Chicken legs land around 150–200 calories per drumstick when roasted; a full leg quarter often sits near 400 calories, size and skin being the swing.
Skinless Piece
Skin-On Piece
Leg Quarter
Skinless Roast
- Trim visible fat
- Roast at 400°F on rack
- Season with garlic & herbs
Lean & Protein-Dense
Crispy Skin Roast
- Pat skin dry
- Light oil spray
- Finish under broiler
Extra Calories From Skin
Leg Quarter Meal
- Roast quarter to 165°F
- Add roasted veg
- Portion starch smart
Hearty Single Piece
What Counts As A Chicken Leg?
A “leg” can mean two different cuts at the store or on a menu. A drumstick is the lower segment with the handle-like bone. A leg quarter includes the drumstick plus the thigh and a bit of back. Both are dark meat and cook up juicy. The main calorie swing comes from piece size and whether you eat the skin.
Portion sizes vary a lot. A typical roasted drumstick with skin weighs close to 105 g after cooking. The same piece without skin is around 96 g. A leg quarter often lands near 224 g cooked. Your numbers will shift if the pieces are smaller, larger, or cooked a different way.
Chicken Leg Calories By Cut And Cooking Method
Use this broad table to match what’s on your plate with realistic numbers. Figures reflect common cooked weights and roasted pieces.
| Cut & Method | Typical Cooked Weight | Calories (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Drumstick, roasted, skin removed | ~96 g per piece | ~149 kcal |
| Drumstick, roasted, skin eaten | ~105 g per piece | ~201 kcal |
| Two drumsticks, roasted, skin eaten | ~210 g total | ~402 kcal |
| Leg quarter, roasted, meat & skin | ~224 g per piece | ~412 kcal |
| Drumstick meat only, roasted (no skin) | 100 g (reference) | ~150–170 kcal |
| Drumstick meat + skin, roasted | 100 g (reference) | ~200–220 kcal |
Once you’ve set your daily calorie intake, these ranges make it easy to plug chicken legs into a meal plan without guesswork.
Why Skin Changes The Count
Dark meat carries a bit more fat than breast, and the crispy outer layer adds more. That’s why a roasted piece with skin climbs to roughly 200 calories, while a trimmed, skin-off piece drops closer to the 150s. Protein stays strong either way, so both can fit a high-protein plate. The choice comes down to taste, texture, and your targets for fat.
If you like the snap of crispy skin, try this: roast with skin on, then peel and set it aside before you eat. You’ll still capture juices and flavor during cooking, yet shave off a chunk of calories at the table.
Cooked Weights And Label Confusion
Packages list raw weights. Calorie charts almost always refer to edible, cooked weight. Roasting reduces moisture, so the same drumstick weighs less after cooking than it did raw. That’s why using piece-based estimates works better than trying to convert from raw labels. If you track closely, weigh the roasted piece without the bone, or rely on the piece averages in the table above.
Does Cooking Method Matter?
Roasting gives you steady numbers because there’s no breading and little added fat. Air-frying behaves much the same if you skip heavy coatings. Pan-frying or deep-frying can push calories higher due to oil uptake. Braising keeps numbers close to roasting unless the sauce includes cream or a lot of butter.
Food safety matters too. Aim for a center temperature of 165°F (74°C) for poultry. The official chart from the U.S. Department of Agriculture lays this out clearly; see the FSIS safe temperature chart for a quick check.
Protein, Fat, And Satiety Per Piece
One roasted drumstick with skin lands near 24–25 g of protein and about 10–11 g of fat. A skinless roasted drumstick still delivers roughly 23 g of protein with about 5–6 g of fat. Those totals match what most people feel at the table: one piece is filling, two pieces feel like a full entrée. For a larger appetite, a leg quarter packs protein in a single cut.
If you want exact nutrition for a skin-on roasted drumstick, a commonly cited entry shows ~201 calories per cooked piece of about 105 g, with protein in the mid-20s. You can review a detailed breakdown on MyFoodData’s roasted drumstick page, which aggregates standardized U.S. nutrient data.
How To Estimate Your Plate Fast
One Piece
Think ~150 calories if the skin is off; ~200 if the skin stays on. That gets you within striking distance for any normal-sized drumstick at dinner.
Two Pieces
Double it: ~300 for two skinless drumsticks, ~400 for two with skin. Add sides and you’re looking at a balanced 500–700 calorie meal without mental math.
Leg Quarter Night
Plan around ~400 calories for the quarter alone. A big salad and roasted potatoes round it out nicely, and you’ll still sit inside reasonable totals.
Quick Portion Cheat Sheet
| Portion | Calories (Approx.) | Protein (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 drumstick, roasted, skin removed (~96 g) | ~149 kcal | ~23 g |
| 1 drumstick, roasted, skin eaten (~105 g) | ~201 kcal | ~24–25 g |
| 2 drumsticks, roasted, skin removed (~192 g) | ~298 kcal | ~46 g |
| 2 drumsticks, roasted, skin eaten (~210 g) | ~402 kcal | ~49 g |
| 1 leg quarter, roasted, meat & skin (~224 g) | ~412 kcal | ~54 g |
Lean Moves That Keep Flavor
Trim And Rack
Snip visible pockets of fat near the opening of the drumstick. Roast on a wire rack over a sheet pan so rendered fat drips away instead of soaking back into the meat.
Season Bold, Not Heavy
Use a dry rub with salt, pepper, paprika, garlic powder, and dried thyme. A light oil spray is plenty. You’ll get browning without loading the pan with calories.
Finish For Texture
Broil for 1–2 minutes at the end to crisp the surface. Pull as soon as the skin snaps and the juices run clear.
Balanced Plates With Dark Meat
Pair one or two pieces with roasted vegetables and a starchy side that fits your plan. Rice, potatoes, or whole-grain bread all work. If you’re watching total energy, load the plate with non-starchy vegetables and keep the starch to a fist-sized scoop. If you want a post-workout plate, add a second drumstick or go with a leg quarter to bump protein.
When To Choose Skinless
Pulling the skin trims calories and fat with minimal loss in taste once the meat is seasoned well. That swap is an easy way to fit dark meat into lower-calorie days without giving up the cut you enjoy.
Storage, Reheat, And Food Safety
Chill leftovers within two hours, store in shallow containers, and reheat until steaming hot. For cooking, an instant-read thermometer takes the guesswork out—poultry is ready at 165°F. The federal chart here is the gold standard for home kitchens; bookmark the FSIS temperature guide so you can check any time.
FAQ-Free Tips That Save Time
Buying
Pick similar-sized pieces so they cook evenly. Family packs are great for batch cooking. If you see leg quarters on sale, roast the whole tray and portion into meals for the week.
Batch Cooking
Roast once, eat twice. Two trays of drumsticks give you dinners plus lunches. Keep some skinless for lighter meals and some with skin for a treat night.
Seasoning Swaps
Lemon-pepper, Cajun blends, and peri-peri spice all work across the board. Use no-sugar rubs to keep counts tight. A squeeze of lemon at the table brightens the meat without adding more than a drip of calories.
Want a longer strategy read? Try our calorie deficit guide for planning and tracking.