How to Cook Bacon in the Oven is my go to move when I want breakfast to feel easy instead of chaotic. You know those mornings when the pan is spitting, the bacon is curling, and you are standing there babysitting it like it is a tiny drama? Yeah, not fun. Oven bacon lets you step away, make coffee, and still get that crispy, salty payoff. Plus, you can cook a whole pack at once without juggling batches. If you have ever burned one strip while the next one is still floppy, this method is about to save your sanity.

The Story Behind This Recipe
Hey, I’m Cuts Food! This How to Cook Bacon in the Oven was built for busy nights: simple steps, reliable results, and flavor that makes people ask for seconds. How to Cook Bacon in the Oven is my go to move when I want breakfast to feel easy instead of chaotic. You know those mornings…
Why This Method Is a Winner
I started baking bacon on a random weekend when I had people over and did not want to smell like a diner cook before 10 a.m. It worked so well that I basically never looked back. The oven gives you steady heat, so the bacon cooks more evenly and you are not constantly flipping and moving pieces around.
Here is why I keep coming back to it:
- Hands off cooking, so you can make eggs, toast, or just breathe.
- Less mess since the grease stays on the tray, not all over your stove.
- Even crisping across the whole strip, especially if you use a rack.
- Great for a crowd because one tray can handle a lot of bacon.
Also, if you are already thinking ahead to what you will do with all that glorious bacon, you should peek at this breakfast situation: Irresistible cheese bacon strata cake. It is the kind of dish that makes people think you tried harder than you did.
One more little benefit that surprised me: cleanup feels way less annoying when you line the tray. And if you are in a full on reset mode, this totally pairs with a quick tidy sprint like how to clean your house like a pro in 2 hours, because oven bacon frees you up to do literally anything else while it cooks.

The Best Bacon for Baking
Most bacon works in the oven, but you will notice differences depending on thickness and how smoky or sweet it is. I usually grab regular cut for everyday breakfasts because it crisps in a reasonable amount of time. Thick cut is amazing, but it takes longer and needs a little more attention at the end.
My quick bacon shopping tips
If you are staring at the bacon wall at the store, here is what I look for:
Regular cut: Best for super crispy strips and quicker bake time. Great for sandwiches and crumbling on salads.
Thick cut: Meatier bite, a little chewier, and awesome for brunch plates. Just plan for extra minutes.
Center cut: Often a bit leaner, so it can go from perfect to overdone faster. Keep an eye on it near the end.
Applewood smoked or hickory smoked: Adds extra flavor without you doing anything. Love that.
Sweetened bacon (like maple) is totally fine, but it can brown faster because of the sugar. If you do use it, consider dropping the temperature slightly or just watch it closely in the final minutes.
And if you are a bacon for breakfast person, you would probably also love these creamy bacon cheddar bagels. Comfort food energy, in the best way.

The Right Temperature for Baking Bacon
After a lot of trial and error, I land at 400 F most of the time. It is hot enough to crisp the edges and render the fat nicely, but not so aggressive that you go from golden to burned in two minutes. If your oven runs hot, you might prefer 375 F.
Oven setup that makes it easier
Here is my simple setup, no fancy tools required:
Option 1: Foil or parchment lined sheet pan
This is the easiest cleanup. The bacon sits directly on the lined pan, and it basically shallow fries in its own rendered fat. You will get crispy edges and a slightly richer feel.
Option 2: Sheet pan plus a wire rack
This lets the grease drip down, so the strips cook more evenly and feel a bit lighter and crispier. If you like bacon that snaps, this is the way.
Either way, lay the strips in a single layer. A little touching is fine, but do not overlap, because overlapped bacon cooks unevenly and you will end up with one chewy section that nobody wants.
“I tried this oven method after years of frying bacon, and it came out evenly crispy with almost no mess. I will never go back.”
How Long to Bake the Bacon
This is the part people want the most, because nobody wants guesswork before coffee. The exact time depends on thickness, temperature, and how crispy you like it. But I can give you a solid starting point that works in a normal home oven.
Timing guide you can actually use
At 400 F:
Regular cut bacon: about 14 to 18 minutes
Thick cut bacon: about 18 to 24 minutes
My personal move is to start checking at the 12 minute mark for regular cut, and then every 2 minutes after that. Bacon can look a little soft when you pull it, but it crisps up more as it cools for a minute or two.
When it is done, transfer it to a paper towel lined plate. Let it sit for a minute before you bite in, unless you enjoy burning your mouth on hot bacon grease, which I do not recommend.
One more safety tip from my own oops moments: be careful when you pull the tray out. The rendered fat is hot and sloshy. Keep it level, move slowly, and set it on a stable surface.
Ways to Use Oven-Baked Bacon
Once you learn How to Cook Bacon in the Oven, you will start making extra on purpose. Because having a little container of cooked bacon in the fridge is like having a secret weapon for fast meals.
Here are some of my favorite ways to use it:
- Breakfast plates: eggs, fruit, toast, bacon. Simple, happy.
- BLTs and breakfast sandwiches: the reason bacon exists, honestly.
- Salads: crumble it over greens with tomatoes and a sharp dressing.
- Loaded baked potatoes: bacon plus sour cream plus chives is the dream team.
- Soups: top a creamy soup with bacon bits for crunch and salt.
If you want a side that feels diner style in the best way, try these crispy breakfast potatoes with your oven bacon. That combo is weekend breakfast perfection.
And if you are the kind of person who likes to bake something fun after brunch, these cute cookie posts are a sweet rabbit hole: deliciously cute Valentines Day cookies or sparkle sweetheart cookies.
Common Questions
Do I need to flip the bacon in the oven?
Not usually. If you are cooking directly on the pan, flipping once halfway can help, but it is not required. On a rack, I never flip.
Should I start with a cold oven or preheat?
I preheat. It keeps the timing predictable, and you get more consistent crisping.
Can I cook bacon on parchment paper?
Yes, parchment works great at 400 F and makes cleanup easy. Foil also works if that is what you have.
How do I store leftover oven baked bacon?
Let it cool, then store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to about 4 days. Reheat in the microwave for 10 to 20 seconds, or pop it back in the oven for a few minutes.
What do I do with the bacon grease?
Let it cool a bit, then carefully pour into a heat safe jar. You can use a spoonful for cooking eggs or sautéing veggies. Or if you do not want to keep it, let it fully cool and toss it, just do not pour it down the sink.
A quick wrap up before you preheat
Once you get the hang of How to Cook Bacon in the Oven, it becomes one of those kitchen habits that makes life easier. Stick with 400 F, watch the last few minutes, and pull it when it looks just a little less crispy than you want, because it firms up as it cools. If you want another solid reference point, I also like reading How to Cook Bacon in the Oven (Easy & Crispy) | Downshiftology and How to Cook Perfect Bacon in the Oven (So Crispy) – The Kitchn when I am comparing timings for different thicknesses. Now go line that pan, pour your coffee, and enjoy the easiest crispy bacon you have ever made.

Oven Baked Bacon
Ingredients
Method
- Preheat the oven to 400°F (or 375°F if your oven runs hot).
- Option 1: Line a sheet pan with foil or parchment paper for easy cleanup.
- Option 2: Place a wire rack in a sheet pan to allow grease to drip.
- Lay the bacon strips in a single layer without overlapping.
- Bake regular cut bacon for about 14 to 18 minutes and thick cut bacon for about 18 to 24 minutes.
- Start checking the bacon for doneness at the 12-minute mark for regular cut, and every 2 minutes thereafter.
- Once done, transfer the bacon to a paper towel-lined plate to absorb excess grease.
- Serve bacon with eggs, toast, or use in sandwiches and salads.
- Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days.
