Brisket Smoking Calculator
Enter your brisket details and serve time to get a complete cook timeline — including exactly when to light the smoker, when the stall hits, and when to pull.
Brisket Style
Your Brisket Timeline
Cook Timeline
How Long to Smoke a Brisket
Brisket is the most rewarding — and most demanding — cook in low-and-slow BBQ. The general rule of thumb is 1.25 to 1.5 hours per pound at 225°F. A full packer brisket weighing 14 to 16 pounds will take 17 to 22 hours from smoker on to pull. At 250°F, that same brisket comes in closer to 14 to 18 hours. These numbers are averages; your actual time will depend on the thickness of the flat, your smoker's temperature consistency, and how you manage the stall. If you are trying to estimate usable sliced meat instead of clock time, the Brisket Yield Calculator breaks down packer, flat, point, and trim loss.
The single most important rule: cook to temperature, not to time. A meat thermometer is not optional equipment for brisket — it is the cook. Pull brisket for slicing at 195°F internal, or 205°F if you are pulling or chopping. Use the probe test to confirm: when a thermometer probe slides into the thickest part of the flat with zero resistance — like pushing into warm butter — the brisket is done regardless of what the thermometer reads.
The Brisket Stall
Every pitmaster who has cooked a brisket has encountered the stall: a maddening plateau that begins around 150°F and can hold for three to six hours. The internal temperature stops climbing or even drops a degree or two, and panic sets in. Do not raise the smoker temperature. The brisket is fine.
The stall occurs because brisket contains a significant amount of surface moisture that evaporates at the same rate the smoker adds heat — a process called evaporative cooling. Your brisket is essentially sweating, and as long as that evaporation is happening, the temperature will not rise. Simultaneously, collagen in the connective tissue is beginning its conversion into gelatin — the process that makes brisket tender. The stall ends naturally when enough moisture has evaporated and the collagen conversion is complete, at which point the internal temperature begins climbing again.
The stall typically begins at around 40% of total cook time and ends near 65%. For a 16-hour cook, that means a stall window of roughly hours 6 through 10. This calculator estimates your stall window and builds it into the timeline automatically.
Wrapping Decisions: Foil vs. Butcher Paper vs. No Wrap
How you wrap — or choose not to wrap — is one of the most consequential decisions of the cook. Each method produces a different result.
- Foil (Texas Crutch): Wrapping tightly in heavy-duty aluminum foil eliminates the stall almost entirely by trapping steam around the meat. The brisket essentially braises in its own juices for the remainder of the cook. Cook time is reduced by roughly 10%. The downside is bark: the steam softens the crust. If you wrap in foil, unwrap during the rest to let the bark firm up. Most backyard cooks and competition teams on a schedule use foil.
- Butcher Paper (Pink / Peach Paper): Butcher paper is breathable, which means it reduces the stall without the bark-destroying steam environment of foil. It slows moisture loss and stabilizes the cook without fully trapping humidity. Cook time is reduced by about 5% compared to foil. The bark is noticeably better — this is the method used by Franklin Barbecue and most serious Texas pitmasters. Wrap when the bark is fully set and the surface is deep mahogany, typically at the onset of the stall.
- No Wrap: The purist approach. The stall runs its full course, the bark gets maximum time exposed to smoke and airflow, and the result is the hardest, most developed crust you can achieve. Cook time is 10% longer than foil-wrapped. Fuel management matters more with no wrap because temperature spikes will dry out the flat faster. It is the highest-risk approach and the most rewarding when executed well.
The Rest Is Not Optional
Resting brisket is not a suggestion — it is a step as important as the cook itself. When brisket comes off the smoker, the muscle fibers are tightly contracted from hours of heat. During the rest, those fibers relax and reabsorb the juices that were pushed to the center during cooking. Slice too early, and the cutting board fills with juice that should have stayed in the meat.
The minimum rest is 90 minutes, loosely tented in foil. Two to four hours is ideal. For large events or catering situations, the faux Cambro method — wrapping the brisket tightly in foil, then in a thick beach towel, and placing it in a dry cooler — will safely hold a brisket at serving temperature for four to six hours, sometimes more. This technique gives you enormous flexibility on timing and is used at competition cook sites worldwide. If you are serving a crowd, the Catering Calculator helps convert that finished brisket into realistic portions and shopping numbers.
Do not skip the rest because the brisket probed done an hour early. That extra hour in the cooler makes it better, not worse. The calculator builds in a 90-minute rest by default and works backward from your serve time accordingly.
Sliced vs. Pulled Brisket
A full packer brisket consists of two muscles: the flat and the point. The flat is the leaner, thinner muscle used for classic sliced brisket. The point (also called the deckle or nose) is heavily marbled and is typically used for burnt ends or pulled brisket.
- Sliced brisket (195°F): The flat holds its structure for clean slices. Pull at 195°F internal, rest, and slice against the grain to 1/4-inch thickness — the width of a pencil. Going thicker or thinner makes it either chewy or crumbly.
- Pulled brisket (205°F): Cooking to 205°F breaks down more collagen and renders more intramuscular fat, producing meat that pulls apart easily. The point is ideal for this treatment. At 205°F, the flat will be very tender but may not hold together for slices — plan accordingly and separate the flat and point before pulling.
Neither style is superior — they serve different occasions. Sliced brisket is the centerpiece of a Texas-style plate. Pulled brisket works beautifully in sandwiches, tacos, and hash. If you are cooking a whole packer, you can serve both by pulling the point while slicing the flat.
Brisket Smoke Time Reference (foil wrap)
Estimated cook times at each temperature using foil wrap. Add 5% for butcher paper and 10% for no wrap. All times include cook only — rest is not included.
| Temp | 8 lbs | 10 lbs | 12 lbs | 14 lbs | 16 lbs | 18 lbs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 225°F | 12.0 hrs | 15.0 hrs | 18.0 hrs | 21.0 hrs | 24.0 hrs | 27.0 hrs |
| 250°F | 10.2 hrs | 12.8 hrs | 15.3 hrs | 17.9 hrs | 20.4 hrs | 23.0 hrs |
| 275°F | 9.0 hrs | 11.3 hrs | 13.5 hrs | 15.8 hrs | 18.0 hrs | 20.3 hrs |
| 300°F | 7.8 hrs | 9.8 hrs | 11.7 hrs | 13.7 hrs | 15.6 hrs | 17.6 hrs |