Best BBQ in Dallas 2026
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Post-oak smoke comes out of the metal chimney before the front door is unlocked. At Cattleack on a Thursday at 9:00 AM, the line is already eighteen deep in a Farmers Branch industrial park — five guys in DeSoto Cowboys jerseys, two retirees from McKinney, a sommelier from Knife on his day off. Todd David walks through the lot, refills the off-set with another split of Texas post-oak, checks the bark on a brisket coming off the second smoker, and goes back inside. Two hours later, the wagyu brisket hits the cutting board and an attendant calls numbers from a clipboard. The DFW metro has eight serious smoke programs in 2026 — one (Goldee's) in Fort Worth, the rest in Dallas — and the queue is the price of admission to every one of them.
Eight DFW BBQ Joints Worth the Line
Five Franklin Barbecue cooks left Austin and opened Goldee's on Dick Price Road south of Fort Worth in 2020. Texas Monthly named it the #1 BBQ joint in Texas in the 2021 statewide ranking and Aaron Franklin himself has called the brisket the best he has eaten outside his own pit. The pitmasters rotate: Heard on the smokers Saturday night into Sunday morning, the others on serving, slicing and sides. The format is Sunday-only, 11:00 AM until sold out, usually by 2:30 PM. The drive from downtown Dallas is thirty minutes west on I-30; the queue requires arriving by 8:30 AM for any guarantee of brisket. The pork rib is the underrated cut. Cash and card accepted; reservations not. The room is a converted gas station; the smoke pit is in the back lot.
Todd David quit a corporate sales job to open Cattleack in 2013 in a Farmers Branch industrial park strip — the room reads as an unlabeled office park lunch counter and that is the joke. The brisket is the order on any day; the Friday-Saturday wagyu brisket is the experiment — fattier, sweeter, the bark sturdier than a Prime cut. Texas Monthly has named Cattleack to the top-five DFW list every revision since 2017. Open Thursday, Friday and Saturday lunch only — 11:00 AM until sold out, generally by 2:00 PM. The room seats around twenty inside; the line goes outside in the heat. Order at the counter, sliced to weight, sides scooped from steam pans. The cherry-bourbon banana pudding is the dessert if it hasn't sold out.
Justin and Diane Fourton opened Pecan Lodge inside the Dallas Farmer's Market shed in 2010 and Texas Monthly named it one of the state's top-four BBQ joints in the 2013 ranking — the move to a standalone Deep Ellum building at 2702 Main Street followed in 2014. The brisket is the order, smoked over Texas post-oak with a heavy salt-and-pepper bark and a fat cap that renders to the texture of butter. The Hot Mess — a baked sweet potato split open and stuffed with chipotle cream, butter, cheese and chopped brisket — is the menu signature that built the destination. The Texas Twinkie (jalapeño stuffed with cream cheese, wrapped in brisket and bacon) is the bar order. The queue around the building runs 90 minutes on a Saturday lunch; arrive by 9:45 AM if brisket matters.
Roy Hutchins opened the McKinney location in 1991; sons Tim and Tracy run the program now, with a second Frisco location since 2018 handling the Dallas Parkway corridor traffic. The hot link — a coarse-ground Texas-style sausage with chile, garlic and beef-pork blend — has been on the menu since opening and is the cut that distinguishes Hutchins from the post-2010 brisket-only generation. The beef rib (3/4 to 1 lb each, smoked seven hours) is the headline. The brisket holds up to the queue. The McKinney room is the original; the Frisco location is the more convenient drive for North Dallas residents. Counter service, no reservations, weekend lunch sees brisket sold out by 2:30 PM.
Jill Grobowsky Bergus is the granddaughter of Edgar "Smitty" Schmidt of Kreuz Market in Lockhart, Texas — the founding line of the original Texas central-Texas-style BBQ tradition. Bergus and husband Jeff opened Lockhart Smokehouse in Bishop Arts in 2011 with rights to ship Kreuz Market hot guts sausage from Lockhart to Dallas. The hot guts (coarse-ground beef with no fillers, snap-skin casing) is the lineage cut and the reason to come; the brisket is the modern Dallas-style smoke around it. No sauce on the table — Lockhart-style; meat comes on butcher paper. The Bishop Arts room is the original and the warmer of the two; the Plano location at 1026 East 15th Street handles the north suburban traffic.
The Black family of Lockhart, Texas have been smoking brisket since 1932 — Edgar Black Sr.'s original Black's Barbecue is the second-oldest continuously-running BBQ joint in Texas. Terry Black's is the Austin-Dallas branch of the family operation, opened in Austin in 2014 and Deep Ellum in 2019. The beef rib (around one pound each, smoked twelve hours) is the cut that distinguishes the Black tradition from the post-2010 brisket-forward generation. The smoked turkey is the underrated order. The Deep Ellum room is larger than Pecan Lodge with faster seating; the meat is sliced to weight at the counter and the line moves quicker. The brisket and turkey hold; the sides are the weakness. Order more meat, fewer scoops.
Jack Perkins opened Slow Bone on Irving Boulevard in 2012, the second restaurant in his Dallas hospitality run after Maple & Motor (still considered one of the city's best burgers). Slow Bone reads as a brisket-and-sides cafeteria — counter service, communal picnic tables, sweet tea by the gallon — and the brisket holds. The honest reason to come is the buttermilk fried chicken: brined, double-dredged, fried to order, served with a piece of toast and a pickle, the best non-BBQ item on any Dallas BBQ menu. The brisket sandwich is the daily standard. The Design District location handles the Stockyards-corridor lunch crowd and Knife/Town Hearth pre-dinner appetite.
John Reaves opened Smokey John's on Mockingbird Lane in 1976 — five decades on, sons Brent and Juan run the pit and the room. The cooking is East Texas-leaning rather than the post-Franklin Central Texas template that dominates Dallas in 2026: pork ribs are the headline, hot links the secondary, the sauce is sweet and tomato-forward in the East Texas tradition. The brisket is competent if not the city's best. The room is unfussy, the prices are the lowest on this list, the location two minutes from Love Field makes it the right pre-flight order. Smokey John's has been a Dallas institution for fifty years and the family stewardship is the value.
How to Eat BBQ in Dallas
Sunday lineup: Goldee's, Fort Worth. Drive starts at 7:30 AM from East Dallas. Brisket, pork rib, sausage trinity.
Thursday lunch: Cattleack. Wagyu brisket is Friday-Saturday only — Thursday is the standard at $24/lb.
Saturday queue tolerance: Pecan Lodge in Deep Ellum at 9:45 AM, or Lockhart Smokehouse in Bishop Arts (shorter line).
Pre-flight at Love Field: Smokey John's, ribs and a hot link sandwich for the plane.
Group of eight with one vegetarian: Slow Bone — the buttermilk fried chicken covers anyone not on brisket.
Old-school Texas no-sauce experience: Lockhart Smokehouse, Bishop Arts. Hot guts on butcher paper.
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