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Best BBQ in Austin 2026

Aaron Franklin lit his first offset smoker behind a rented house in Austin in 2009, opened the trailer on Eleventh Street in 2011, won the James Beard for Best Chef Southwest in 2015, and reset what brisket means on the continent. He is the reason this article exists. But Austin BBQ in 2026 is no longer a single-shop conversation. la Barbecue solved the line problem with a SevenRooms pre-order system. Terry Black's brought the Lockhart family lineage to South Austin. John Bates moved sausage from afterthought to headliner at InterStellar. Miguel Vidal made the smoked-brisket taco the city's most-photographed bite at Valentina's. Eight rooms below — ranked by what a serious eater actually orders this year.

Eight Austin BBQ Joints Worth the Line

Franklin Barbecue
#1
Pitmaster: Aaron Franklin
Cuisine: Central Texas BBQ — salt-and-pepper brisket on post oak
Neighborhood: East Austin · 900 E 11th Street
Price: Brisket $33/lb, beef rib $36/lb; opens 11:00 AM, sells out by mid-afternoon; James Beard Best Chef Southwest 2015
Aaron Franklin's brisket is the test brisket of North American BBQ — and the line, as of 2026, is still part of the meal. Reserve weeks ahead via the Skip-the-Line tickets.

Aaron Franklin began smoking brisket on a single offset rig behind a rented house in 2009, opened the trailer at 11th and Branch in 2011, took the brick-and-mortar at 900 East 11th in 2011, and the line has not died since. The recipe is famously simple — kosher salt, sixteen-mesh black pepper, post-oak smoke, twelve to eighteen hours at 225°F — and the bark, the smoke ring, and the pull-apart fat have been imitated by every Central Texas pit in the decade since. Order: brisket fatty, one beef rib, a link of sausage. The Skip-the-Line ticket is a paid daily release that walks you to the counter without the queue; it is the most efficient way to eat at Franklin in 2026. Franklin's book — *Franklin Barbecue: A Meat-Smoking Manifesto* — is the brisket bible.

Not for: a midweek lunch on the way to a meeting. Even with Skip-the-Line, allow ninety minutes start to finish.
la Barbecue
#2
Owners: LeAnn Mueller and Ali Clem; lineage from Louie Mueller BBQ in Taylor (Bobby Mueller, LeAnn's father)
Cuisine: Central Texas BBQ — brisket, beef rib, smoked turkey, jalapeño-cheddar sausage
Neighborhood: East Cesar Chavez · 2401 E Cesar Chavez Street
Price: Brisket $32/lb, beef rib $35/lb; pre-orders via SevenRooms seven days out; founded 2011
LeAnn Mueller's pit, Ali Clem's front of house, and the only Austin BBQ shop with a SevenRooms pre-order system worth the click. Book it seven days out and skip the line entirely.

LeAnn Mueller carried the Louie Mueller family pit lineage from Taylor to East Austin in 2011, partnered with Ali Clem, and built what is, on technique, the closest match for Franklin Barbecue in town. The brisket is salt-and-pepper, post oak, sixteen hours; the beef rib is the alternative headliner; the jalapeño-cheddar sausage holds up to the rest of the plate. The genuine differentiator is the SevenRooms pre-order: select your meats by the pound, pick a fifteen-minute pickup window seven days out, and walk straight to a separate counter when you arrive. That single change makes la Barbecue the most-bookable serious BBQ in Austin. The East Cesar Chavez yard is shaded and has picnic tables; live music on weekends.

Not for: a walk-in lunch without the pre-order. The walk-up line is still real, though shorter than Franklin's.
InterStellar BBQ
#3
Pitmaster: John Bates
Cuisine: Central Texas BBQ with a rotating sausage program
Neighborhood: North Austin · 12233 Ranch Road 620 N
Price: Brisket $30/lb, sausage links $5–6; opened 2018; Texas Monthly Top 50 BBQ 2021
John Bates moved sausage from afterthought to headliner — the peach-bourbon link is the most ambitious sausage made in Texas. Worth the flight for the rotating menu.

John Bates spent a decade running the Noble Sandwich Company before opening InterStellar in a north Austin strip mall on Ranch Road 620 in 2018. The brisket is solid and the smoked turkey is excellent, but the differentiator is the sausage. The rotating program — peach-bourbon, green-chile-cheddar, jalapeño-cheddar, brisket-and-blue-cheese, fennel-and-orange-pork — is the most ambitious in the state and the reason Texas Monthly named InterStellar to its Top 50 list in 2021. The peach cobbler is the dessert. The room is functional rather than scenic — a strip-mall counter with picnic-table seating outside — and the line moves quickly because the system is built for it. The drive from downtown Austin runs forty minutes.

Not for: a downtown visitor without a rental car. Ranch Road 620 is a serious drive from anywhere south of MoPac.
Terry Black's Barbecue
#4
Owners: Mike and Mark Black (twins), with sister Christina Black; sons of Terry Black, of the Lockhart Black family
Cuisine: Central Texas BBQ — Lockhart lineage
Neighborhood: South Austin · 1003 Barton Springs Road
Price: Brisket $28/lb, beef rib $32/lb; opened 2014; lineage from Black's Barbecue (Lockhart, founded 1932)
The Lockhart family pit lineage in a South Austin room — twin brothers Mike and Mark Black ran the kitchen since 2014. Try it once for the beef rib alone.

The Black family has been smoking brisket in Lockhart since 1932 — Edgar Black Jr. founded Black's Barbecue, the Lockhart institution, in the depth of the Depression. Terry Black is one of his grandsons; Mike, Mark, and Christina Black are Terry's children, and they opened Terry Black's at 1003 Barton Springs Road in 2014. The brisket is salt-and-pepper on post oak; the beef rib is the largest in town and the test order; the jalapeño sausage is straight Lockhart. The Austin room is the rare BBQ shop with a real dining room, full bar, and reservations available for groups of eight or more. The line is shorter than Franklin's and the technique is genuinely Lockhart. Two more locations (Dallas, Deep Ellum) have opened since.

Not for: a guest looking for the trailer-yard authenticity of Franklin's. Terry Black's is a polished sit-down BBQ room — that's the point.
Valentina's Tex Mex BBQ
#5
Pitmaster: Miguel Vidal
Cuisine: Tex-Mex BBQ — smoked-brisket tacos on house tortillas
Neighborhood: South Austin · 11500 Menchaca Road
Price: Real Deal Holyfield taco $7; brisket plate $30/lb; opened 2013
Miguel Vidal's smoked-brisket taco — house tortillas, refried beans, guacamole, pico — is the most-photographed bite in Austin BBQ. Worth the flight if you only eat one meal in town.

Miguel Vidal trained as a Central Texas pitmaster and a Mexican home cook simultaneously, opened the Valentina's trailer in 2013, and rewrote the conversation about Tex-Mex BBQ in the process. The Real Deal Holyfield breakfast taco — smoked brisket, refried beans, guacamole, pico, scrambled egg on a house-pressed tortilla — is the most-photographed taco in Austin and the rare brunch dish that justifies a thirty-minute drive south. The brisket plate is the alternative serious order. The yard on Menchaca is shaded picnic tables, Mexican Cokes in glass bottles, and queso on tap. Saturday morning is the test visit; arrive by 9:00 AM for the breakfast taco window.

Not for: a guest wanting a sit-down dining room. Valentina's is yard, trailer, and tables.
Micklethwait Craft Meats
#6
Pitmaster: Tom Micklethwait
Cuisine: Central Texas BBQ — house-made sausage program
Neighborhood: East Austin · 1309 Rosewood Avenue
Price: Brisket $26/lb, lamb-and-mint sausage $6; opened 2012; Texas Monthly Top 50 BBQ multiple editions
Tom Micklethwait's lamb-and-mint sausage on a Rosewood Avenue trailer — the most precise house-made link in East Austin. Pencil it in for a Saturday lunch.

Tom Micklethwait opened the trailer on Rosewood Avenue in East Austin in 2012 and has been quietly running one of the most precise sausage programs in Texas since. The lamb-and-mint sausage is the signature link — the seasoning is restrained, the casing snaps, the lamb is sourced from a Hill Country ranch. The brisket is honest Central Texas with a slightly lighter post-oak character than Franklin's. The trailer yard is small, the line is real but not punishing, and the moonshine pickles and house-made bread (yes, bread — the family runs a bakery as well) round out the plate. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays. Saturday lunch is the right visit; arrive before noon for the lamb-and-mint.

Not for: a guest who wants brisket as the only headliner. Micklethwait is a sausage shop first; treat it as such.
Distant Relatives
#7
Pitmaster: Damien Brockway
Cuisine: African-Texan BBQ — West African and Caribbean influences on Central Texas technique
Neighborhood: East Austin · 91 Navasota Street
Price: Brisket plate $26, peri-peri chicken $22; opened 2022; Texas Monthly Top 50 BBQ 2025
Damien Brockway's African-Texan BBQ — peri-peri chicken, smoked-rib jollof, brisket with shito sauce. Try it once for a Sunday meal that rewrites the category.

Damien Brockway opened Distant Relatives on Navasota Street in 2022 with a thesis no one had quite executed in Texas before: the African diaspora layered onto Central Texas BBQ technique. The brisket is salt-and-pepper post-oak — true to lineage — but served alongside shito (Ghanaian pepper sauce) and jollof rice. The peri-peri chicken is a half-bird smoked over post oak and finished with the Mozambican chili sauce. The smoked-rib jollof is the dish that gets photographed. Brockway trained in fine-dining kitchens before turning to BBQ; that background shows in the plating, the sourcing, and the cocktail program. Texas Monthly named it to the Top 50 BBQ list in 2025. The room is converted-warehouse East Austin with a covered patio.

Not for: a purist after only the Lockhart brisket-and-sausage template. Distant Relatives is a fusion meal — that's the point.
KG BBQ
#8
Pitmaster: Kareem El-Ghayesh
Cuisine: Egyptian-Texan BBQ
Neighborhood: Burnet Road · 6019 Burnet Road
Price: Brisket plate $26, koshari sides $6; opened (brick and mortar) 2021
Kareem El-Ghayesh smoked his way out of Cairo and into a Burnet Road yard — Egyptian-Texan BBQ that genuinely works. Pencil it in for a weekday lunch.

Kareem El-Ghayesh left a corporate finance career in Cairo, trained at Franklin Barbecue and at Salt Lick, and opened the KG BBQ trailer in 2019 before moving to the Burnet Road brick-and-mortar in 2021. The brisket is Franklin-school — kosher salt, sixteen-mesh pepper, post oak — and the technique is genuinely Central Texas. The sides are where the Egyptian half lands: koshari (rice, lentils, pasta, tomato, fried onion) under brisket, a tahini-yoghurt slaw, a basboosa for dessert. The hibiscus iced tea is the right drink. The room is small and walk-in friendly; closed Mondays. KG won the Eater Austin Pitmaster of the Year nomination twice since opening.

Not for: a Saturday-line tolerance test. KG is precisely a weekday lunch — the meat sells out by mid-afternoon on weekends, and the line is longer than the operation deserves on Saturdays.

The Skip-It Aside

Skip the Salt Lick. Not because the BBQ is bad — the brisket and sausage at the Driftwood location are genuinely Central Texas in style — but because the BYOB tourism premium, the bus tours, and the unrelenting wait have moved the room out of serious-eater territory. If a Hill Country drive is the goal, Black's in Lockhart or Smitty's Market is the better pilgrimage. If a Southern Austin BBQ is the goal, drive ten minutes north to Valentina's instead.

How to Eat BBQ in Austin in 2026

One-meal Austin visitor: Franklin's Skip-the-Line ticket. Order brisket fatty, one beef rib, jalapeño sausage. Allow ninety minutes.

Locals avoiding the line: la Barbecue SevenRooms pre-order, seven days out.

Saturday brunch: Valentina's. Real Deal Holyfield taco, arrive by 9:00 AM.

Sausage obsessive: InterStellar on Ranch Road 620. Order four different links.

Sit-down BBQ dinner with a wine list: Terry Black's at Barton Springs.

Curious about fusion: Distant Relatives for African-Texan; KG BBQ for Egyptian-Texan.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best BBQ in Austin?
For brisket on a single criterion (the bark, the smoke ring, the pull-apart), Aaron Franklin's Franklin Barbecue on East 11th Street, James Beard Best Chef Southwest 2015 and the most-cited brisket on the continent. For a meal you can actually book in advance, la Barbecue on East Cesar Chavez — LeAnn Mueller and Ali Clem run a SevenRooms pre-order system that bypasses the line entirely. For Tex-Mex BBQ, Valentina's on Menchaca Road — Miguel Vidal's smoked-brisket taco is the dish.
How long is the line at Franklin Barbecue?
Two to three hours on a typical weekday, often longer on Saturdays. Franklin opens at 11:00 AM and sells out by mid-afternoon. The serious Franklin protocol is: arrive by 8:30 AM, bring a chair, bring water, bring shade, and bring the friend whose patience you most trust. Or skip the line entirely by booking a "Skip-the-Line" ticket via the website — they sell a small number daily at a premium and you walk straight to the counter.
Do you need a reservation for la Barbecue?
Yes — and you should make one. la Barbecue is the most-civilized BBQ booking in Austin: SevenRooms pre-orders open seven days out, you select a fifteen-minute pickup window and a meat-by-the-pound order, you arrive, you walk past the regular line. LeAnn Mueller (daughter of Bobby Mueller of Louie Mueller BBQ in Taylor) and Ali Clem run the operation; the East Cesar Chavez yard is the right room for the meal.
Is Terry Black's the same family as Black's in Lockhart?
Yes, partially. Terry Black's in Austin is run by Mike and Mark Black — twin sons of Terry Black, who is a brother of Kent Black of Black's Barbecue in Lockhart (founded by their grandfather Edgar Black Jr. in 1932). The Austin location at 1003 Barton Springs Road opened in 2014 and serves the same Central Texas style — fat-cap brisket, jalapeño sausage, beef ribs — with a much shorter line than Franklin's and an actual sit-down dining room.
What's the best sausage in Austin BBQ?
John Bates at InterStellar BBQ on Ranch Road 620 in north Austin — the rotating sausage menu (peach-bourbon, green-chile-cheddar, jalapeño-cheddar) is the most ambitious in Texas, and the smoked turkey is the alternative test order. Tom Micklethwait at Micklethwait Craft Meats on Rosewood Avenue is the East Austin alternative — the lamb-and-mint sausage is the lineage order and the food trailer setting is the right room.
How much does Austin BBQ cost?
BBQ in Austin is sold by the pound. Brisket runs $30–35 per pound at Franklin and la Barbecue, $28 at Terry Black's, around $26 at Micklethwait. Sausage links are $4–6 each. A full lunch for one person — quarter-pound brisket, a sausage link, a side, a drink — lands at $28–38 across the rooms in this list. Valentina's brisket taco is $7 and stands as the best dollar-for-flavor order in this guide.

Editorial independence: RFK accepts no payment for inclusion. Some links may pay an affiliate commission on completed reservations; this does not affect rank order or whether a restaurant is included. See methodology for our scoring rubric and revisit cadence.