Perishable food should stay at room temperature no longer than 2 hours, or 1 hour once the air reaches 90°F (32°C).
Food left on the counter does not turn risky all at once, but the clock matters more than most people think. Bacteria grow fast in the temperature range where many cooked meals, dairy foods, sliced fruit, sauces, and takeout boxes tend to sit after a meal.
If you want one clear rule, use this: refrigerate perishable food within 2 hours. Cut that to 1 hour on a hot day, at a picnic, in a parked car, or anywhere the air is above 90°F. After that point, the safe move is to throw it away, not reheat it and hope for the best.
How Long Can Food Sit Outside? The Basic Rule
The usual limit is 2 hours for perishable food at room temperature. That includes cooked meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, milk, soft cheese, cut fruit, cooked rice, cooked pasta, casseroles, pizza, and leftovers.
Once the air temperature climbs above 90°F, the limit drops to 1 hour. The USDA 2-hour rule spells this out clearly, and the same timing shows up in other federal food-safety guidance.
This rule is not about whether the food still smells fine. Many germs that cause foodborne illness do not change the taste, smell, or look of food in a way you can catch with your senses. That is why “it seems okay” is not a safe test.
Why Room Temperature Turns Risky Fast
Foodborne bacteria multiply fast in the “danger zone,” which runs from 40°F to 140°F. The CDC food safety guidance warns that perishable food left in that range for too long can become unsafe even when it still looks normal.
That matters most with protein-rich and moisture-rich foods. A tray of chicken wings, a pan of lasagna, tuna salad, gravy, or a bowl of peeled melon can move from fine to risky faster than many people expect. A small taste is not a safe test either.
Reheating helps with some bacteria, but not every hazard. Some germs leave behind toxins that reheating may not fix. So once perishable food has sat out too long, the safe choice is discard, not rescue.
Food Sitting Out At Room Temperature: What Counts As Perishable
Perishable food is any food that needs chilling to stay safe. In daily life, that covers more than raw meat and milk. It also covers plenty of cooked and ready-to-eat foods people leave on the table after meals.
- Cooked meat, poultry, seafood, and egg dishes
- Milk, yogurt, cream, soft cheese, and cream-based dips
- Cooked rice, beans, pasta, and casseroles
- Pizza, burgers, sandwiches with meat or mayo, and takeout leftovers
- Cut fruit, cut tomatoes, cooked vegetables, and opened deli salads
- Soups, gravies, sauces, and broth-based dishes
- Baby formula and prepared infant food
Whole apples, dry crackers, unopened shelf-stable foods, and plain bread are a different story. Those are not in the same risk group. The rule here is mainly about foods that need refrigeration after cooking, opening, or slicing.
Common Foods And Their Safe Counter Limits
The chart below gives a practical read on foods people leave out most often. The time limit is the same for most perishables. The type of food changes the spoilage pattern, not the basic rule.
| Food | Safe Limit At Room Temperature | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Cooked meat or chicken | Up to 2 hours | Refrigerate fast in shallow containers |
| Pizza | Up to 2 hours | Chill leftovers, then reheat until hot |
| Cooked rice or pasta | Up to 2 hours | Store promptly; do not leave on stove |
| Milk, yogurt, soft cheese | Up to 2 hours | Return to fridge right away after serving |
| Egg dishes and casseroles | Up to 2 hours | Discard if the timing is uncertain |
| Cut fruit or cut melon | Up to 2 hours | Chill after serving |
| Deli salads or mayo-based salads | Up to 2 hours | Keep cold over ice when serving |
| Buffet food above 90°F air temperature | Up to 1 hour | Use smaller trays and swap often |
Hot Days, Parties, Cars, And Buffets
Heat changes the rule fast. Once the air gets above 90°F, the safe window drops to 1 hour. That catches a lot of people during summer parties, tailgates, outdoor birthdays, beach trips, and grocery runs with a long drive home.
A parked car can get hot fast. So can a picnic table in partial sun. If food is sitting outside in those settings, treat the shorter 1-hour rule as your limit, not the usual 2 hours.
The FDA buffet safety advice also points out that buffet food should be kept hot or cold while serving. Small trays help. So do ice beds for cold food and warming trays or slow cookers for hot food.
What “Kept Hot Or Cold” Means
Food that is actively held above 140°F or below 40°F is in better shape than food sitting on the counter. Hot holding and cold holding slow bacterial growth by keeping food out of the danger zone.
That said, warmers and coolers only help if they are doing the job. A tray of meatballs in a slow cooker that is barely warm is not truly hot-held. A salad bowl on melting ice under direct sun is not truly cold-held either.
When You Should Throw It Away
Some food is easy to save. Some is not worth the risk. If any of the points below apply, throw it out.
- It sat out more than 2 hours at room temperature
- It sat out more than 1 hour above 90°F
- You do not know how long it has been out
- It was left out overnight
- It smells off, feels slimy, or shows mold
- It was stored in a deep pot and stayed warm for hours
The “overnight” case is simple. If meat, rice, pizza, soup, dairy food, or leftovers stayed out all night, toss them. Do not chill them in the morning and save them for lunch.
How To Cool Food The Right Way
Cooling food fast is where many kitchens slip. A large pot of soup or chili can stay warm in the middle for a long time. That gives bacteria time to grow even after the pot goes into the fridge.
Use shallow containers. Split big batches into smaller portions. Leave a little space in the fridge so cold air can move around the containers. If steam is heavy, let it ease for a short bit, then refrigerate without waiting for hours.
| Situation | Safer Move | Avoid This |
|---|---|---|
| Large pot of soup | Divide into shallow containers | Putting the whole pot in the fridge |
| Party leftovers | Pack within the safe time window | Waiting until cleanup is done |
| Cold picnic foods | Keep over ice and refill in small batches | Leaving one large bowl in the sun |
| Hot buffet foods | Use warming trays or slow cookers | Serving warm food on an unplugged tray |
| Takeout after travel | Refrigerate as soon as you get home | Leaving the bag on the counter |
Easy Rules To Remember In Real Life
Food safety gets simpler when you reduce it to a few habits. These are the ones that save the most meals and cut the most risk.
- Set a timer when food hits the table
- Use the 2-hour rule indoors and the 1-hour rule in heat
- Pack leftovers before the conversation drifts too long
- Serve in small batches and refill as needed
- Use coolers with plenty of ice for trips and picnics
- When timing is fuzzy, throw it out
If you host often, these habits matter even more. Put storage containers out before the meal starts. That small move makes cleanup faster and keeps leftovers from sitting on the table too long.
The Rule Most People Need
If the food is perishable, do not let it sit outside the fridge for more than 2 hours. Cut that to 1 hour when the air is above 90°F. When the timing is unclear, the safe call is to toss it.
References & Sources
- USDA.“What is the ‘2 Hour Rule’ with leaving food out?”States that perishable food should not stay out longer than 2 hours, or 1 hour above 90°F.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Preventing Food Poisoning.”Explains the 40°F to 140°F danger zone and the need to refrigerate perishable food promptly.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Serving Up Safe Buffets.”Gives buffet and party food timing, plus safe hot and cold holding tips.

