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Whether you're following a recipe from overseas, converting between oven types, or checking your meat is safely cooked, this comprehensive guide has all the temperature conversions you need.

Temperature Conversion Formulas

Celsius to Fahrenheit: °F = (°C × 9/5) + 32 Fahrenheit to Celsius: °C = (°F - 32) × 5/9

Example Conversions

180°C to Fahrenheit: (180 × 9/5) + 32 = 356°F (rounded to 350°F)

400°F to Celsius: (400 - 32) × 5/9 = 204°C (rounded to 200°C)

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Oven Temperature Conversion Chart

Description °C (Conventional) °C (Fan) °F Gas Mark
Very Cool 110°C 90°C 225°F ¼
Cool 140°C 120°C 275°F 1
Warm 150°C 130°C 300°F 2
Moderate 160°C 140°C 325°F 3
Moderate 180°C 160°C 350°F 4
Moderately Hot 190°C 170°C 375°F 5
Hot 200°C 180°C 400°F 6
Hot 220°C 200°C 425°F 7
Very Hot 230°C 210°C 450°F 8
Very Hot 240°C 220°C 475°F 9
Fan Oven Rule: Reduce the temperature by 20°C when using a fan (convection) oven. Fan ovens circulate heat more efficiently, cooking food faster and more evenly.

Safe Meat Cooking Temperatures

Internal temperatures to ensure food is safely cooked:

Meat Type Safe Internal Temp (°C) Safe Internal Temp (°F)
Chicken (whole, pieces, mince) 74°C 165°F
Turkey (whole, pieces, mince) 74°C 165°F
Duck 74°C 165°F
Beef (steak, roast) - Medium Rare 55-57°C 130-135°F
Beef (steak, roast) - Medium 60-65°C 140-150°F
Beef (steak, roast) - Well Done 70°C+ 160°F+
Beef/Lamb Mince 71°C 160°F
Lamb (roast) - Pink 60-65°C 140-150°F
Pork (roast, chops) 63°C 145°F
Pork Mince/Sausages 71°C 160°F
Fish 63°C 145°F
Food Safety: Always use a meat thermometer for accurate readings. Insert it into the thickest part of the meat, avoiding bone. Poultry and mince must always be cooked thoroughly—no pink meat or juices.

Steak Doneness Guide

Doneness Internal Temp (°C) Internal Temp (°F) Description
Blue (rare) 46-49°C 115-120°F Cool red centre, seared outside
Rare 50-55°C 125-130°F Warm red centre
Medium Rare 55-60°C 130-140°F Warm pink centre
Medium 60-65°C 140-150°F Hot pink centre
Medium Well 65-70°C 150-160°F Slightly pink centre
Well Done 70°C+ 160°F+ No pink, fully cooked through
Resting Meat: After cooking, rest meat for 5-10 minutes before cutting. The internal temperature will rise 3-5°C during resting (carryover cooking), and juices redistribute for better flavour.

Common Baking Temperatures

Baked Good Conventional (°C) Fan (°C)
Meringues 100-120°C 80-100°C
Slow-roast meat 140-150°C 120-130°C
Casseroles 160-180°C 140-160°C
Cakes 180°C 160°C
Biscuits/Cookies 180-190°C 160-170°C
Bread 200-220°C 180-200°C
Roast potatoes 200-220°C 180-200°C
Pizza 220-250°C 200-230°C

Oil Smoke Points

The temperature at which cooking oils start to smoke and break down:

Oil Type Smoke Point (°C) Best For
Extra Virgin Olive Oil 160-190°C Dressings, low-heat cooking
Butter 150°C Low-heat sautéing
Coconut Oil (unrefined) 175°C Medium-heat cooking
Vegetable Oil 220-230°C Frying, high-heat cooking
Sunflower Oil 225°C Frying, roasting
Rapeseed Oil 230°C All-purpose, high-heat
Groundnut (Peanut) Oil 230°C Deep frying, stir-frying
Avocado Oil 270°C Very high-heat cooking

Deep Frying Temperatures

Food Temperature (°C) Temperature (°F)
Chips (chunky) 160°C first, 180°C second 320°F, then 360°F
Fish in batter 180-190°C 355-375°F
Chicken pieces 175°C 350°F
Doughnuts 180°C 355°F
Tempura 180°C 355°F

Understanding Oven Types in the UK

UK kitchens use several different oven types, and understanding the differences is essential for achieving consistent cooking results. The most common types are conventional ovens, fan ovens (also called convection ovens), and gas ovens that use the traditional gas mark system. Each type distributes heat differently, which directly affects cooking times and temperatures.

Conventional ovens heat from elements at the top and bottom, creating natural heat zones within the oven cavity. The top tends to be hotter than the bottom, which is why recipes often specify which shelf to use. Fan ovens use a built-in fan to circulate hot air evenly throughout the cavity, eliminating hot spots and allowing food to cook more uniformly. This is why fan ovens require a lower temperature setting, typically 20 degrees Celsius less than a conventional oven for the same result.

Gas ovens, still found in many older UK homes, use the gas mark system unique to British cooking. Gas ovens tend to have more moisture in the cooking environment because combustion of natural gas produces water vapour. This can be advantageous for certain baked goods but may require adjustment for dishes that need a dry, crisp finish. If your recipe was written for a gas oven and you are using an electric fan oven, you will need to convert the gas mark to Celsius and then reduce by 20 degrees for the fan setting.

Oven calibration tip: Many ovens run hotter or cooler than the temperature displayed on the dial. An oven thermometer (available from about £5) placed inside the oven gives you the actual temperature. If your oven runs 10-15 degrees hot, you will need to set it lower than the recipe states to achieve the correct cooking temperature.

UK Food Safety Standards

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) in the UK provides specific guidance on safe cooking temperatures that differ slightly from guidelines in other countries. Understanding these standards is particularly important when cooking for vulnerable groups such as young children, pregnant women, elderly people, or those with weakened immune systems.

All poultry, including chicken and turkey, must reach an internal temperature of 74 degrees Celsius throughout the thickest part of the meat. The FSA recommends checking that juices run clear and that no pink meat remains, particularly near the bone. For pork, the recommended safe internal temperature is 63 degrees Celsius, though many UK cooks prefer to cook pork to 71 degrees Celsius for complete peace of mind. Minced meat products such as burgers, sausages, and meatloaf should always reach 71 degrees Celsius, as the mincing process can distribute bacteria throughout the meat.

When reheating food, the FSA states it should be heated to at least 70 degrees Celsius and held at that temperature for two minutes. In Scotland, the requirement is stricter at 82 degrees Celsius. Leftover food should be reheated only once, and any food that has been left at room temperature for more than two hours should be discarded rather than refrigerated for later use.

Barbecue safety: The FSA reports that food poisoning cases increase during summer barbecue season. Always ensure that barbecued meat, particularly chicken and sausages, is cooked all the way through. Use a meat thermometer to verify the internal temperature has reached 74 degrees Celsius for poultry and 71 degrees Celsius for burgers and sausages. Charring on the outside does not guarantee the inside is safely cooked.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do American recipes use Fahrenheit?

The United States is one of the few countries that still uses the Fahrenheit scale for everyday temperature measurement. When following American recipes, baking blogs, or cooking videos from US-based creators, you will need to convert Fahrenheit to Celsius for your UK oven. The most common American baking temperature of 350 degrees Fahrenheit converts to approximately 180 degrees Celsius conventional or 160 degrees Celsius fan. Similarly, 375 degrees Fahrenheit is about 190 degrees Celsius, and 400 degrees Fahrenheit is approximately 200 degrees Celsius.

How do I know if my oven temperature is accurate?

Place a standalone oven thermometer in the centre of your oven, set the oven to 180 degrees Celsius, and wait 20 minutes for it to stabilise. Compare the thermometer reading to the dial setting. Many ovens, particularly older models, can be off by 10 to 25 degrees Celsius. If your oven consistently runs hot or cold, simply adjust your settings accordingly. For example, if your oven runs 15 degrees hot, set it to 165 degrees Celsius when a recipe calls for 180 degrees Celsius.

What is the difference between grilling and broiling?

In UK cooking terminology, grilling refers to cooking food under a direct heat source at the top of the oven. In American English, this same method is called broiling. Both typically operate at temperatures between 260 and 290 degrees Celsius. The UK grill is ideal for finishing dishes like cheese on toast, browning the top of shepherd's pie, or cooking thinner cuts of meat quickly. Always keep the oven door slightly ajar when using a gas grill to prevent overheating.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are UK gas mark temperatures and how do they relate to Celsius?
Gas marks are a temperature scale used exclusively in the UK and Ireland for gas ovens. The scale runs from gas mark 1 at 140 degrees Celsius up to gas mark 9 at 240 degrees Celsius, with each increment representing approximately 14 degrees Celsius. The most commonly used settings in UK cooking are gas mark 4 at 180 degrees Celsius for gentle baking, gas mark 5 at 190 degrees Celsius for cakes and biscuits, gas mark 6 at 200 degrees Celsius for roasting, and gas mark 7 at 220 degrees Celsius for high-heat cooking such as Yorkshire puddings and bread. Below gas mark 1, there is a setting often marked as S or slow at 130 degrees Celsius. Although fewer UK households use gas ovens today, gas marks remain widely referenced in British cookbooks, BBC Good Food recipes, and on food packaging, making conversion knowledge essential for anyone using an electric or fan oven.
What internal temperatures should meat reach to be safe according to UK food safety guidelines?
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) recommends that all poultry including chicken and turkey should reach an internal temperature of 75 degrees Celsius throughout. Pork should also reach 75 degrees Celsius to ensure safety, as the old guidance of cooking until juices run clear is no longer considered reliable. For beef and lamb, the safe minimum depends on preference: 75 degrees Celsius for well done, 71 degrees Celsius for medium, and 63 degrees Celsius for medium-rare. Whole cuts of beef and lamb can be served rare as bacteria are only present on the outer surface, but minced meat products such as burgers and sausages must be cooked through to 75 degrees Celsius because bacteria are distributed throughout. The FSA advises using a digital food thermometer, inserting it into the thickest part of the meat away from bone, to verify temperatures accurately rather than relying on visual cues or cooking time alone.

Food Standards Agency Guidelines for Safe Cooking in the UK

The Food Standards Agency (FSA), the independent government department responsible for food safety across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, publishes comprehensive guidance on safe cooking temperatures that every UK household should follow. The FSA's core recommendation is that food must be cooked to a core temperature of at least 70 degrees Celsius for two minutes, or an equivalent time-temperature combination, to eliminate harmful bacteria including Salmonella, E. coli O157, Campylobacter, and Listeria. Campylobacter is the most common cause of food poisoning in the United Kingdom, responsible for an estimated 500,000 cases annually, and is most frequently associated with undercooked poultry. The FSA strongly advises against washing raw chicken before cooking, as this can spread bacteria through water droplets across kitchen surfaces.

UK food businesses operating under the Food Safety Act 1990 and the Food Safety and Hygiene (England) Regulations 2013 are legally required to implement Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) procedures, which include documented temperature monitoring at critical cooking and storage stages. For home cooks, the FSA recommends investing in a digital probe thermometer, which typically costs between five and fifteen pounds from UK retailers, as the most reliable method of verifying that food has reached a safe internal temperature. The agency's guidance is particularly important during barbecue season, when UK hospital admissions for food poisoning increase noticeably. The FSA also provides specific guidance for cooking from frozen, reheating leftovers (which must reach 70 degrees Celsius throughout), and safe slow-cooker usage, all of which require careful temperature management to prevent bacterial growth in the temperature danger zone between 8 and 63 degrees Celsius.

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James Mitchell, ACCA

James Mitchell, ACCA

Chartered Accountant & Former HMRC Advisor

James is a Chartered Certified Accountant (ACCA) specialising in UK personal taxation and financial planning. With over 12 years in practice and a background as a former HMRC compliance officer, he brings authoritative insight to complex tax topics.

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Last updated: February 2026 | Verified with latest UK rates