Learn how to cook a restaurant-quality succulent Lobster Tail with tender and juicy results every time. I’ll walk you through everything you need to know, from butterflying the lobster tail to making the best lobster dipping sauce. This is the best way to cook lobster tails.

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Lobster Tail with Garlic Butter Sauce
If you’re looking for that go-to recipe for lobster, this is the one, and it’s surprisingly easy! Broiling is the best way to cook lobster tails – better than boiling or baking because it locks in the flavor, and it’s fast! The broiled lobster meat is succulent, tender, and juicy, and each bite is packed with flavor, especially after dipping into the warm garlic lemon butter. Dunk it into the melted butter, take it for a swim, watch the excess drip off your fork, and enjoy.
I’m such a fan of lobster – I always have been! Growing up, my mom was allergic to shellfish, so I think that made my Dad and I (both seafood super fans) all the more desperate to get our hands on all of our favorite shellfish – hello Shrimp Scampi and Crab Legs! Of all the lobster I’ve eaten over the years, I still think this is the best way to cook it and eat it – and trust me, you won’t want to miss the buttery dipping sauce. The garlic and dijon sauce was inspired by my wildly popular Baked Salmon and everyone who tries it loves it.
Helpful Reader Review
“I made this the other night and let me say Thank You! Best lobster tails I’ve ever eaten. The marinade & sauce were perfection. I haven’t enjoyed a meal this fantastic in a long long time. The absolute best!” – Dawn ★★★★★
Lobster Tails Video Tutorial
This lobster tails recipe is such a treat. Easy and excellent in flavor and presentation. I hope you fall in love with this recipe as much as my family has.
P.S. I also included step-by-step photo instructions on how to prepare butterflied lobster tails so you can make the most impressive posh-looking lobster tails like a boss :).

Ingredients for Lobster Tail with Lemon Butter
- Lobster Tail – you’ll need 4 lobster tails, about 5 to 6 ounces each. If using larger lobster tails, be sure to broil further away from the broiler so they don’t burn. You can also easily scale the recipe up or down.
- For the Marinade – This is the perfect blend of flavors that work so well on all kinds of seafood – olive oil, parsley, garlic, dijon, lemon juice, salt, and pepper. This combination of flavors is the best seasoning for lobster tail.
- Butter – you’ll need 4 Tbsp total; half to dot the top of the lobster tails before baking and the rest to combine with the pan drippings for the best lobster dipping sauce.

Pro Tip: Shopping For Lobster
Lobster tails tend to go on sale before holidays like Valentine’s Day. I found these 5 oz Lobster tails at Fred Meyer on sale for $6 each. Not bad! You can serve 4 people at $6 each or splurge on 2 people for $12 each, which is still amazing for lobster compared to restaurant prices.
How to Butterfly Lobster Tails
Preparing lobster tails is easier than you think, and kitchen shears make the process quick.
- Use kitchen shears to cut through and split the top shell of the lobster tail, stopping at the base of the tail and snipping through the top portion of the meat as you go.
- Flip the tail over to the back see-through side of the tail and crack the ribs in the center. This will help open the shell.
- Open the shell using your thumbs and fingers and loosen the meat from the shell (remove and discard the grey vein if present). Work carefully – shells can be sharp! Lift the meat from the shell, keeping it attached at the base. Press the shell together and set the lobster meat over the top. The bulk of the lobster meat should be sitting over the top of the shell.

How to Cook Lobster Tails
- Prep – Place rack in center of oven so when you bake, the meaty tops of your lobster tails will be at least 6 inches from the top heating elements. Preheat oven to broil on high heat.
- Make the Marinade – In a small bowl, add the marinade ingredients: 1 Tbsp parsley, 2 pressed garlic cloves, 1 tsp dijon, 1/4 tsp salt, 1/8 tsp pepper, 1 1/2 Tbsp olive oil, and 1 1/2 Tbsp lemon juice. Stir to combine.

- Arrange butterflied Lobster Tails into a baking dish such as a 9×13 or 8×12 roasting pan with the flesh-side up. Divide the marinade evenly over the tops of each lobster tail and dot each tail all over with 1/2 Tbsp of butter cut into smaller pieces. The butter melts over the lobster tails as they cook, resulting in the best pan drippings.

- Broil lobster tails on high for 10-11 minutes (or according to the lobster tail size – see chart below). When done, lobster meat should be opaque and white in the center and register an internal temperature of 145˚F on an instant-read thermometer. Transfer lobster tails to a serving platter and garnish with fresh parsley if desired.

- Make the Garlic Lemon Butter: drain drippings from the roasting pan into a small saucepan and combine with the remaining 2 Tbsp butter, bring to a simmer, and remove from heat. Pour over lobster tails or divide into small ramekins and use as dipping sauce. I also serve with lemon wedges to squeeze over the lobster meat.

How Long to Broil Lobster Tails:
You’ll know the lobster tail is done cooking when the meat is opaque and white in the center or it reaches 145˚F on an instant-read thermometer. The shell will also turn a bright red, and the meat should feel firm, not mushy. Make sure you don’t overcook, or the lobster can become tough and rubbery.
- Small lobster tails (3 to 4 oz): 6 to 8 minutes
- Medium lobster tails (5 to 6 oz): 10-11 minutes
- Larger lobster tails (7 to 9 oz): 12-15 minutes (move the rack to the middle of the oven so larger lobster tails don’t burn before they cook through)

Enjoy this incredible lobster tails recipe, my friends and let me know if you try it. I can’t tell you enough how good this is! You’ll just have to find out for yourself! 😉 Thank you so much for pinning and sharing this on social media with your lobster-loving friends. This recipe is so worth discovering! 🙂

Make broiled lobster tails at home for Valentine’s Day or any special occasion and you’ll pay less than half of what you’d drop in a nice restaurant, and GET THIS: it totally tastes gourmet!
Serve Lobster With
You’ll want to keep lobster as the star of the show, so pair it with these simple sides.
- Mashed Potatoes or Baked Potato
- Roasted asparagus
- Caesar Salad
- Roasted Cauliflower
- Risotto
- Sourdough Dinner Rolls
If you’re looking to pair it with steak, check out our Surf and Turf Recipe.
Lobster Tail Recipe with Garlic Lemon Butter

Ingredients
- 4 lobster tails, 5 to 6 oz each
- 1 Tbsp fresh parsley, very finely chopped, plus more for garnish
- 2 garlic cloves, pressed
- 1 tsp dijon mustard
- 1/4 tsp fine sea salt
- 1/8 tsp freshly cracked black pepper
- 1 1/2 Tbsp olive oil
- 1 1/2 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
- 4 Tbsp unsalted butter, divided
Instructions
How to Prepare/Butterfly Lobster Tails:
- Cut the Shell: Use kitchen scissors to cut through the top shell of the lobster tail, stopping at the base of the tail and snipping through the top portion of the meat as you go.
- Crack the Ribs: Flip the tail over to the back see-through side and crack the ribs in the center. This will help open the shell.
- Butterfly: Open the shell carefully using thumbs and fingers and loosen meat from the shell (remove vein if present). Lift the meat from the shell, keeping it attached at the base. Press the shell together and set the lobster meat over the top. Most of the lobster meat should be sitting on top of the shell.
How to Make Broiled Lobster Tails:
- Prep: Place rack in upper third or center of the oven so the meaty tops of your lobster tails will be at least 6 inches from the top heating element. Preheat oven to broil on high heat.
- Make the Sauce: In a small bowl, stir together marinade ingredients: 1 Tbsp parsley, 2 garlic cloves, 1 tsp dijon, 1/4 tsp salt, 1/8 tsp pepper, 1 1/2 Tbsp olive oil and 1 1/2 Tbsp lemon juice.
- Arrange: Place butterflied Lobster Tails into a 9×13 or 8×12 roasting pan. Divide marinade evenly over the tops of each lobster tail and dot each tail all over with 1/2 Tbsp of butter cut into smaller pieces.
- Broil lobster tails on high heat 10-11 min (or according to the lobster tail size – see chart). When done, lobster meat should be opaque and white in the center and register 145˚F on an instant read thermometer. Transfer to serving platter and garnish with parsley if desired.
- To make the Garlic Lemon Butter: drain drippings from the roasting pan into a small saucepan and combine with remaining 2 Tbsp butter, bring to a simmer and remove from heat. Pour over lobster tails or divide into ramekins and use as dipping sauce.
Notes
- Smaller (3 to 4 oz) lobster tail 6 to 8 minutes
- Medium (5 to 6 oz) lobster tail 10-11 minutes
- Larger (7 to 9 oz) lobsters tail 12-15 minutes (with rack in the middle of the oven)
Nutrition Per Serving
Filed Under
Natasha’s Favorite Seafood Recipes
- Shrimp Tacos
- Ceviche
- Fish Tacos
- Shrimp Boil
- Clam Chowder
- Coconut Shrimp
- Teriyaki Salmon
- Pan-Seared Cod
This recipe looks divine!!! I cannot wait to try it and I am now currently checking for fresh lobster tails in my local seafood market thanks to the recipe lol. Thanks for sharing this recipe. I came across your blog by searching a lobster recipe on google, I am now a subbie and can’t wait to browse all your recipes and follow your blog!
You’re welcome Veronica! THAT’S GREAT! Let me know what you think after you make the recipe please. 🙂
I’m not a seafood lover, but this one was a winner! Thanks, Natasha, for making my cooking so much more fun 🙂
Awesome!!! I’m so happy you liked it 🙂
Hi Natasha, looking forward to trying these tonight. Should I Broil on high or low.
Thanks for you help.
Hi Matt, broil on high 🙂
I made these for my husband and you should have seen the LOOK ON HIS FACE!! Ha ha, priceless! He was so impressed and we both loved it 🙂
Oh that is just awesome! Thank you for sharing your amazing review 🙂
Sounded fantastic….but something was off. Only cooked 2 tails so I cut the marinate in half. Was very confused with the butter dot on the tail…all it did was melt off and burn so I had nothing to add to the sauce. After adding extra butter and what marinate I could scrape out of the bowl, I should have drizzled the butter over the lobster instead of dipping. Lobster top was burning, so I lowered shelf lower than the recommended 6″. Tail was still burning….so I pulled them out. These were larger tails and I ended up having to pull the lobster out of the shells and cooking them longer. Marinate on the top became a little tuff. Would not do again
Hi Denise, how large were your lobster tails? It sounds like you had the meat too close to the broiler. You want to make sure the meaty top of your lobster tails is at least 6 inches away from the broiler. In my oven with smaller tails, that is just 1 rack up from the center – since some ovens are larger/smaller – you have to imagine where the top of your tail will be. If working with really large lobster tails, keep the rack in the center. Also, was your lobster meat sitting over the shell as shown or was it hidden in the shell – I’ve tried both ways and when it’s hidden in the shell, it takes longer and the shell starts to burn on the broil setting. Also, when dotting a larger lobster tail with butter, I would scatter it more to cover more surface area. The pieces of butter melt a little slower and the goal is for it to baste itself as it melts. Thank you for sharing your feedback – I added some specific notes regarding larger tails. I hope that helps for next time! Thanks Denise!
Fantastic instruction on how to prepare lobster tails!
I’m glad you found it helpful Paul! Thank you for sharing 🙂
This looks amazing! Do you think an oven safe dish would work as well as a roasting pan? I just started cooking a couple months ago and I seriously tell all my friends that I don’t know where i’d be without YOU! lol Thank you so much for all your amazing recipes and the love you put into getting them to us! You rock! 🙂 p.s. I was surprised to find lobster tail on sale for $6 at my local Whole Foods, and of course the seafood guy was quick to suggest that I make it for husband for Valentine’s dinner 🙂
Thank you for that amazing compliment! 🙂 I’m so glad you’re enjoying my recipes! What do you mean by “oven safe dish” Is it a platter? I wouldn’t put that into the oven if it’s going to be on broil the whole time. Some dishes are oven safe but are not broiler safe. I hope that helps! 🙂
Ah interesting.. the ovensafe dishes I have are Corningware ones.
Does it look like a serving dish, or is it more dinnerware? You might check with their website to see how heat tolerant they are in the oven.
Like a serving dish, with a glass lid. I’ll double check with them about broiling in it. Thanks so much for your help! Have a wonderful Valentine’s Day! 💕
Those lobster tails look delish! shellfish and garlics a great combo.
They are AMAZING!!
Is grilling the same? I prefer the grilled taste over broiled but can I follow same steps?
Hi Kathy, I prefer this broiled because the buttery juices collect in the baking dish and you use them to create the most amazing butter dip afterwards. I think you could cook the lobster on the grill, but you would lose those juices to your grill as they drip down into the grates. The method would have to change slightly as most grilled lobster tails are cooked inside the shell rather than pulling the meat up over the shell. I would suggest doing some research on grilled lobster and follow a grilled lobster tail method if that’s what you are looking for and this topping would still work for a grilled lobster recipe – the lobsters are still super flavorful even without the dip, but I sure love that dip! 🙂
Ok – thank you for getting back to me!
My pleasure!
I always thought lobster was a super hard dish to prepare…probably because of the price tag, but this looks very approachable and also delicious. Will definitely have to add it to my bucket list of must make dinners 🙂
It’s so easy AND so delicious Lily!! Let me know what you think 🙂
Natasha,
We made this because small lobster tails were $3.50 at the grocery store. This was so good, we went back and bought more the next day and made it again! This was my husband’s first time doing one of your recipes (I’ve done tons). This lobster recipe is phenomenal.
I’m so glad to hear how much you both enjoyed the recipe! Thank you for sharing Jessica 🙂
I made this tonight and was so impressed with myself! Thank you for the recipe. My husband and I loved it!
You’re welcome Jenny! I’m glad you both loved it!! 🙂
I know that when one orders lobster tails in a restaurant and as you did, the meat is prepared and served on top of the shell. I’ve always felt that this is for presentation’s sake. Do you know of any reason why one could not just remove the meat, discard the shell and bake or broil it? It has to be removed before it can be eaten anyway. Has anyone else thought about this, or am I just being odd? 🙂
That is a great question!! I think it depends on the cooking method but in this case, it is primarily for presentation – it sure looks fancy with that shell on the bottom. Does anyone else have any insight about that shell?
Made the lobster tails today and they turned out excellent! Really, the hardest part was getting the meat out of the shell. 🍤 yum – I wish there was more! Thanks for the detailed recipe, Natasha!
YES!! I’m so so happy you liked it! Thank you for your wonderful review 🙂
Thank you so much for the lobster recipe. I needed a good one and wanted them to be broiled. This is excellant.
You’re welcome! 🙂 It IS so delicious!! I’m happy to hear you enjoy it too!
made this for my hubs birthday with a side of fried rice and asparagus. We LOVED it. Thank you!!
You’re welcome Olga! I’m glad you two loved it!
This looks so luxe and delicious! Yum.
Thank you so much Sara!! 🙂
Looks amazing, I cannot wait to try make this. What side dishes would you recommend serving with this.?
Hi Irina, Lobster tails pair perfectly with creamy mashed potatoes and roasted asparagus. So good and seriously better than eating out!!
Thank you so much!!
Natasha, this looks awesome. I definitely will try this. Question about broiling. My oven has a high and low feature for broil, which would you recommend using? I’ve never made lobster so I don’t want to mess this up! Thank you in advance.
Hi Maggie! I hope you LOVE it as much as we do! 🙂 Use the High setting on the broiler 🙂
I’m sure we will. This looks delicious! My family loves your website and several of your recipes have been saved under our “favorites” list. You do an amazing job and thank you so much for the detailed instructions! I can’t wait to try this! Thank you for all the hard work you put into your website and for your timely response!
Aww! Thank you so much for saying so. That really means alot to us 🙂
OMG! No words! Looks like heaven! Love lobsters! Where did you get yours? Thanks!!!!!
Thank you for that amazing compliment! I purchased mine at Fred Meyer (please see note just below the ingredients photo – hope that helps!) 🙂