Golden chicken thighs tucked over fluffy rice make this one-pan chicken and rice bake the kind of dinner that disappears fast and doesn’t leave you with a sink full of dishes. The rice cooks underneath the chicken, so every grain picks up the savory drippings from the skin, the broth, and the herbs. What you get at the table is comfort food with actual structure: crisp skin on top, tender meat underneath, and rice that tastes like it was cooked with purpose instead of dumped into a pot and hoped for the best.
The trick is keeping the chicken on top so the skin has a chance to brown while the rice stays covered long enough to steam through. Long-grain white rice works best here because it holds its shape and absorbs the broth without turning sticky. Onion and garlic go in raw, which saves a step and gives the rice a built-in base flavor as everything bakes together.
Below, I’ve included the small details that keep this bake from turning soggy or undercooked, plus a few swaps that still give you a solid dinner when you need to work with what’s in the kitchen.
The rice came out fluffy and absorbed all the chicken drippings without getting mushy, and the skin on top got beautifully crisp once I took the foil off. My husband went back for seconds before I even sat down.
Love the crispy-skin chicken and herb rice? Save this one-pan chicken and rice bake for an easy dinner that cooks together in one dish.
The Reason the Rice Cooks Right Under the Chicken
Most chicken-and-rice bakes fail in one of two ways: the chicken dries out before the rice is done, or the rice turns soft and gluey because it sits in too much liquid for too long. This version avoids both problems by using bone-in, skin-on thighs and baking them on top of the rice instead of burying them in it. The chicken drips flavor down into the pan while the skin stays exposed enough to crisp when the foil comes off.
The other key move is using the right rice. Long-grain white rice keeps a separate, fluffy texture after baking, while short-grain rice or instant rice can collapse into a dense layer. If the rice is still a little firm at the end of the covered bake, it usually needs a few more minutes under foil, not more liquid. Adding extra broth late is the fastest way to wash out the seasoning and make the bottom heavy.
- Bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs — They stay juicy through the full bake and give the rice the richest drippings. Boneless thighs cook faster but won’t brown the same way, and the rice loses some of that roasted chicken flavor.
- Long-grain white rice — This is the rice that holds up. Basmati or jasmine both work well as long as you keep the same liquid ratio and don’t stir aggressively once the chicken goes on top.
- Chicken broth — Broth seasons the rice from the inside out. Homemade or store-bought both work here, but if your broth is salted, go lighter on the added salt in the pan.
- Onion and garlic — They cook right in the rice and build the base without any separate sautéing. Dice the onion small so it softens fully in the oven instead of staying crunchy.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Chicken Dish

- Chicken (pat dry for browning) — Room temperature cooks more evenly. Even thickness ensures uniform cooking.
- Oil or butter (the browning medium) — High-heat oil essential. Creates pan flavor through browning.
- Seasonings (salt, pepper, spices) — Apply generously. Chicken carries the entire flavor profile.
- Aromatics (garlic, ginger, or herbs) — Cook with fat to bloom flavors. Become the foundation.
- Sauce or braising liquid (if using) — This keeps chicken moist. Balance richness with acid.
- Vegetables (if using) — Layer by cooking time so everything finishes together.
- Acid (vinegar, wine, lime, or pineapple) — This brightens and prevents one-dimensional flavor.
- Proper doneness (165°F internal temperature) — Use thermometer for accuracy. Overcooked is dry.
How to Bake It So the Chicken Browns and the Rice Stays Fluffy
Building the Rice Base
Start by stirring the rice, broth, onion, garlic, thyme, Italian seasoning, and salt directly in the baking dish. The rice should be evenly spread across the bottom with no dry patches hiding in the corners. If the onion is cut too large, it can stay a little firm after baking, so keep the dice small. This base needs to look loose and soupy before it goes into the oven; the rice will drink up that liquid as it cooks.
Seasoning and Nestling the Chicken
Season the thighs generously on both sides, then place them skin-side up over the rice mixture. Don’t push them down into the liquid. The top of the skin should stay above the surface so it can brown instead of steaming. A light drizzle of olive oil over the skin helps it deepen in color during the final uncovered bake.
Covered Baking for Tender Rice
Cover the dish tightly with foil and bake until the rice has absorbed most of the liquid and the chicken is starting to cook through. Tight foil matters here because escaping steam is what leaves you with hard rice in the center. If the foil has gaps, the top can dry out before the rice finishes underneath. Use a pan with enough room, too; overcrowding makes the liquid move around unevenly and can leave a wet pocket at the edge.
Uncovering for the Final Crisp
Once the rice is tender and the chicken is nearly done, remove the foil and bake until the skin turns golden and crisp. This is the stage that gives the dish its best texture, so don’t rush it by cranking the heat. You want the top to sizzle lightly and the skin to look taut, not pale or rubbery. If the rice is done but the chicken color is still soft, give it a few extra minutes uncovered rather than pulling it early.
What to Change When You Need a Different Version
Use chicken breasts instead of thighs
Chicken breasts will work, but they cook faster and dry out more easily than thighs. If you use them, choose bone-in breasts if possible and start checking for doneness a little earlier. The rice will still taste good, but you’ll lose some of the richness that comes from the dark meat and skin.
Make it dairy-free and gluten-free
This recipe already fits both of those needs as written, as long as your broth is certified gluten-free. The flavor still lands because the richness comes from the chicken skin and pan drippings, not from butter or cream. That makes it a good one to keep in your back pocket when you need a dinner that works for more people without extra changes.
Add vegetables without watering it down
Diced carrots, peas, or chopped celery can go in with the rice, but keep the total amount modest so the pan doesn’t get crowded. Watery vegetables like zucchini will soften too much and can throw off the liquid balance. If you want more color and freshness, add tender vegetables near the end or scatter them on top as garnish.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The rice firms up as it chills, but it loosens again with gentle reheating.
- Freezer: It freezes well for about 2 months. Cool it completely first, then freeze in portions so the rice doesn’t clump into one large block.
- Reheating: Reheat covered in the oven at 325°F with a splash of broth or water to bring the rice back to life. Microwaving works for a quick lunch, but add a little liquid and cover the dish or the rice dries out fast.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

One-Pan Chicken and Rice Bake
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 375°F, ensuring the rack is set in the middle position so the chicken skin browns evenly.
- In a 9x13 baking dish, mix long-grain white rice, chicken broth, diced onion, minced garlic, dried thyme, dried Italian seasoning, and salt; stir until evenly combined.
- Season bone-in skin-on chicken thighs generously on all sides with pepper, garlic powder, paprika, and Italian seasoning.
- Nestle the chicken skin-side up on top of the rice mixture, then drizzle the chicken with olive oil so the skin crisps as it bakes.
- Cover tightly with foil and bake for 40 minutes until the rice is actively simmering around the chicken and the grains look swollen.
- Remove the foil and bake for 15 minutes more at 375°F until the chicken skin is golden and the rice has absorbed all visible liquid.
- Garnish with fresh parsley and serve straight from the baking dish, letting the top look crisp and the rice fluffy.