Rinsing Doesn’t Kill a Single Bacterium

Rinsing or soaking chicken does not destroy bacteria. Only cooking will destroy any bacteria that might be present on fresh chicken. This is not a matter of debate – it is a basic biological fact. Washing or rinsing raw chicken does not kill bacterial pathogens such as Campylobacter, Salmonella, or other bacteria that might be on the inside and outside of raw chicken. The only thing water actually does is move those bacteria around.
Your Sink Becomes a Bacterial Minefield

Bacteria was found in the sinks of roughly three in five cooks who rinsed raw chicken, as part of a 2019 USDA study. That statistic alone should give most home cooks pause. Even more concerning, roughly one in seven people still had bacteria in their sinks after they attempted to clean the sink. A surface you believe you’ve cleaned may still be harboring live pathogens.
Bacteria Travels Much Farther Than You Think

Washing chicken in the sink under standard kitchen faucet conditions can eject droplets containing culturable levels of pathogens throughout the kitchen. The splash radius is wider than most people realize. Some estimates say the splatter can spread out and land on surfaces up to 3 feet away. Your cutting board, your fruit bowl, your spice jars – all potentially within range.
The USDA’s Own Research Condemns the Practice

A study from the U.S. Department of Agriculture reveals that individuals are putting themselves at risk of illness when they wash or rinse raw poultry. Even when consumers think they are effectively cleaning after washing poultry, the study showed that bacteria can easily spread to other surfaces and foods. The USDA concluded that the best practice is simply not to wash poultry at all. This is one of those rare cases where the government agency, the scientific community, and the clinical community are all in full agreement.
Your Salad Could Get Contaminated Too

A 2019 USDA study found that roughly a quarter of participants who washed raw chicken transferred bacteria to their salad when they later used the sink again to wash their greens. Think about that for a moment. Roughly one in four participants who washed raw poultry transferred bacteria from that raw poultry to their ready-to-eat salad lettuce. A contaminated sink used to rinse raw chicken and then to wash fresh vegetables creates a direct path from poultry bacteria to an uncooked meal.
Salmonella and Campylobacter Can Linger for Hours

Campylobacter can survive in your kitchen for up to 4 hours, and Salmonella can last for up to 32 hours, and both can be found on raw poultry. These are not bacteria that dry up and disappear quickly. Bacteria associated with chicken include Salmonella, Staphylococcus aureus, Campylobacter jejuni, Listeria monocytogenes, and Escherichia coli. When you rinse chicken and splash these microorganisms onto your counter, they can remain active for the rest of your cooking session and well beyond it.
One Million Americans Get Sick from Poultry Every Year

Every year in the United States, about 1 million people get sick from eating contaminated poultry. This is a significant public health burden tied directly to how poultry is handled in the home. The CDC estimates that Salmonella causes more foodborne illnesses than any other bacteria, and chicken is a major source of these illnesses. Cross-contamination during prep, including rinsing, is one of the key pathways through which people become infected before the chicken ever reaches the heat.
Vinegar and Lemon Juice Won’t Save You Either

The “internet wisdom” of rinsing a chicken with vinegar, lemon juice, or salt water to kill germs has been debunked by scientific studies. These methods will apply a quick brine to the chicken, but they do not have any effect on bacteria. Many people believe these acidic rinses are a safer alternative, but the research does not support that belief. Washing, rinsing, or brining meat and poultry in salt water, vinegar, or lemon juice does not destroy bacteria. The only reliable method remains heat.
Most Cooks Still Do It – But the Numbers Are Slowly Shifting

In 2022, an online survey found that among nearly 1,900 consumers in the US, nearly three quarters of respondents said they washed their raw poultry. That is a surprisingly high number given how long the guidance against rinsing has been in place. Some consumers wash or rinse their raw meat or poultry because it’s a habit, or because a family member they trust has always washed their meat. Changing that habit requires replacing an old instinct with a better-informed one, which takes time and clear information.
What You Should Do Instead

Cooking chicken to the proper internal temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit kills germs or bacteria on chicken. That is really the whole solution right there. If you’re determined to cut down on raw chicken juices before cooking, you can gently pat the poultry with a paper towel, disposing of it immediately and washing your hands thoroughly afterward. Use a dedicated cutting board for poultry and meat and another for produce and cheese. If a cutting board is used to prepare poultry and then fresh vegetables that will not be cooked, the chicken may transfer bacteria to the cutting board, which will then cross-contaminate the vegetables. Using separate cutting boards eliminates this risk.
The Bottom Line

The habit of rinsing raw poultry is deeply ingrained in many households, and it’s easy to understand why it persists. It feels intuitive. It looks thorough. The trouble is, it quietly does more harm than good. USDA research has found that washing or rinsing meat or poultry increases the risk of cross-contamination in the kitchen. From a food safety perspective, washing raw poultry before cooking it is not recommended. If you wash meat or poultry, some bacteria can be splashed onto the surfaces of your kitchen, which can make you sick if not properly cleaned and sanitized.
The good news is that the fix is genuinely simple: skip the rinse, use a thermometer, and let the heat do what water never could. Sometimes the safest move is the one that asks the least of you.



