part without touching bone. Done at 185°F.

Variations

Honey Garlic Glaze

Mix 3 tbsp honey + 2 tbsp soy sauce + 4 minced garlic cloves. Brush on during the last 10 minutes. The sugars caramelize under the 450°F blast, creating a sticky, lacquered crust.

Lemon Herb

Replace smoked paprika with lemon zest and dried oregano. Squeeze half a lemon over the drumsticks after baking. The acidity cuts through the richness of the dark meat.

BBQ Style

Bake plain at 400°F for 30 minutes. Brush with BBQ sauce. Continue baking 15 minutes. The sauce sets into a thick, caramelized glaze without burning.

Air Fryer

Season the same way. Air fry at 400°F for 20–22 minutes, flipping halfway. The basket acts as its own wire rack. Skin crisps faster due to the concentrated airflow.

What to Serve With Chicken Drumsticks

  • Roasted vegetables — potatoes, carrots, and broccoli that can share the same oven at 400°F.
  • Coleslaw — the cool crunch contrasts the hot, crispy skin.
  • Mac and cheese — the classic comfort food pairing, especially with the BBQ variation.
  • Steamed rice — absorbs the juices and works with any spice profile.

Storage

❄️
Refrigerator
Up to 4 days in an airtight container. Dark meat reheats better than breast because the higher fat content prevents drying.
❄️
Freezer
Up to 3 months. Freeze individually on a sheet pan first, then bag. Thaw overnight in the fridge.
🔥
Reheating
Oven at 375°F for 12–15 minutes on a wire rack. The dry oven heat re-crisps the skin. Avoid the microwave.

Nutrition

NutrientAmount
Calories290 kcal
Protein28g
Carbohydrates1g
Fat19g
Iron12% DV
Zinc18% DV

Common Mistakes

Baking on a flat sheet pan without a rack. The bottom of the drumstick sits in rendered fat and steam, producing soggy, pale skin. A wire rack solves this entirely.
Pulling at 165°F. Safe but chewy. Dark meat drumsticks need 185°F for the collagen to convert to gelatin. The extra 20 degrees is the difference between rubbery and tender.
Crowding the pan. Drumsticks touching each other trap steam between them, preventing the skin from crisping. Leave at least 1 inch of space between each piece.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long to bake chicken drumsticks at 400?
35 minutes at 400°F for standard-size drumsticks (4–5 oz each), followed by a 10-minute blast at 450°F for crispy skin. Total: 45 minutes. Always verify with a thermometer — target is 185°F internal.
Should I cover drumsticks when baking?
Never. Covering traps steam and prevents the skin from crisping. Bake uncovered for the entire cook time. The dark meat has enough fat to stay moist without foil protection.
Why are my baked drumsticks rubbery?
Two likely causes: the internal temp did not reach 185°F (collagen near the bone is still intact), or the skin was wet when it went into the oven (it steamed instead of crisped). Pat dry and use a thermometer.
Can I marinate drumsticks before baking?
Yes, but pat them dry before baking or the wet marinade will prevent the skin from crisping. A dry rub gives better skin texture than a wet marinade. If marinating, do it overnight and dry thoroughly before the oven.

Pat dry, season with a simple spice rub, bake on a wire rack at 400°F then blast at 450°F — that is the full method for crispy baked chicken drumsticks with tender, pull-off-the-bone meat.

Save This Drumstick Recipe

Pin it for your next budget-friendly dinner — feeds 6 for under $8.

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Emma Delacourt

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.

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