Try These 8 Cheap Grilling Ideas for Backyard Cookouts

Host delicious summer cookouts without breaking the bank using these expert-approved cheap grilling ideas and budget-friendly tips.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
Created on

Summer brings the joy of backyard cookouts, where grills sizzle with burgers, hot dogs, steaks, and veggie delights like grilled mushrooms or black bean burgers. However, the costs of meat, sides, beers, and potato salad can quickly add up, turning a fun gathering into a budget buster. The good news is you don’t have to sacrifice flavor for frugality. Grill masters like Steven Raichlen, James Beard Award winner and author of The Barbecue Bible, and Andrew Schloss, co-author of Grilling with Gas, share proven strategies to host affordable barbecues that taste premium.

These 8 cheap grilling ideas focus on smart shopping, versatile grilling techniques, and flavorful alternatives to pricey staples. Whether you’re firing up charcoal, gas, or even turning your existing grill into a smoker, these tips will help you save money while impressing your guests. Let’s dive into how to keep your cookout wallet-friendly and delicious.

1. Invest in the Right Tools (and Skip the Rest)

The key to cheap grilling starts with essentials that prevent waste and ensure perfect results. According to expert Bruce Lampe, an instant-read thermometer is non-negotiable. Priced affordably at around $10-$20, it lets you cook by internal temperature rather than guesswork or timers, avoiding overcooked or underdone meat.

Skip unnecessary gadgets like basting brushes, rotisserie attachments, grill brushes, trays, skewers, gloves, and shears. Lampe emphasizes that a good thermometer eliminates mistakes, saving money on ruined food. If you’re missing a grill or charcoal, time your purchase for summer holiday sales—Memorial Day, Fourth of July, and Labor Day—when home improvement stores slash prices on grills, charcoal, and propane. Stock up on bags of charcoal during these aggressive promotions to fuel multiple cookouts cheaply.

2. Host at Smart Times to Cut Costs

Timing your cookout can slash expenses. Raichlen suggests hosting a Sunday brunch barbecue instead of a traditional evening event. Grill breakfast meats like sausages or bacon, egg-based dishes, and fruits like pineapple or peaches. Skip heavy liquor bills—brunch crowds favor lighter drinks or none at all, keeping costs low while delivering big flavor.

  • Brunch perks: Cheaper meats (bacon, sausage), grilled fruit sides, and reduced alcohol spend.
  • Pro tip: Use affordable eggs for grilled frittatas or shakshuka straight on the grill grates.

3. Turn Your Grill Into a Barbecue or Smoker

Craving smoky barbecue flavor without buying a $500 smoker? Transform your charcoal or gas grill. Lampe notes, “If you’ve got a grill and you’re curious about smoking, there’s all kinds of ways to get that wood flavor, even on a gas grill.”

Create hot and cold zones: pile coals on one side for charcoal (indirect heat on the other), or turn burners off on one side for gas. Soak wood chips (hickory, mesquite—cheap at $5/bag) and add to coals or a foil pouch over gas flames. Use a water pan to maintain moisture. This method yields tender ribs or brisket for pennies compared to dedicated smokers.

Grill TypeSmoking SetupTips
CharcoalHot coals one side, wood chips on coals, water pan oppositeVent control for temperature (225-250°F)
GasOne burner on, wood chip pouch over flame, drip panMonitor with thermometer

4. Go Veggie (or Fruit) for Mains and Sides

Vegetables and fruits are budget superstars on the grill—their natural sugars caramelize for gourmet taste at low cost. Grill mushrooms for antipasto salad, or make veggie entrees like stuffed peppers or eggplant steaks. Fruits like peaches pair perfectly with pork.

Plant-based burgers (e.g., Beyond Meat) work on sales—freeze extras. Serve grilled corn, zucchini, or pineapple as stars. Raichlen recommends mussels or clams as cheap, smoky appetizers rivaling pricier seafood.

  • 38 veggie mains from reliable sources for inspiration.
  • Grilled peaches with pork chops: Sweet, juicy, and under $2/serving.

5. Grind Your Own Food and Shop Sales

Ditch premade patties—grind your own for superior flavor and savings. Lampe advises, “Look for ground beef when it’s on sale or if you have the ability to grind it yourself.” Cheap grinders start at $15; high-end at $200, paying off quickly.

Shop sales for bulk buys, and freeze portions. Aim for 70-75% lean ground beef for juicy burgers—fat is flavor.

6. Look for Less Expensive Cuts

Prime rib-eye? Skip it. Opt for chuck eye steak (“poor man’s rib-eye”), beef back ribs, skirt/flank steak, or chuck roast. These need marinades or low-slow cooking but deliver steakhouse quality cheaply.

Pork loin (brine it), thick-cut bone-in pork chops, chicken thighs (99¢/lb), turkey, or affordable fish like cod/mackerel instead of lobster.

  • Chuck eye: Marbled, grill-fast.
  • Flank steak: Marinate for fajitas/salads.
  • Chicken thighs: Juicier, cheaper than breasts.

7. Brine for Juiciness and Flavor

Brining—saltwater soak—transforms cheap cuts. Raichlen swears by it for pork chops, turkey, and chicken to prevent dryness. Simple recipe: 1/4 cup salt per quart water, soak 1-4 hours.

Add sugar, herbs, or citrus for variety. Grill brined turkey with olive oil, salt, pepper for Mediterranean flair.

8. Stretch with Sides and Smart Shopping

Bulk up with grilled potato salad, coleslaw, or beans. Buy whole chickens for quarters/thighs. Make friends with butchers for sale alerts.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: What’s the cheapest cut of meat for grilling?

A: Chicken thighs or legs at 99¢/lb, chuck eye steak, or pork loin. Brine for best results.

Q: How can I smoke on a regular grill?

A: Use wood chips in a foil pouch (gas) or on coals (charcoal), indirect heat zones, and a water pan.

Q: Are veggie mains really satisfying for a cookout?

A: Yes—grill portobellos, eggplant, or fruit for smoky, sweet flavors that rival meat.

Q: Best tool for beginner grillers?

A: Instant-read thermometer to avoid overcooking and waste.

Q: How to grill fish affordably?

A: Choose cod, sardines, or mussels over pricey lobster; grill in foil packets.

Save Beyond the Backyard Grilling

Mastering cheap grilling is a win for your wallet. Extend savings with apps like InboxDollars for surveys or FreeCash for tasks—earn extra for cookouts.

OfferWhat You Can EarnWhat You Have to Do
InboxDollars$225/monthComplete short surveys
FreeCash$1,000/monthSimple online tasks
Kashkick$1,000/monthTry out apps

References

  1. Try These 8 Cheap Grilling Ideas for Backyard Cookouts — The Penny Hoarder. 2023. https://www.thepennyhoarder.com/save-money/cheap-grilling-ideas/
  2. 5 Cheap Cuts for Grilling to Smoke Your Budget Goals — The Penny Hoarder. 2023. https://www.thepennyhoarder.com/save-money/cheap-cuts-for-grilling/
  3. 11 Tips That Will Help You Do Summer Cooking on a Budget — The Penny Hoarder. 2023. https://www.thepennyhoarder.com/save-money/summer-cooking-on-a-budget/
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

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