Quick Answer

How do you store leftover buffalo wings?

Let buffalo wings cool to room temperature (no more than 2 hours — USDA guideline), then refrigerate in an airtight container. Already-sauced wings last 3–4 days in the refrigerator. The best reheating method for crispiness: air fryer at 375°F for 5–7 minutes or oven at 400°F for 8–10 minutes. Avoid microwaving — it creates steam that turns the skin rubbery. For freezing: wings freeze well for up to 3 months. Reheat from frozen in the oven at 400°F for 20–25 minutes, flipping halfway. The skin won't be quite as crispy as fresh but is very acceptable.

Food Safety Basics for Leftover Wings

Cooked chicken wings fall under standard cooked poultry food safety guidelines:

  • The 2-hour rule: Cooked chicken should not sit at room temperature for more than 2 hours total. If the wings were at a party or sitting on a buffet, the clock starts from when they were cooked. After 2 hours in the "danger zone" (40–140°F), bacterial growth accelerates significantly.
  • Refrigerator storage: 3–4 days at 40°F or below. Store in an airtight container to prevent moisture loss and prevent the wings from absorbing other refrigerator odors.
  • The sniff test isn't enough: Bacteria that cause foodborne illness (Salmonella, Staphylococcus aureus) don't always produce odor. After 4 days in the refrigerator, discard regardless of smell.
  • Buffalo sauce on leftover wings: The acidity in buffalo sauce (from Frank's RedHot vinegar base) does have a mild preservative effect — but not significant enough to extend the 3–4 day window. Store as you would any cooked chicken.

Storage Methods

Buffalo Wing Storage Methods

Storage MethodDurationQuality on ReheatBest For
Airtight container, refrigerator 3–4 days Good with proper reheating Most leftover situations
Covered plate, refrigerator 3–4 days (same) Slightly less moisture Short-term, no container available
Freezer bag, freezer 2–3 months Good — skin not as crispy Making ahead, large batches
Room temperature (not recommended) 2 hours max N/A Only safe during service

For refrigerator storage, the key decision is whether to separate the wings or store them together. If the wings are sauced, they can be stored in a pile in a container — the sauce helps keep them moist. If storing unsauced (dry-rubbed or plain), try to arrange in a single layer or with parchment paper between layers to prevent sticking.

For longer storage, see the guide to freezing buffalo sauce — the sauce itself can be frozen separately from wings, which gives you more flexibility in portion control.

Reheating Methods for Maximum Crispiness

The challenge in reheating buffalo wings is recovering skin crispiness. During refrigeration, the wing skin absorbs moisture from the surrounding environment and from the sauce — it softens. Effective reheating drives this moisture back out through heat.

Buffalo Wing Reheating Methods

MethodCrispinessTimeDownsides
Air fryer (375°F, 5–7 min) Excellent Fast Small batch size
Oven on wire rack (400°F, 8–10 min) Very good Moderate Requires preheating
Broiler (2–3 min) Good — watch closely Very fast Can burn quickly
Microwave Poor — rubbery skin Very fast Creates steam, destroys crispiness
Pan-fry (dry pan, medium-high) Good Moderate Requires attention, smoke

The air fryer is the best reheating tool for wings. Its high-velocity hot air circulation acts like a convection oven but more concentrated — moisture evaporates rapidly and the skin recrisps in minutes. At 375°F for 5–7 minutes, refrigerator-cold wings come back to approximately 80–90% of their original crispiness.

Oven reheating works well if you elevate the wings on a wire rack. The wire rack allows hot air to circulate under the wing, crisping the bottom rather than having it sit in its own moisture. Without the rack (wings directly on a sheet pan), the bottom stays soft.

⚠️ Don't Microwave Sauced Wings

Microwaving sauced buffalo wings creates steam — the water in the buffalo sauce heats rapidly and converts to steam, which then bathes the wing skin. The result is soft, rubbery skin and an unpleasant texture. If a microwave is your only option: place wings on a microwave-safe plate, cover with a paper towel (not plastic wrap — that seals steam in), and microwave at 50% power in 30-second intervals. The reduced power slows steam creation. It's still not as good as oven or air fryer, but it's better than full-power microwaving. The paper towel absorbs some of the escaping steam.

When to Freeze vs. Refrigerate

Freeze if:

  • You won't eat the wings within 3 days
  • You made a very large batch and want portions available for multiple weeks
  • You're meal prepping wings in advance for a future event

Refrigerate if:

  • You'll eat within 3–4 days (refrigerator wings reheat with better texture than frozen)
  • You made a moderate amount of leftovers from a specific meal

Freezing technique: let wings cool completely. Arrange on a sheet pan in a single layer and freeze for 1–2 hours (flash freezing). Once frozen solid, transfer to a freezer bag — this prevents them from sticking together and allows you to take out single portions. Label with the date.

Reheating from frozen: oven at 400°F for 20–25 minutes, flipping once at the halfway point. No need to thaw first. The oven route works better than the air fryer for frozen wings because the larger heat mass of frozen wings benefits from longer exposure to moderate heat rather than short exposure to high heat.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — cold buffalo wings are a legitimate way to eat leftovers. The sauce flavor is fully present; only the texture changes. Cold wing skin is soft rather than crispy, and the meat is denser and chewier. Some people prefer the flavor of cold wings because the buffalo sauce has had time to meld with the meat. Room temperature is actually the preferred serving temperature for flavor (cold slightly mutes taste perception) — if you're going to eat them cold, take them out of the refrigerator 15–20 minutes before eating. Cold wings can be pulled off the bone and used as a protein in other preparations (grain bowls, salads, sandwiches) where the texture is less critical than it is in the traditional hand-held wing format.