This oven baked 3-ingredient honey mustard chicken thighs recipe is exactly the kind of dish that shows up at a family gathering, disappears in minutes, and has everyone asking for the secret. My eldest brother brought a pan of these to a casual Sunday get-together, and the sticky, sweet-savory glaze and shatteringly crisp skin had people hovering by the stove. The beauty is in its simplicity: bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs, a good yellow mustard, and honey. That’s it. The oven does the work, caramelizing the glaze into something that tastes like it came out of a neighborhood bistro kitchen rather than a weeknight home oven.
These chicken thighs are rich and sticky, so they pair nicely with simple, soothing sides. I like them with roasted potatoes or a basic buttered rice to catch the extra glaze. A crisp green salad with a tangy vinaigrette or steamed green beans with a squeeze of lemon helps cut through the sweetness. If you’re serving a crowd, add a pan of roasted carrots or a tray of crusty bread for swiping through the juices in the bottom of the glass baking dish.
Oven Baked 3-Ingredient Honey Mustard Chicken Thighs
Servings: 4
Ingredients
2 1/2 to 3 pounds bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs (about 6–8 pieces), patted dry
1/2 cup yellow mustard
1/3 cup honey
Directions
Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Set a rack in the middle of the oven. Lightly grease a glass 9x13-inch casserole dish or similar baking dish.
In a small bowl, whisk together the yellow mustard and honey until completely smooth. Taste and adjust: add a touch more honey if you prefer it sweeter, or a spoonful more mustard if you like extra tang.
Pat the chicken thighs very dry with paper towels; this helps the skin crisp and allows the glaze to cling. Arrange the thighs in a single layer in the glass baking dish, skin side up, leaving a little space between each piece.
Spoon or brush about half of the honey mustard mixture over the chicken, coating the tops and sides of each thigh. Be sure some glaze settles around the chicken in the dish, but keep the skin side mostly coated rather than submerged so it can crisp.
Place the dish in the preheated oven and bake for 20 minutes. The glaze will start to bubble and thin out as the chicken releases some juices.
After 20 minutes, remove the dish from the oven and carefully spoon or brush the remaining honey mustard mixture over the chicken thighs, focusing on the tops to build a thicker layer of glaze.
Return the dish to the oven and continue baking for another 20–25 minutes, or until the chicken is cooked through (an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of a thigh, not touching bone, reads 175–185°F / 80–85°C) and the glaze is deeply golden and sticky.
For extra caramelization and crispier skin, switch the oven to broil on high for 2–4 minutes at the very end of cooking. Watch closely so the glaze darkens and bubbles but does not burn.
Remove the baking dish from the oven and let the chicken rest for 5–10 minutes. The glaze will thicken slightly as it cools. Serve the thighs straight from the glass dish, spooning some of the sticky honey mustard juices over each portion.
Variations & Tips
Because this recipe is built on only three ingredients, each one matters. Use a classic yellow mustard, the kind you’d put on a hot dog, for the bright color and familiar tang that caramelizes so nicely. If you’d like to change the character of the dish without complicating it, you can swap the mustard type while still keeping the ingredient count to three: try half yellow mustard and half Dijon for a slightly sharper, more grown-up flavor, or use a stone-ground mustard for more texture. You can also adjust the ratio of honey to mustard—more honey for a sweeter, more lacquered finish, more mustard for a punchier glaze. If you prefer boneless, skinless thighs, reduce the cooking time by about 10 minutes and skip the broil or keep it very brief to avoid drying them out, though you will lose some of the crispy-skin effect shown in the photo. For meal prep, bake a full pan, cool completely, and refrigerate; reheat covered in a low oven until warmed through, then briefly uncover and broil to re-crisp the glaze. Serve leftovers sliced over salads or tucked into sandwiches with any extra pan juices.