Sheet Pan Mediterranean Chicken and Zucchini

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Servings 4–6 people

Golden chicken thighs, blistered zucchini, and jammy cherry tomatoes make this sheet pan dinner feel like a lot more effort than it actually takes. The edges of the vegetables caramelize, the olives turn briny and rich in the hot oven, and the feta melts just enough to cling to everything without disappearing. It’s the kind of meal that lands on the table fast but still tastes like somebody cooked with a plan.

What makes this version work is the split seasoning. Half of the lemon-garlic mixture goes on the chicken first, so the meat gets a stronger hit of flavor and stays juicy while the vegetables roast in the rest. That keeps the zucchini from tasting flat and the chicken from tasting like it was just salted at the end. The high oven temp matters here too. At 425°F, the vegetables roast instead of steaming, and the tomatoes collapse into little bursts of sauce around the pan.

Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: how to keep the zucchini from going soft, which ingredient gives you the biggest payoff, and a few smart variations if you want to change the dish without losing what makes it work.

The chicken stayed juicy and the zucchini browned at the edges instead of turning mushy. I loved how the lemon and feta pulled everything together, and even my picky eater went back for seconds.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Save this sheet pan Mediterranean chicken and zucchini for the nights when you want juicy chicken, caramelized vegetables, and one pan to wash.

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The Trick to Keeping Zucchini Roasted, Not Watery

Zucchini is the ingredient most likely to go sideways in a sheet pan dinner. Cut too thick and it stays underdone; cut too thin and it collapses before the chicken finishes. Half-moons about the width of a coin give you the best balance: tender in the center with browned edges that hold their shape.

The other thing that matters is space. If you crowd the pan, the zucchini and tomatoes release moisture and steam each other instead of roasting. A lined sheet pan helps with cleanup, but the real win is giving everything a single layer so the hot air can do its job. The olives go on the pan as-is because they only need to warm through and perfume the rest of the dish.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

Sheet pan Mediterranean chicken and zucchini, lemony roasted, feta-topped
  • Boneless chicken thighs — These stay juicier than chicken breast in a hot oven and handle the lemon-garlic mixture without drying out. If you use breasts, cut them into large chunks so they cook in the same window as the vegetables.
  • Zucchini — This soaks up the lemon herb oil and turns sweet at the edges when roasted hard and fast. Smaller zucchini are better here because they hold less water and roast more evenly.
  • Cherry tomatoes — They burst in the oven and create the saucy, glossy pockets that tie the whole pan together. Grape tomatoes work too, but they’re usually a little firmer and less juicy.
  • Kalamata olives — This is where the Mediterranean flavor really shows up. They don’t need much treatment; the heat pulls out their briny depth and keeps the dish from tasting one-note.
  • Feta cheese — Add it after roasting so it softens without fully melting. Pre-crumbled feta is fine, but block feta crumbled by hand usually tastes cleaner and a little creamier.
  • Lemon juice and zest — The juice brings brightness, but the zest is what keeps the flavor from fading in the oven. If you skip the zest, the dish still works, but it loses that fresh, sharp top note.

How to Build the Pan So Everything Finishes at the Same Time

Mix the lemon-garlic oil first

Whisk the olive oil, garlic, lemon juice, lemon zest, oregano, thyme, salt, and pepper in a bowl before anything touches the pan. That keeps the seasoning even and prevents raw garlic from clumping in one spot. If the garlic sits in the lemon too long before roasting, it can turn harsh, so use the mixture right away.

Season the chicken separately

Toss the chicken with half of the seasoning mixture so it gets coated well on all sides. The chicken needs a little more direct flavor than the vegetables because it carries the whole dish. Lay the pieces out with space between them so they brown instead of turning gray and steamed on the bottom.

Roast the vegetables around the chicken

Mix the zucchini and tomatoes with the remaining seasoning, then scatter them around the chicken in a single layer. The vegetables should sit close enough to pick up the pan juices but not stacked on top of each other. Add the olives now so they warm through and give up their brine into the pan without drying out.

Finish with feta and parsley

Pull the pan when the chicken hits 165°F and the zucchini has browned edges. The tomatoes should be collapsed and glossy, not dried out. Add the feta and parsley after the pan comes out of the oven so the cheese stays distinct and the herbs keep their color.

Three Ways to Adjust This Without Losing the Point

Dairy-Free Version

Skip the feta and finish with extra parsley and a squeeze of fresh lemon. You’ll lose the salty creaminess, so add a few more olives if you want that same briny punch.

Gluten-Free and Naturally Low-Carb

This recipe already fits both without any special swaps. Serve it as-is for a lighter dinner, or spoon it over cauliflower rice if you want something more substantial underneath.

Swap the Protein

Boneless skinless chicken breasts work if that’s what you have, but they need to be watched closely because they dry out faster. Cut them into larger pieces and start checking a few minutes early so they don’t overcook before the vegetables are ready.

Make It a Bigger Meal

Add red onion wedges or bell pepper strips if you want more vegetables on the pan. Both hold up well at 425°F and bring a little extra sweetness that works with the lemon and feta.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The zucchini softens a bit, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: The chicken freezes well, but the zucchini and tomatoes turn soft after thawing. If you plan to freeze it, pull out the chicken portions and freeze them separately.
  • Reheating: Warm in a 350°F oven until the chicken is heated through, or use a skillet over medium-low heat. The biggest mistake is blasting it in the microwave, which makes the zucchini collapse and the chicken dry out at the edges.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use chicken breasts instead of thighs?+

Yes, but cut them into large, even pieces so they cook at the same pace as the zucchini. Breasts dry out faster than thighs, so start checking them a few minutes early and pull the pan as soon as they hit 165°F.

How do I keep the zucchini from getting mushy?+

Cut it into medium half-moons and spread it out in one layer. If the pan is crowded, the zucchini steams in its own moisture instead of roasting, which is where that soft, watery texture comes from.

Can I make this sheet pan Mediterranean chicken and zucchini ahead of time?+

You can whisk the seasoning and chop the vegetables a few hours ahead, but I’d roast it right before serving. The vegetables lose their edge if they sit after cooking, and the feta is best added at the end so it stays bright.

How do I know when the chicken is done without overcooking the vegetables?+

Use an instant-read thermometer and pull the pan when the thickest part of the chicken reaches 165°F. At that point the zucchini should be browned at the edges and the tomatoes should have collapsed, which is exactly where you want them.

Can I leave out the olives if I don’t like them?+

Yes, but the dish will taste milder and a little less Mediterranean. If you skip them, add an extra pinch of salt and a few more crumbles of feta to replace some of that briny depth.

Sheet Pan Mediterranean Chicken and Zucchini

Sheet pan Mediterranean chicken and zucchini with golden roasted chicken thighs surrounded by caramelized zucchini, cherry tomatoes, and kalamata olives. Finished with lemon herb olive oil and crumbled feta for a bright, savory one-pan dinner.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Mediterranean
Calories: 610

Ingredients
  

Boneless chicken thighs
  • 1.5 lb boneless chicken thighs Cut none; keep whole for even roasting.
Vegetables and finishing
  • 2 zucchini Slice into half-moons.
  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes Halve if large for quicker caramelization.
  • 0.5 cup kalamata olives Halve.
  • 0.5 cup feta cheese Crumbled.
  • 0.25 fresh parsley Chopped for garnish.
Lemon herb olive oil
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 cloves garlic cloves Minced.
  • 1 lemon Juiced and zested.
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
  • 0.25 salt and black pepper To taste; season the lemon herb mixture and vegetables.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Prep and season
  1. Preheat oven to 425°F and line a sheet pan with foil.
  2. Whisk olive oil, minced garlic, lemon juice, lemon zest, oregano, thyme, salt, and pepper until combined.
  3. Toss chicken thighs in about half the lemon herb mixture and arrange them on the sheet pan.
  4. Toss zucchini and cherry tomatoes in the remaining mixture, then scatter them around the chicken.
  5. Add kalamata olives to the pan and roast for 22–25 minutes at 425°F, until chicken is cooked and vegetables are caramelized (look for browned edges on the zucchini and blistered tomatoes).
Finish and serve
  1. Top the hot pan with crumbled feta and fresh parsley, then serve immediately.

Notes

For the best browning, spread everything in a single layer with space between the chicken and vegetables so moisture can evaporate. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days; reheat in a 400°F oven until warmed through (about 8–12 minutes). Freezing is not recommended because zucchini can turn watery after thawing. Dietary swap: use dairy-free feta if you want a lactose-free option while keeping the lemon herb flavor.

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