Hereโs why you should almost always avoid cheap lump charcoal (especially the super-low-price stuff from big-box stores or generic brands):
- Inconsistent Burn & Temperature Spikes Cheap lump is often made from scrap wood, flooring offcuts, construction debris, or whatever was cheapest that week. Youโll 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.
- Tons of Small Pieces, Dust, and Fines Open a $6โ8 bag and half of it is fingernail-sized chunks and powder. You end up wasting 20โ40% of the bag right away, and the dust can choke airflow or flare up like gunpowder when it ignites.
- Excessive Sparking & Popping Low-end manufacturers donโt screen out bark, sap-heavy softwoods, or plywood scraps. Those pieces explode and throw sparks everywhereโdangerous if youโre cooking around kids, on a wooden deck, or in dry conditions.
- Chemical Taste / Off Flavors Some ultra-cheap charcoal (especially imported bags) comes from tropical hardwoods treated with chemicals, or itโs kiln-dried with accelerants that werenโt fully burned off. People regularly report a petroleum or plastic taste on food cooked over the really cheap stuff.
- Short Burn Time Because itโs full of softwoods and odd scraps, it burns up 30โ50% faster than good hardwood lump. Youโll use way more charcoal per cook, so that โbargainโ bag ends up costing you more in the long run.
- 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.
Whatโs actually worth buying instead?
- BBQdaddycharcoal of course. Settle for only the best.
Rule of thumb: If the bag is under ~$12โ15 for 20 lb (or equivalent) in your area, itโs almost certainly junk. Spend a few extra bucksโyouโll save money and headaches in the long run.






