Pork Shoulder Smoking Calculator

Enter your pork butt details and serve time. The calculator works backward to give you a precise cook timeline with stall prediction.

Style

lbs

Adds ~10% to cook time. Use bone-wiggle test for doneness.

The calculator works backward from this time.

How Long to Smoke a Pork Shoulder

Pork shoulder — sold as either "Boston butt" (the upper portion) or "picnic shoulder" (the lower portion) — is one of the most forgiving cuts for the smoker. Unlike brisket, which punishes an extra degree or two of overcooking, pork shoulder has so much collagen and intramuscular fat that it tolerates a wide temperature window and rewards the patient cook who lets the process run its full course.

The standard rule of thumb is 1.25 to 1.5 hours per pound at 225°F. An 8-pound boneless Boston butt will typically finish in 10 to 12 hours. A 10-pound bone-in shoulder can run 13 to 15 hours. These estimates assume a consistent cooker temperature, a preheated smoker, and a foil or butcher paper wrap around the stall. Add 15 to 20 minutes any time you open the lid for a significant period.

The safest approach is always to work backward from a serve time rather than forward from a start time. Add cook time plus rest time, count backward from when you want to eat, subtract 30 minutes for preheat, and set your alarm. If the cook runs short, the faux Cambro hold makes a 3-hour buffer essentially free. If pork shoulder is only one part of the meal, the Cook Time Coordinator helps line it up with your other meats.

Bone-In vs. Boneless

Bone-in pork shoulder is the classic choice for a reason. The bone — a dense femur running through the center of the butt — acts as a natural heat conductor, drawing warmth into the thickest part of the muscle and promoting even cooking. It also contributes collagen that dissolves into the surrounding meat over a long cook, adding body and richness to the finished pulled pork.

On the downside, bone-in shoulders take roughly 10 to 15% longer than boneless of the same stated weight, because that weight includes bone that contributes no yield. A 10-pound bone-in butt typically yields about 6 pounds of pulled pork once cooked and cleaned. A 10-pound boneless shoulder yields closer to 7 pounds. For guest-count planning, the Meat Per Person Calculator converts that finished pork into realistic servings.

The classic bone-in doneness test: grip the exposed bone end with a paper towel and wiggle. When the bone rotates freely with almost no resistance, the pork is ready to pull. It is a more intuitive test than chasing a temperature reading and works regardless of how the stall varied that day.

The Stall on Pork Butt

Every pork shoulder smoker eventually encounters the stall — a plateau in internal temperature that typically sets in around 150 to 165°F and can last anywhere from 2 to 5 hours. First-time pitmasters often assume something has gone wrong. Nothing has. The stall is a natural consequence of evaporative cooling: as the interior temperature of the meat rises, moisture migrates toward the surface. That surface moisture evaporates, and the cooling effect of evaporation perfectly counteracts the heat coming from the smoker, holding the internal temperature flat.

The stall eventually breaks on its own when the surface moisture is exhausted and the cooler can no longer keep up with the smoker. But you can dramatically shorten the stall by wrapping the shoulder in foil or butcher paper once you see the plateau begin, typically around 155 to 160°F. Wrapping raises the humidity immediately around the meat, eliminating the evaporative cooling effect and allowing the temperature to climb again within 30 to 60 minutes.

Pulled vs. Sliced Pork

The style you choose determines your pull temperature. For pulled pork — the classic competition standard where the meat shreds in long strands with two forks or a pair of bear claws — you need to reach 203 to 207°F internal. At that temperature, the collagen has fully converted to gelatin, the connective tissue has dissolved, and the muscle fibers separate easily.

For sliced pork butt, pull at 185°F. At this temperature the pork is fully cooked, juicy, and firm enough to hold together for the knife. You will get clean slices that still show the money muscle — the cylindrical section along the front of the butt that is especially prized for its fine grain and tenderness. Many competition teams cook to 185°F to showcase the money muscle, then rely on the tenderness of the surrounding shoulder to pull cleanly as they work through the cut.

Regardless of target temperature, the probe test is your final confirmation: insert a thermometer probe anywhere in the thickest part of the meat. When it glides in and out with zero resistance — exactly like inserting a toothpick into room-temperature butter — the pork is ready. Trust the probe over the clock every time.

Resting and Pulling

Resting is not optional. A properly rested pork shoulder is noticeably juicier than one pulled immediately off the smoker, because the muscle fibers — contracted by heat during cooking — relax during the rest and reabsorb the juices that were driven toward the center. A minimum rest of 60 minutes is mandatory. Longer is better.

The faux Cambro method extends the hold dramatically. Double-wrap the finished shoulder tightly in heavy-duty foil. Line a dry cooler with old bath towels. Place the wrapped shoulder inside, fold the towels over the top, and close the lid. A properly set-up faux Cambro will keep a pork shoulder safely above 140°F (the USDA safe holding temperature) for 4 to 6 hours — which also means you can finish the cook 4 hours before serve time without any quality loss.

When pulling, wear heat-resistant gloves and pull directly with your hands for the best feel, or use a pair of bear claws for speed. Pull into fist-sized chunks first, then shred. Save every drop of liquid that collects in the foil — it is concentrated pork jus that you pour back over the finished pulled pork to keep it moist during service.

Pork Shoulder Smoke Time Reference

Estimated cook times for pulled pork (203°F target) with foil wrap. Boneless shoulder, consistent smoker temperature.

Smoker Temp 4 lbs 6 lbs 8 lbs 10 lbs 12 lbs
225°F 6.0 hrs 9.0 hrs 12.0 hrs 15.0 hrs 18.0 hrs
250°F 5.1 hrs 7.7 hrs 10.2 hrs 12.8 hrs 15.3 hrs
275°F 4.5 hrs 6.8 hrs 9.0 hrs 11.3 hrs 13.5 hrs
300°F 3.9 hrs 5.9 hrs 7.8 hrs 9.8 hrs 11.7 hrs

Frequently Asked Questions

How long to smoke a pork shoulder?
At 225°F, plan on 1.25 to 1.5 hours per pound for a bone-in pork shoulder. An 8-pound butt will typically take 10 to 12 hours from cold to a pull temperature of 205°F. At 250°F the estimate drops to about 1.1 to 1.3 hours per pound, and at 275°F to around 0.95 to 1.1 hours per pound. Always use a meat thermometer — weight-based estimates are a starting point, not a guarantee.
What temp to pull pork butt?
For pulled pork, target an internal temperature of 203 to 207°F. At this point the collagen has fully converted to gelatin and the meat pulls apart with minimal resistance. For sliced pork butt, pull at 185°F — the meat holds together cleanly for the knife. The most reliable test is the probe test: the thermometer probe should slide in with zero resistance, like warm butter, regardless of the temperature reading.
Bone-in or boneless pork butt for smoking?
Bone-in pork butt is generally preferred for smoking. The bone acts as a natural heat conductor and contributes collagen that melts into the surrounding meat. Bone-in shoulders take about 10 to 15% longer than boneless of the same weight. The classic doneness test for bone-in is the bone-wiggle test: when the bone spins freely with light pressure, the pork is ready to pull.
Why is my pork butt stalling at 165°F?
The stall is caused by evaporative cooling — moisture migrating to the surface of the meat evaporates and cools the meat at the same rate the smoker is adding heat, creating a plateau that can last 3 to 5 hours. This is completely normal and will eventually break on its own. Do not raise your smoker temperature to push through the stall. Wrapping in foil or butcher paper dramatically shortens the stall by trapping moisture and raising humidity around the meat.
How long to rest pork shoulder?
Rest pork shoulder for a minimum of 60 minutes before pulling. A longer rest of 2 to 4 hours in a faux Cambro — tightly foil-wrapped butt placed in a dry cooler lined with towels — results in noticeably juicier pulled pork and keeps the meat safely above 140°F for hours. Many competition pitmasters hold for 3 to 4 hours as standard practice.