Perfectly Smoked Chicken Drumsticks: Juicy, Crispy Recipe

Smoked chicken drumsticks are a perfect choice for cookouts and barbecues. They deliver a smoky aroma, juicy dark meat, and crisp skin when smoked correctly. The key is steady heat and proper internal temperature—this keeps the meat tender and prevents dried-out, sauce-drenched drumsticks.

Chicken drumsticks are affordable and ideal for feeding a crowd. When you pair the right smoker temperature with the correct internal doneness for dark meat, you get a tasty combination of smoke, spice, and texture. This recipe aims to help you transform inexpensive chicken into a standout main dish.

Overhead of smoked chicken drums showing golden bbq rubbed chicken skin on a black board with garnish.

Table of Contents

  1. Ingredients
  2. The Cut
  3. How to Make
  4. How to Get Crispy Skin
  5. Tips
  6. What to Serve With This
  7. How to Store
  8. FAQs
  9. Smoked Chicken Drumsticks Recipe
Ingredients for this chicken drumstick recipe.

Ingredients

  • Chicken drumsticks – Look for air-chilled drumsticks without added water or broth for better texture and flavor.
  • Chicken rub – Use an all-purpose barbecue rub with low sugar to reduce burning during smoking.
  • BBQ sauce – Your favorite sauce for finishing; brush on at the end so it sets without burning.

The Cut

Drumsticks are the lower leg portion of the chicken (between the tibia and femur). This bone-in cut is all dark meat, which tolerates longer cooking without drying out. Drumsticks are economical and forgiving, making them ideal for practicing grill and smoker techniques.

How to Make

This straightforward smoked drumstick recipe takes under an hour and delivers reliably juicy results.

  1. Preheat your smoker to 275–300°F and clean and oil the grates.
  2. Remove the chicken from packaging and pat dry with paper towels.
  3. Arrange the drumsticks on a baking sheet or in a large bowl and season generously with your rub, tossing to coat all sides.
  4. Place the drumsticks on the smoker when it’s holding steady heat. Smoke for about 45 minutes to 1 hour, until the thickest part reaches 165°F on a digital instant-read thermometer.
  5. Brush each drumstick with BBQ sauce and close the lid. Let the sauce set for 5 minutes on the smoker.
  6. Remove the drumsticks, transfer to a clean platter, and let rest about 5 minutes before serving.
Chicken legs coated in spices.
Season the drumsticks.
Raw legs going on the grill.
Place chicken on the smoker.
Chicken legs on a pellet grill.
Smoke until 165°F.
Brush basting chicken with bbq sauce.
Baste and set the sauce.

How to Get Crispy Skin

Temperature control is the secret. Smoking too low leaves skin rubbery; too high cooks the meat before it absorbs smoke. Maintain 275–300°F for a good balance: enough heat to render fat and crisp skin while allowing smoke flavor to develop.

Tips

For pellet grills, adding charcoal-flavored pellets and a smoker box with wood chips will boost flavor. On gas grills, create a two-zone fire by turning one burner off and smoke with wood chips in a foil packet or smoker box, placing drumsticks over the cooler zone. With charcoal, bank the coals to one side for indirect heat and add wood chunks to the coals. Rotate and flip as needed for even color and doneness.

Always check poultry with a digital thermometer and remove the drumsticks at 165°F internal temperature.

Overhead shot of smoked chicken legs piled onto a serving platter.

What to Serve With This

Classic sides include creamy mac and cheese, coleslaw, smoked potato salad, grilled corn on the cob, baked beans, or deviled eggs—great choices for picnics and backyard meals.

How to Store

Store: Refrigerate leftover drumsticks in an airtight container for up to 3 days.

Reheat: Reheat under the broiler on a foil-lined baking sheet for 7–12 minutes to crisp the skin, or use an air fryer for quick reheating.

Smoked chicken drums on a platter with more bbq sauce, pickles and jalapenos.

FAQs

Do you flip chicken drumsticks when smoking?

Yes. Flip and rotate as needed for even cooking and to develop consistent color and crisp skin.

How long does it take to smoke drumsticks?

Cook by temperature, not time. At 275°F expect about 45 minutes to 1 hour for drumsticks to reach 165°F.

Should I wrap my smoked chicken in foil?

No need to wrap unless you need to hold the drumsticks warm after removing them from the smoker.

How do you smoke chicken without drying it out?

Don’t overcook. Use a digital thermometer for accuracy. For added humidity, place a foil pan with water in the smoker or spritz the chicken occasionally.

More Smoked Chicken Recipes

Top view of two whole chickens being grilled on a circular metal grill with a red exterior.

Poultry Recipes

Smoked Half Chickens

Overhead shot of spatchcock chicken over a bed of charcoal.

How To

Best Wood for Smoking Chicken

Smoked game hens on a black tray with greens.

Poultry Recipes

Smoked Cornish Hens

Smoked Chicken Drumsticks

5 from 21 votes
Prep: 5 mins
Cook: 1 hr
Total: 1 hr 10 mins
Servings: 6
Smoked chicken drumsticks on a baking sheet.
Master juicy smoked chicken drumsticks with step-by-step instructions and practical tips for great flavor and texture.

Ingredients

  • 4 lbs Chicken drumsticks
  • 2 tbsp Chicken spice rub
  • 1 cup BBQ sauce

Instructions

Prep the Chicken and Grill

  • Preheat the smoker to 275–300°F. Clean and oil the grates.
  • Pat the chicken dry with paper towels.
  • Season the drumsticks generously with the spice blend, tossing to coat.

Smoke the Drumsticks

  • Place the legs on the smoker once it holds steady heat.
  • Smoke for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until the thickest part reaches 165°F.
  • Brush with BBQ sauce and let set in the smoker for 5 minutes.

Rest and Serve

  • Remove from the smoker and transfer to a clean platter.
  • Let rest for about 5 minutes, then serve with desired sides.

Notes

Keep the smoker between 275–300°F for the best balance of smoke flavor and skin texture. Use a digital thermometer to confirm 165°F internal temperature. For pellet grills, try charcoal-flavored pellets and a smoker box with wood chips. For gas grills, create a two-zone fire and smoke over the cooler side. With charcoal, bank the coals for indirect heat and add wood chunks for smoke.

Nutrition

Serving: 1 |
Calories: 417 kcal |
Carbohydrates: 23 g |
Protein: 36 g |
Fat: 19 g
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Barbecue

More Favorites

  • Smoking Pork Loin
  • Reverse Sear Rib Roast
  • Chicken Dishes
  • Smoked Prime Rib
  • Grilled London Broil
  • Beef Bone Broth
  • Roast Pork Tenderloin
  • Smoked Baby Back Ribs
  • Tri Tip Steak

Sources

Poultry cuts reference: OpenTextBC – Poultry Cuts.