We Are Restocked. Dont Miss Out!


Hereโ€™s why you should almost always avoid cheap lump charcoal (especially the super-low-price stuff from big-box stores or generic brands):

  1. Inconsistent Burn & Temperature Spikes Cheap lump is often made from scrap wood, flooring offcuts, construction debris, or whatever was cheapest that week. Youโ€™ll get wildly different piece sizes and wood types in the same bag. One load might burn hot and fast, the next barely lights. It makes temperature control a nightmare.
  2. Tons of Small Pieces, Dust, and Fines Open a $6โ€“8 bag and half of it is fingernail-sized chunks and powder. You end up wasting 20โ€“40% of the bag right away, and the dust can choke airflow or flare up like gunpowder when it ignites.
  3. Excessive Sparking & Popping Low-end manufacturers donโ€™t screen out bark, sap-heavy softwoods, or plywood scraps. Those pieces explode and throw sparks everywhereโ€”dangerous if youโ€™re cooking around kids, on a wooden deck, or in dry conditions.
  4. Chemical Taste / Off Flavors Some ultra-cheap charcoal (especially imported bags) comes from tropical hardwoods treated with chemicals, or itโ€™s kiln-dried with accelerants that werenโ€™t fully burned off. People regularly report a petroleum or plastic taste on food cooked over the really cheap stuff.
  5. Short Burn Time Because itโ€™s full of softwoods and odd scraps, it burns up 30โ€“50% faster than good hardwood lump. Youโ€™ll use way more charcoal per cook, so that โ€œbargainโ€ bag ends up costing you more in the long run.
  6. High Ash Production Cheap lump leaves behind a snowstorm of ash that clogs vents and gets blown onto your food the second you open the lid.

Whatโ€™s actually worth buying instead?

  • BBQdaddycharcoal of course. Settle for only the best.

Rule of thumb: If the bag is under ~$12โ€“15 for 20 lb (or equivalent) in your area, itโ€™s almost certainly junk. Spend a few extra bucksโ€”youโ€™ll save money and headaches in the long run.