Juicy Smoked Spatchcock Chicken Recipe for Perfect BBQ Flavor

Have you ever smoked a whole chicken on a pellet grill? I’ve smoked many whole birds on my Traeger using the beer-can method, but my preferred approach is to spatchcock the chicken. Spatchcocking lays the bird flat so it cooks evenly, yields juicier meat, and produces deeper, more consistent flavor.

This post explains a straightforward, reliable way to smoke a spatchcock chicken with great texture and flavor. If you want an easy method that delivers moist breasts and crispy skin, this smoked spatchcock chicken technique is for you.

Looking for a simple smoked chicken recipe? Spatchcock Chicken is one of the best ways for you to prepare poultry on a pellet grill
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How do you Spatchcock Chicken?

When I say I spatchcock a chicken, people often ask what that means. Spatchcocking is simply splitting the bird along the backbone and flattening it so it lies flat on the grill. Because the meat cooks at a single level, it finishes more evenly and stays juicier than a whole bird left intact.

The word spatchcock is believed to come from “dispatch the cock,” an old phrase for quickly preparing a bird by removing the backbone and flattening it. Regardless of the name, the technique is easy and very effective.

The Simple Steps

Spatchcocking sounds technical, but you only need a sharp knife or poultry shears and a few minutes.

Place the chicken breast-side down. Locate the backbone and cut along each side from tail to neck. Remove the backbone completely — save it for stock if you like. Then make a small cut through the cartilage at the breastbone, flip the bird breast-side up, and press down to flatten it. That small cut helps the breastbone break more easily so the bird lies flat.

smoked spatchcock chicken
If your spatchcocked chicken looks like a monster’s face, you did it right.

Salt the bird

After spatchcocking, don’t skip salting. Seasoning under the skin improves flavor and helps retain moisture.

Lightly salt the underside of the bird first. Flip it over and gently slide your fingers under the skin, being careful not to tear it. Sprinkle a little salt under the skin over the breasts, thighs, and legs.

Place the salted chicken on a baking sheet, cover, and refrigerate for 15–20 minutes. This step is quick but noticeably improves moisture retention and taste.

If you want even more flavor, consider brining the bird before spatchcocking. A simple quick brine will enhance juiciness and seasoning depth.

Smoked Spatchcock Chicken

Set up your smoker for indirect heat and preheat to 300°F (about 150°C).

Take the chicken from the fridge and lightly season the underside with your favorite rub. Choose a rub with moderate salt—since you’ve already salted the bird—to avoid overdoing it. Traeger’s Fin and Feather is a good example, but any balanced poultry rub works.

Smoked Spatchcock Chicken - Seasoned

Flip the bird and work as much seasoning as you can under the skin. If you have time, blend the rub with a couple of tablespoons of soft butter; the butter helps the seasoning slide under the skin, stay in place, and adds richness as the fat renders.

Cook the Bird

How Long Does it Take to Smoke a Spatchcock Chicken?

Place the chicken on the smoker breast-side up. Tuck the wing tips behind the breasts to prevent burning. Smoke at 300°F until the internal temperature in the thickest part of the breast reaches about 155°F (roughly two hours, though time varies by bird size).

Once the breast hits 155°F, increase the heat to high and cook an additional 8–12 minutes to crisp the skin. If you prefer not to eat the skin, you can skip this step. Always confirm the final internal temperature is 165°F before removing the chicken from the smoker.

When the bird is done, let it rest briefly, then carve easily into two breasts and two thigh/leg portions. Spatchcocking makes carving quick and simple.

This method works wonderfully for turkey too—spatchcocking a turkey yields moist meat and faster, more even cooking. Have you tried spatchcocking before? Share what adjustments you made or your favorite rubs.

spatchcocked grilled lemon chicken

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Smoked Spatchcock Chicken

This smoked spatchcock chicken is an easy, reliable way to cook a whole bird with even results: juicy meat, crisp skin, and great flavor.
Course Chicken
Cuisine American
Keyword beer can chicken, chicken, spatchcock, whole chicken
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours 15 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Servings 4
Calories 335kcal
Author Nick

Equipment

  • Smoke 2-Channel Alarm Thermometer
  • Kosher salt
  • Instant-read thermometer
  • Disposable gloves

Ingredients

  • 1 Whole chicken
  • 1 tbsp Kosher salt
  • 1 tbsp Favorite seasoning (example: Fin and Feather rub)
  • 2 tbsp Butter optional

Instructions

  • Locate the spine and cut along both sides from neck to tail to remove it.
  • Make a small cut through the breastbone cartilage, flip the bird over, and press it flat.
  • Lightly salt the underside of the bird.
  • Flip the bird and slide fingers under the skin to put a bit of salt under the breasts, thighs, and legs.
  • Place the chicken on a baking sheet, cover, and refrigerate for 15–20 minutes.
  • Prepare your smoker for indirect heat and set it to 300°F.
  • Remove the chicken from the fridge and lightly season the underside.
  • Use a rub with moderate salt since the bird has already been salted under the skin.
  • Flip the bird and work seasoning under the skin. For extra richness, mix the rub with soft butter before applying.
  • Place the chicken on the smoker breasts up and tuck wing tips behind the breasts. Smoke until the breast reaches about 155°F, then raise heat to crisp the skin.
  • Cook an additional 8–12 minutes on high to crisp. Verify the chicken reaches a safe internal temperature of 165°F before serving.

Video

Notes

This method works for turkey as well—spatchcocking shortens cook time and improves evenness.

This recipe uses kosher salt. If you use table salt, use about half the amount.