Perfect juicy grilled burgers are a must-have for summer cookouts.

If there's one thing that signals "it's summertime," it's a perfect burger sizzling on the grill, with crispy edges, melty cheese, and toasted buns, waiting to be piled high with toppings and sauces. A great burger should be juicy but not greasy, simple but flavorful, and sturdy enough to hold everything without ketchup sliding down your shirt.
These grilled hamburgers are my go-to recipe for a classic summer cookout, and exactly what you want when the weather is warm and you want to hit the easy button. They’re perfect for family dinners on the patio, casual BBQs with friends, Memorial Day cookouts, or game day grilling. My secret? Forget adding eggs or breadcrumbs — we're not making meatloaf! Just a really good burger. Start with the right meat, season it simply, shape it gently, and let the grill do its job.
Why You’ll Love These Grilled Burgers
These burgers are juicy, flavorful, and easy to customize. They cook quickly, work with gas or charcoal grills, and can be dressed up or down depending on your mood.
They’re also family-friendly. Set out the buns, toppings, sauces, cheese slices, and pickles, and let everyone build their own. Kids get ketchup and cheese. Adults get caramelized onions, spicy mayo, pickled jalapeños, or whatever floats your boat.
Ingredients for the Best Grilled Burgers
- Ground beef: For the best grilled burgers, use 80/20 ground chuck. That means 80% lean meat and 20% fat, so you get a juicy burger with great flavor. Leaner beef can dry out quickly on the grill.
- Kosher salt: Season the outside of the burger patties right before grilling. This helps create a flavorful crust without making the inside dense.
- Black pepper: Freshly ground black pepper adds just enough bite.
- Hamburger buns: Brioche buns, potato buns, sesame buns, or classic hamburger buns all work. Toasting them on the grill is non-negotiable.
- Cheese: American cheese is classic because it melts beautifully. Cheddar, pepper jack, swiss, provolone, or dairy-free cheese slices also work.
- Toppings: Lettuce, tomato, red onion, pickles, avocado, grilled onions, sautéed mushrooms, jalapeños, bacon, or crispy onions are all great options.
- Burger sauce: Mix mayo, ketchup, relish, Worcestershire sauce, and a little mustard for a quick burger sauce that tastes like summer.
Shortcut: ButcherBox Preformed Burgers
Homemade burger patties are wonderful, but sometimes there's just not enough time (or energy).
For nights when you want great grilled burgers without shaping patties from scratch, ButcherBox preformed burger patties are a fantastic freezer shortcut. They’re already portioned, easy to keep on hand, and can go straight from the freezer to the grill, which makes them perfect for last-minute dinners, backyard cookouts, or those “oops, I forgot to take something out of the freezer” evenings.
To cook frozen burger patties on the grill, preheat your grill to medium-high heat, place the frozen patties directly on the grates, and cook until browned and cooked through, flipping once or twice as needed. Since they’re frozen, they’ll take longer than fresh patties, so use an instant-read thermometer to check the center for doneness. For beef burgers, aim for 160°F if cooking from frozen, following standard food safety guidance.
The best part? You can still make them feel homemade with the right finishing touches: toasted buns, melty cheese, crisp lettuce, juicy tomato slices, pickles, grilled onions, and a quick burger sauce.
💡 Busy weeknight tip: Keep a box of frozen burger patties, buns or lettuce wraps, sliced cheese, pickles, and a jar of burger sauce on hand. Dinner can go from "we have nothing" to "yum" in 20 minutes.

How to Make Grilled Burgers
This is an overview of how to make classic grilled burgers. See the recipe card below for detailed ingredients and instructions.
- Choose the right meat. Start with 80/20 ground chuck. It has enough fat content to stay juicy over direct heat without turning greasy. For a more custom blend, you can ask your butcher to grind chuck with brisket or short ribs. *drool*
- Shape the burger patties. Divide the beef into equal portions. For classic burgers, aim for about ⅓ pound per patty. Gently shape each portion into a patty about ¾- to 1-inch thick and slightly wider than your buns, since the burgers will shrink as they cook. Use your thumb to make a small dimple or slight indent in the center of each patty. This helps prevent the center of each patty from puffing up into a football-shaped burger situation. The biggest rule: don’t overwork the meat. Handle it gently so your burgers stay tender.
- Season right before grilling. Season the outside of the burger patties generously with kosher salt and black pepper just before they go on the grill. Avoid mixing salt into the ground meat ahead of time, which can make the texture tighter and less juicy. If you really want, you can add more spices, like garlic powder and onion powder, or go for a spice blend (I like McCormick Worcestershire Pub Burger Seasoning).
- Preheat the grill. Preheat your gas grill to medium-high heat or prepare a charcoal grill for direct heat. Clean the grill grates, then use tongs, a paper towel, and a little neutral oil or vegetable oil to oil the grates so the patties don’t stick. Hot grill grates are key to a great burger. Browning equals flavor, and flavor is the whole point.
- Grill the burgers. Place the raw patties on the hot grill and cook with the lid closed. For ¾- to 1-inch thick patties, grill for about 3 to 4 minutes on the first side, then flip once and cook another 3 to 4 minutes, depending on your preferred level of doneness. Resist the urge to press down on the burgers with a spatula. That squeezes out the juices and can lead to dry burgers. We are not here to make sad hockey pucks.
- Add cheese during the last minute of cooking. For cheeseburgers, add a slice of cheese during the last minute of cooking. Close the grill lid so the cheese melts quickly and evenly.
- Toast the buns. Place the buns cut-side down on the grill for 30 to 60 seconds, just until lightly toasted. This adds flavor and helps keep sauces from making the buns soggy.
- Build and serve. Spread burger sauce on the buns, add the grilled burgers, pile on your favorite toppings, and serve immediately. Burgers are best hot off the grill, while the cheese is still melty.

Burger Grill Times and Temperatures
Cook time can vary based on the thickness of your burgers, your grill temperature, and how hot your grill runs. A meat thermometer or instant-read thermometer is the best way to check doneness.
For beef burgers, use these internal temperature guidelines:
| Doneness | Internal Temperature | Approximate Grill Time |
|---|---|---|
| Medium-rare | 130–135°F | 6–7 minutes total |
| Medium | 140–145°F | 7–8 minutes total |
| Medium-well | 150–155°F | 9 minutes total |
| Well-done | 160°F | 10 minutes total |
* For chicken burgers, turkey burgers, salmon burgers, or seafood patties, cook completely through according to safe internal temperature guidelines. Medium-rare is for beef, not poultry. Undercooked chicken is a recipe for a bad night.
Easy Burger Variations
- Classic cheeseburger: American cheese, lettuce, tomato, pickles, onion, ketchup, and mustard.
- BBQ bacon burger: Cheddar, bacon, barbecue sauce, and crispy onions.
- Mushroom Swiss burger: Sautéed mushrooms, Swiss cheese, and garlic aioli.
- Spicy burger: Pepper jack, pickled jalapeños, chipotle mayo, and avocado.
- Mediterranean burger: Feta, cucumber, tomato, red onion, and tzatziki.
- Kid-friendly burger: Keep it simple with cheese, ketchup, and pickles on the side.
What to Serve with Grilled Burgers
These grilled burgers are excellent with classic cookout sides like potato salad, pasta salad, coleslaw, corn on the cob, watermelon salad, baked beans, grilled vegetables, or crispy oven fries.
For a lighter dinner, serve burgers with a big green salad, cucumber tomato salad, or grilled zucchini. For a casual gathering, set up a burger bar with toppings, sauces, chips, pickles, and fruit. It feels festive without the effort of making separate dishes for everyone.
Pro Tips for Perfect Grilled Burgers
The best burgers don’t need to be complicated. Use quality ground beef, shape the patties gently, add a small dimple in the center, season generously on the outside, grill over direct heat, flip once, and don’t press out the juices.
Toast the buns, melt the cheese, add your favorite toppings, and serve right away. That’s how you make grilled burgers that taste like summer: smoky, juicy, a little messy, and absolutely worth the extra napkin.

Frequently asked questions
The most important ingredient is the beef. For the best grilled burgers, use 80/20 ground chuck. It has enough fat to keep the burgers juicy and flavorful without becoming greasy. If you want an upgraded burger, try a custom blend with chuck, brisket, or short ribs. After that, keep the seasoning simple. Kosher salt and black pepper are all you really need.
Yes. You can shape the burger patties up to 24 hours ahead of time. Place them on a parchment-lined baking sheet, cover tightly, and refrigerate until ready to grill.
For longer storage, freeze the uncooked patties. Stack them with parchment or wax paper between each patty, place in freezer bags, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before grilling. For the best texture, wait to season the outside of the burgers until right before cooking.
For classic grilled burgers, season the outside of the patties right before grilling. Mixing salt into the meat can make the texture denser.
Medium-high heat is ideal. You want the grill hot enough to brown the outside while keeping the inside juicy.
Cook burgers with the lid closed to help the heat circulate and cook the patties evenly. Open the lid to flip, check the temperature, and add cheese.
Yes. Turkey burgers, chicken burgers, salmon burgers, veggie burgers, and black bean burgers are all great alternatives. Just make sure poultry and seafood burgers are cooked through completely.
Use 80/20 ground beef, don’t overwork the meat, avoid pressing the patties while they cook, and use an instant-read thermometer so you don’t overcook them.
Special diets
If you have a special diet you're adhering to, here are some ways you can adjust this recipe.
- Gluten free: For a gluten-free grilled burger, use gluten-free buns or skip the bun and serve the burger in lettuce wraps. You can also serve it burger-bowl style over greens, roasted potatoes, or rice.
- Dairy free: For a dairy-free burger, skip the cheese or use dairy-free, plant-based cheese slices. Just check that the buns and sauces are dairy-free, too.
- Whole30 / Paleo: Skip the buns and the cheese and serve with toppings like homemade mayo, compliant condiments, pickles, tomatoes, and lettuce for a Whole30-compliant / paleo burger.
- Keto: Skip the bun and serve in lettuce wraps for a delicious keto burger.
Related recipes
These sides will take your barbecue to the next level:
- Summer fruit salad — This easy summer fruit salad has fresh berries, cherries, peaches, and a mojito-inspired dressing.
Easy antipasto pasta salad — A pasta salad that brings all the delicious flavors of an antipasto platter to your table with a combo of pasta, fresh veggies, herbs, salami, fresh mozzarella, and zesty Italian dressing. - Watermelon feta basil salad — This easy watermelon feta basil salad is simple, healthy, and refreshing!
Before you go...
⭐️ If you make these classic grilled burgers and love them, please comment and leave a five-star rating for this recipe! ⭐️
I love to hear from you and do my best to respond to each and every comment. And of course, don’t forget to tag me on Instagram — seeing your delicious creations is my favorite!
Print
Classic Grilled Burgers
- Prep Time: 10 mins
- Cook Time: 8 mins
- Total Time: 18 minutes
- Yield: 4 burgers 1x
- Category: Dinner, Grilling, Lunch
- Method: Grilling
- Cuisine: American
Description
Juicy, smoky, classic grilled burgers made with simple seasoning, melty cheese, toasted buns, and all your favorite toppings. Perfect for summer cookouts, easy family dinners, and casual backyard gatherings.
Ingredients
For the burgers
- 1 ½ pounds 80/20 ground chuck
- 1 ½ teaspoons kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 4 hamburger buns
- 4 slices American cheese, cheddar, pepper Jack, Swiss, or preferred cheese
- Neutral oil, for oiling grill grates
For serving
- Lettuce
- Tomato slices
- Red onion slices
- Pickles
- Ketchup
- Mustard
- Burger sauce
- Grilled onions, avocado, bacon, or jalapeños, optional
Optional Burger Sauce
- ½ cup mayonnaise
- 2 tablespoons ketchup
- 1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish
- 1 teaspoon yellow mustard
- 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
- ½ teaspoon paprika
- 1 clove of grated garlic
Instructions
- Preheat a gas grill to medium-high heat, or prepare a charcoal grill for direct heat. Clean the grates and lightly oil them with neutral oil.
- Divide 1 ½ pounds 80/20 ground chuck into 4 equal portions. Gently form each portion into a patty about ¾- to 1-inch thick and slightly wider than your buns.
- Press a small indentation into the center of each patty with your thumb. This helps prevent the burgers from puffing up as they cook.
- Season both sides of each patty generously with kosher salt and black pepper right before grilling.
- Place the patties on the hot grill. Cook for 3 to 4 minutes on the first side, then flip once and cook for another 3 to 4 minutes, or until they reach your desired doneness.
- Make the burger sauce by whisking together ½ cup mayonnaise, 2 tablespoons ketchup, 1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish, 1 teaspoon yellow mustard, 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, ½ teaspoon paprika, and 1 clove of grated garlic until smooth. Taste and season with salt. Set aside.
- During the last minute of cooking, add cheese slices and close the grill lid until the cheese is melted.
- Place the buns cut-side down on the grill for 30 to 60 seconds, just until lightly toasted.
- Spread sauce or condiments on the buns, add the grilled burgers, then layer with lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles, and any extra toppings. Serve immediately.
Notes
- Do not overwork the meat when shaping the patties. A light touch keeps the burgers tender.
- Season the outside of the patties right before grilling instead of mixing salt into the meat.
- Do not press down on the burgers while they cook. That squeezes out the juices.
- For the best flavor and texture, serve grilled burgers right away.
- Patties can be shaped up to 24 hours ahead and refrigerated until ready to cook.
Shortcut Option
No time to shape patties from scratch? Use ButcherBox preformed burger patties straight from the freezer. Grill from frozen over medium-high heat, flipping as needed, until browned and cooked through. Frozen patties will take a few extra minutes, so check the internal temperature with a thermometer.
One more thing!
This recipe is a part of my grilling out recipes collection — check it out!

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