A garlic-crusted Prime Rib Recipe with a trusted method for juicy, melt-in-your-mouth tender prime rib roast. Watch the video tutorial and learn how to trim, tie, wrestle (kidding), and cook a standing rib roast.
This is a stunning and holiday-worthy roast that we reserve for spe cial meals like Christmas dinner. It’s right up there with juicy Roast Turkey. Everyone should have a go-to recipe for Prime Rib Roast and this recipe doesn’t disappoint.

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Prime rib is so satisfying and pairs really well with creamy mashed potatoes and baked asparagus for the ultimate holiday feast. And don’t forget the Creamy Horseradish Sauce.
Prime Rib Video Tutorial
I hope you are super pumped to make your own prime rib roast after watching this easy tutorial.
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Prime Rib Roast Recipe
Repeat after me, “prime rib is not scary.” It’s actually very simple to prepare. Prime Rib Roast can be intimidating because it is an expensive cut of beef and is usually made for important life events or holidays, but really, this is not hard to make.
The secrets to a great prime rib are:
- Use an in-oven meat thermometer
- Don’t overcook the roast (see rule #1)
- Follow a trusted recipe (watch the video tutorial and you’ll be a pro in no time)
What Cut is Prime Rib Meat?
There are 2 grades at the grocery store; USDA prime grade and USDA choice grade. Prime grade has more fat and marbling and can be considerably more expensive per pound. If you aren’t sure, ask your butcher whether your roast is prime or choice because it isn’t always clear on the packaging and most cuts sold are actually “choice”.
See our tutorial on How to Select a Prime Rib Roast. This recipe works for either prime or choice, so go with the best you can buy.
Pro Tip: Look for bone-in prime rib, also known as a “Standing Rib Roast.” We used a 7 lb bone-in beef prime rib, but you can use larger or smaller roasts and modify the baking time per the cooking time chart below. P.S. You can use the bones later to make a Beef Stock.

How to Carve and Tie Prime Rib Roast
Pre-cutting the bones away is optional but will make carving easier when ready to serve. It’s best to do it ahead than struggle with it in front of dinner guests. Removing and re-attaching the ribs with a string doesn’t change the juiciness of the roast at all.
- Cut away the bones running your knife right along the bones.
- Replace the bones and tightly tie them right back onto your roast with kitchen string, looping the string around in 1″ intervals.
Pro Tip: A butcher can cut away the ribs and tie the roast for you (usually free of charge).

The Best Prime Rib Seasoning Rub
Combine 6 finely chopped garlic cloves, 1/2 Tbsp salt, 1/2 Tbsp black pepper, 1 tsp chopped fresh rosemary leaves, 1/2 tsp chopped fresh thyme leaves, and 3 Tbsp light olive oil. It’s even better if you let it sit for 5 minutes for the flavors to meld.
Pro Tips: Mince garlic with a knife. Do not use a garlic press as pressed garlic burns under high heat. Also, use an extra light olive oil with a high smoke point so your oven is less likely to get smokey.

How to Cook Prime Rib:
1. Season and Rest – Sprinkle meat all over with about 2 tsp salt, cover loosely with plastic wrap and let it rest on the counter for 3 hours to come to room temperature. The roast will bake more uniformly if it is near room temperature. When nearly at room temperature, Preheat the Oven to 500˚F with a rack in the lower third of the oven.

2. Pat Dry and Rub – use paper towels to pat dry the roast then use your hands to rub the garlic and herb mixture all over the top and sides of the roast. Place into a roasting pan, rib-side-down.

3. Roast – Put an oven-safe meat thermometer into the thickest portion of the meat and cook according to the Cooking Time Chart Below.
4. Rest the roast – Once out of the oven transfer to a cutting board, tent loosely with foil, and rest 30 minutes before carving. If you don’t rest the roast, it will juice out and become chewy. Remove the kitchen string and use a carving knife to slice against the grain to desired thickness

Prime Rib Cooking Time
Bake in a fully pre-heated oven at 500˚F for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 325˚F and continue baking:
- 10-12 min per pound for rare
- 13-14 min per pound for medium-rare
- 14-15 min per pound for medium
- 16-17 min per pound for medium-well
Roast until the thermometer registers:
- 115-120˚F for rare
- 125-130˚F for medium-rare
- 135-140 for medium doneness
- 145-150 for a medium-well
The internal temp of the roast will continue to rise 5-10 degrees even after it’s out of the oven so don’t over-bake it. You can put it back in the oven if you want it more done.
Pro Tip: A colder or thicker roast will take more time to cook and oven strengths can vary so a meat thermometer is super-important.

The garlic crust and initial roasting over high heat seal in the juices and make every bite of this Prime Rib roast so tender and flavorful. I learned to make a standing rib roast from my blogging friend, Elise of Simply Recipes and I am using her method for prepping and baking.
Common Questions
If you are buying a bone-in prime rib roast as the main dish, you can plan on serving 2-3 people per rib, depending on how large your menu is. If it is your only protein and main course, the rule of thumb is 1 lb per person.
You can use a boneless roast and adjust the cooking time accordingly for the weight. You will need a rack inside of your roasting pan since the ribs won’t be there to serve as a rack. Also, we do recommend still tying the roast with string for even roasting.
Serve with
Here’s a classic holiday Prime Rib Menu that will impress everyone:
- Creamy Mashed Potatoes or Au Gratin Potatoes
- Cloverleaf Rolls
- Horseradish Sauce
- Green Bean Casserole
- Roasted Cauliflower
- Homemade Stuffing
Prime Rib Recipe

Ingredients
For the Roast:
- 7 lb beef prime rib (bone-in)
- 3 1/2 tsp sea salt, divided
- 1/2 Tbsp black pepper, freshly ground
- 1 tsp fresh rosemary leaves, minced, from 1 sprig or 1/2 tsp dried rosemary
- 1/2 tsp fresh thyme leaves, mnced, from 1-2 sprigs, or 1/4 tsp dried thyme
- 6 garlic cloves, finely chopped
- 3 Tbsp extra light olive oil
Instructions
How to Make Prime Rib:
- Cut the ribs away from the roast, cutting right along the ribs and keeping the ribs together. Replace the ribs back onto the roast and use kitchen string to tie them tightly onto the roast in 1-inch intervals.
- Sprinkle meat all over with 2 tsp salt, cover loosely with plastic wrap and let it rest at room temperature for 3 hours to come to room temperature (it will bake more uniformly). Then preheat Oven to 500˚F with rack in the lower third of the oven.
- Make your Prime Rib rub: In a small bowl, stir together: 1/2 Tbsp salt, 1/2 Tbsp black pepper, 1 tsp minced rosemary, 1/2 tsp minced thyme leaves, chopped garlic, and 3 Tbsp olive oil.
- Lightly pat the roast dry with a paper towel then rub all over top and sides with garlic rub. Place into a roasting pan bone-side-down (the bones will serve as a rack) and put a meat thermometer into the thickest portion of the meat. Bake at 500˚F for 15 minutes.
- Reduce heat to 325˚F and continue baking following these guidelines: 10-12 min per pound for rare, or 13-14 min per pound for medium rare, and 14-15 min per pound for medium. Roast until the thermometer registers: 120˚F for rare, 130˚F for medium rare, 140 for Medium, 150 for medium well.*
- Transfer to a cutting board, tent loosely with foil and rest 30 minutes before carving. Remove string and rack of ribs then slice to desired thickness.



Hi Natasha. I made a 6.75 lb prime rib roast tonight following your recipe and it took almost an hour longer than your suggested time to get it to medium rare. I tested my oven temp and I used a meat thermometer. I followed your directions to the letter. The roast was fully thawed and left on counter for 3 hours prior. I can’t figure out why.
Hi Janis, that is surprising. It could have been a thicker roast? Also did you make sure your oven was fully preheated before putting the roast inside.
My husband and I just made this for Easter dinner. We’ve made several of your other recipes and knew this too would be fool-proof. It was. The meat came out perfectly and was nicely seasoned. We can always count on your recipes to come out awesome and this was no exception. No more ham for us on Easter. Thank you!
Thank you for your great comments and feedback. It is inspiring for us when we receive good messages like this.
I made this roast and the creamy mashed potato recipe for Christmas dinner. I paired it with squash au gratin and roasted brussels. It was excellent. My husband and my sister both said it was the best meal I have ever cooked!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for the wonderful review, Laurie!
Made Prime Rib, Horseradish Sauce and Slow Cooker Mashed Potatoes as instructed per Natasha. Perfect !!! Thank you so very much. Love your recipes and videos ! Prime rib was 13 lbs ($355 for prime quality) so was so afraid of overcooking etc. Used your cooking times and was so so good. Had to put centercut back in for a bit. Better to do that than overcook. Loved all 3 recipes. Ty !
That sounds like such a treat to have prime quality prime rib. I’m so happy you loved the recipes and enjoyed everything. I hope you had a wonderful Christmas!
We made your prime rib roast today and it was delicious! I appreciated your video and suggestions on picking out the meat. We have loved everything we’ve made of yours! Thank you!
You’re most welcome, Shanna! It’s a pleasure and I hope you will love all the recipes that you will try from my website.
Thank you Natasha, my prime ribs turned out perfect. I have convection oven, and I was worried if my prime ribs get burned. So I covered with alluminal foil for last a hour. it was great.Crispy outside and juicy inside. Everyone loved it.
Hello Nima, you are so welcome. Great to hear that it turned out perfect and delicious. Thanks for sharing that with us.
I followed this recipe for our Christmas dinner and it turned out perfect. The outside crust was amazing. Thank you for the video and instructions. I am definitely going to follow some of your other recipes. Thank you so much
Neil
You’re most welcome, Neil. Thank you for sharing that with us!
Making for Christmas Dinner! Very excited! I’ve made this before but a different recipe. Wish me luck!
I hope you love this recipe, Wendy!
Question: I completely forgot to pat the roast down after it came to room temperature and before adding the garlic-herb coating. It’s in the oven, now, but will not patting it down, impede with the cooking, texture or flavor?
Thank you!
Hi Cindy, it’s best to pat it dry so it creates less steam in the oven while baking. It may impact the outcome of the crust developing on the meat.
Looks great wish me luck….I’m making it for Christmas eve diner.
It’s going to turn out great! I hope you love it, Richard!
If I already let my prime rib sit in the fridge with kosher salt for four days, do I still need to salt it when letting it come to room temperature?
Hi Jessica, letting it sit at room temperature as described in the recipe will help it cooked through more evenly.
Hello, I’m a huge fan and bought Christmas gift prime rib for my in laws who are on a very tight budget. Due to COVID, they didn’t want to mingle. Provided your link for this and they LOVED it! Back story, mother in law now has dental issues and can only eat seriously tender meat. She could eat this prime rib. So tender and said it was the best meat she has eaten in a long time. She is in her 80’s. Got an additional prime rib for my family and look forward to this for our Christmas day meal.
That makes me so happy! Thank you for sharing that with me.
Hi Natasha. I’m planning on doing the rib roast and wanted to know which meat thermometer you use? Thank you.
Hi Myrna, Hi use my absolute favorite Thermapen One HERE for instant reading. If you’re looking for an oven-safe thermometer, I use this probe and thermometer HERE.
This has been my “go-to” Christmas Prime Rib recipe for the past 5 years and it never disappoints!
Thank you, Natasha for your delicious recipes! My family loves trying a new one each week.
Merry Christmas 🎄
Merry Christmas! I’m so glad your family loved it!
Hi Natasha,
I was thinking of making the mushroom sauce that you have in the beef tenderloin recipe, and make it with this Prime Rib recipe. Will it go well together?
Hi Mare, you know that sounds delicious, but I haven’t paired the two myself to advise. If you happen to try this, please let me know how you liked it!
Hello Natasha, is there a certain kind of salt to use. Some sites said Sea salt or Kosher
Hi Emanul, I used sea salt and I think it’s perfect for this recipe!
I am going to make your roast prime rib recipe. I will let you know how it turns out
Please do, Pam. We would love to know how it turns out for you.
HI!!
I have a big dilemma I originally bought a 7lb roast for the expected company. I now have to buy a additional 5 lbs how can i cook them together?? Can i just smush them together as tight as possible to cook them or will the smaller one cook faster HELP
Hi Kim, the smaller one will likely cook faster. I recommend checking the temperature of each and pulling the smaller one out sooner if necessary so it doesn’t dry out.
Turned out excellent! Cooked on a smoker for Christmas dinner. Everyone loved it
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review!
Turned out excellent! Cooked on a smoker for Christmas dinner
Thank you so much for sharing that with me. I’m so happy you enjoyed that.