Dehydrator jerky-temperature guides
Last reviewed July 2026.
Every dehydrator we track, plus the background guides. Each model page answers one question — is it hot enough for jerky? — with the manufacturer's published spec, the marketing claim quoted, and the USDA record linked.
Hot enough for jerky, model by model
- Is the Excalibur 3926TB 9-Tray hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Cosori CP267-FD Premium 6-Tray hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Magic Mill MFD-1010 11-Tray hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Nesco FD-1040 Gardenmaster hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Presto 06301 Dehydro Digital hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Hamilton Beach 32100A hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Presto 06300 Dehydro hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Nesco FD-75A Snackmaster Pro hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Colzer 12-Tray hot enough for jerky?
- Is the Elite Gourmet EFD319 hot enough for jerky?
- Is the CO-Z 10-Tray hot enough for jerky?
The record
- 160°F meat, 165°F poultry: the USDA jerky rule no dehydrator dial satisfies
- The dial is not the food's temperature: drift, evaporation, and Excalibur's own FAQ
- Fruit dries at ~135–140°F: the max-temp number is a jerky question
- “Temperature Compliant” and “Jerky Safe”: what the marketing words actually claim
Dehydrator Score indexes manufacturer-published temperature specs and marketing claims against the USDA jerky record, with attribution — we test nothing and give no safety advice. No dial setting substitutes for USDA's instruction: heat meat to 160°F (poultry 165°F) in an oven before dehydrating, or bake the finished jerky after — inside a dehydrator, evaporating moisture holds the meat below air temperature until it is already dry. If a maker publishes a spec or manual that changes a row, the page changes — the record wins.
← Every dehydrator we track, claim by claim