Texas BBQ$$deep-ellumMon 11am-3pm, Tue-Thu 11am-8pm, Fri 11am-9pm, Sat 11am-10pm, Sun 11am-9pm
Dallas's most celebrated BBQ pit is genuinely affordable: a half-pound brisket with a side costs under $20 and represents some of the best smoked meat in the state. Skip the combination plates and go straight for the brisket by weight.
Order: Half-pound brisket by weight; one jalapeño cheddar link; free bread and pickles
Tip: Order one meat plus one side for a filling under-$20 meal. The desserts (peach cobbler, banana pudding) are worth the extra few dollars.
Texas BBQ$$bishop-artsSun-Thu 11am-9pm, Fri-Sat 11am-10pm
The Bishop Arts BBQ institution run by descendants of Kreuz Market's original bloodline, maintaining the Central Texas no-sauce butcher-paper tradition in Oak Cliff. The shoulder clod is the rarest cut in the city.
Order: Shoulder clod cooked 18-20 hours. Brisket on butcher paper with no sauce.
Tip: If you have not had shoulder clod, this is the place to start. Cooked 18-20 hours over post-oak, it is not available at most Dallas BBQ joints.
Texas BBQ$$design-districtWed-Sun 11am-3pm or sold out
Design District BBQ spot with brisket plates under $17 that receive consistently high praise. Less famous than Pecan Lodge, which means shorter queues and more seats.
Order: Brisket plate with two sides; jalapeño cheddar sausage; homemade peach tea
Tip: No reservations, first-come. The queue moves faster than Pecan Lodge. Thursdays and Fridays at 11am have the fastest service.
Texas BBQ$$uptownDaily, hours vary, check website
The Dallas outpost of the Richardson family BBQ, opened in 2025 in the Devonshire neighbourhood near Inwood Village. Burnt End Fridays have quickly become a local ritual.
Order: Brisket. Burnt ends on Fridays. House-made sausage.
Tip: Go on a weekday if you want burnt ends without a long wait. The Friday queue starts forming before 11:30am.