Is Smoked Salmon Raw? The Complete Safety Guide (Cold vs Hot Smoked)
The question “is smoked salmon raw?” has a frustratingly nuanced answer: it depends. The salmon at the deli counter is almost certainly cold-smoked — technically still raw. But smoked salmon also comes in a hot-smoked version that’s fully cooked.
The distinction matters for safety, especially if you’re pregnant, immunocompromised, or feeding young kids.
The Short Answer
- Cold-smoked salmon = raw. Cured and smoked below 90°F/32°C. Silky, translucent. Not safe for pregnant women or immunocompromised people.
- Hot-smoked salmon = cooked. Smoked above 145°F/63°C. Flaky, opaque. Safe for everyone.
Cold-Smoked vs Hot-Smoked: What’s the Difference?
Cold-Smoked Salmon (Lox, Nova)
- Temperature: 70-90°F (21-32°C) | Time: 12-24 hours
- Fish is never cooked — stays raw, takes on smoky flavor and silky texture
- Appearance: Translucent, glossy, deep coral-pink. Slices thin enough to see through
- Examples: Thin slices at bagel shops, deli lox, smoked salmon nigiri
- Cured with salt but not cooked to kill parasites
Hot-Smoked Salmon (Smoked Fillet, Kippered Salmon)
- Temperature: 120-180°F (50-82°C), above USDA safe-cook of 145°F | Time: 6-12 hours
- Fish is fully cooked during smoking. Texture is flaky like baked salmon
- Appearance: Opaque, matte, deeper red-brown. Flakes apart
- Examples: Whole fillets or chunks, used in dips, pasta, salads
- Both salted AND cooked — fully food-safe
Is Cold-Smoked Salmon Safe to Eat?
For most healthy adults, yes — it’s safe straight from the package. Salt-curing reduces (but doesn’t eliminate) harmful bacteria and parasites.
Risk 1: Listeria monocytogenes — Cold-smoked salmon is a known vehicle. Listeria grows even at refrigerator temperatures. Rare in healthy adults but severe in pregnant women (can cause miscarriage) and deadly for immunocompromised people.
Risk 2: Parasites (Tapeworms) — Wild salmon can carry tapeworm larvae. Freezing at -4°F (-20°C) for 7 days kills them (required by FDA for raw fish sold in the U.S.). Farmed salmon has much lower parasite risk.
Who Should Avoid Cold-Smoked Salmon?
The CDC and FDA recommend these groups avoid cold-smoked salmon entirely (or cook it to 165°F/74°C):
- Pregnant women — Listeria risk is severe and can cross the placenta
- Children under 5 — Immune systems still developing
- Adults over 65 — Reduced immune response
- Immunocompromised people — Cancer patients, transplant recipients, HIV/AIDS, immunosuppressive drugs
Hot-smoked salmon is a safe alternative — fully cooked, no raw-fish risks.
How to Tell Them Apart
| Feature | Cold-Smoked (Raw) | Hot-Smoked (Cooked) |
|—|—|—|
| Texture | Silky, sliceable | Flaky, breaks apart |
| Color | Translucent, glossy | Opaque, matte |
| Shape | Thin deli-sliced ribbons | Whole fillets or chunks |
| Label | “Lox,” “Nova,” “cold-smoked” | “Hot-smoked,” “kippered” |
Quick test: If you can see through it, it’s cold-smoked (raw). If it flakes like cooked fish, it’s hot-smoked (cooked).
How to Store Smoked Salmon
- Refrigerator (unopened): Keep in coldest part of fridge until use-by date (~2-3 weeks). Never leave at room temp over 2 hours.
- Refrigerator (opened): Wrap tightly, use within 5-7 days.
- Freezer: Up to 3 months. Wrap in parchment, seal in freezer bag. Thaw overnight in fridge.
- Never leave smoked salmon in a hot car or on a buffet for hours. Listeria thrives at 40-140°F (4-60°C).