BBQ chicken, tender potatoes, and melted cheese all in one skillet is the kind of dinner that disappears fast. The potatoes get a head start so they can turn golden at the edges before the chicken and vegetables go in, and that matters more than it sounds. If everything starts at the same time, the potatoes stay pale and the chicken overcooks while you wait for the starch to soften.
This version leans on a cast iron skillet and medium heat for even browning, then finishes with BBQ sauce after the chicken is cooked through so the sugars don’t burn. The smoked paprika adds a little depth under the sauce, and the lid at the end gives you that melted cheese finish without drying out the pan. It’s the kind of meal that feels casual enough for a weeknight but solid enough to cook over a grill or campfire setup.
Below, I’ve included the one timing detail that keeps the potatoes from turning mushy, plus a few useful swaps if you’re working with what’s already in the fridge.
The potatoes browned up on the bottom before the chicken went in, and the BBQ sauce clung to everything instead of sliding off. My husband kept scraping the skillet for the crispy bits.
This BBQ Chicken Potato Skillet is the kind of one-pan dinner that gets the potatoes crispy and the sauce sticky in all the right ways.
The Trick to Keeping the Potatoes Brown, Not Mushy
The potatoes need their own time in the pan before the chicken goes in. That first 10 minutes does the heavy lifting: it starts the browning, cooks off surface moisture, and gives the potatoes a little structure so they can finish with the sauce instead of dissolving into it. If you crowd the skillet or keep the heat too low, they steam instead of sear.
Cast iron helps here because it holds steady heat and gives you a better chance at those browned edges. Stir occasionally, not constantly. You want enough movement to prevent sticking, but if you keep tossing them around, they never stay in contact with the hot pan long enough to color.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Skillet

- Chicken thighs — Thighs stay juicy through the extra skillet time and hold up better than breast meat under a sticky sauce. Cube them evenly so they cook at the same pace as the vegetables.
- Potatoes — Diced potatoes are the base of the whole dish, and a waxier variety or Yukon Gold will hold shape best. Russets work, but they soften faster and can break apart if you stir too aggressively.
- BBQ sauce — Add it at the end so the sugars don’t scorch. A thicker sauce clings better; if yours is thin, simmer it for a minute after stirring it in so it coats instead of pooling.
- Smoked paprika — This gives the skillet a deeper grilled taste even if you’re cooking on the stovetop. It’s a small amount, but it helps bridge the gap between the chicken, potatoes, and sauce.
- Shredded cheese — The cheese finishes the skillet with a melty top and helps round out the sweet-smoky sauce. Use a low-moisture shredding cheese for the best melt; pre-shredded works, but it won’t melt as smoothly as freshly grated.
Building the Skillet in the Right Order
Getting the Potatoes Started
Heat the oil in the cast iron skillet over medium heat until it shimmers, then add the diced potatoes. They should sizzle right away. Stir every couple of minutes and let them sit long enough between turns to take on color. If the pan looks dry or the potatoes are sticking hard, the heat is a little too high; drop it slightly and keep going so they brown instead of burning.
Cooking the Chicken and Vegetables
Add the chicken, bell pepper, onion, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper once the potatoes have some color. The chicken should lose its raw pink sheen and start picking up light browning on the edges, while the onions turn translucent and soft. If the vegetables release a lot of liquid, keep cooking until that moisture cooks off; otherwise the skillet turns steamy and the sauce won’t cling later.
Finishing with BBQ Sauce and Cheese
Stir in the BBQ sauce only after the chicken is cooked through. This keeps the glaze thick and glossy instead of burnt and bitter. Once everything is coated, sprinkle the cheese over the top and cover the skillet just long enough to melt it, about 2 minutes. Take the lid off as soon as the cheese is soft and stretchy; leaving it covered too long traps steam and softens the potatoes you just worked to brown.
Ways to Adjust This Skillet Without Losing the Good Part
Make it dairy-free
Skip the cheese or finish with a dairy-free shredded blend if you use one that melts well. The skillet still has plenty of body from the potatoes and BBQ sauce, so you won’t miss much texture-wise, but the top will be a little less rich and stretchy.
Use chicken breast instead of thighs
Chicken breast works if that’s what you have, but cut it into larger pieces and shorten the final cook time. Breast meat dries out faster in a skillet, especially once the BBQ sauce goes in, so pull it off the heat as soon as it’s cooked through.
Swap in sweet potatoes for a different kind of sweetness
Sweet potatoes give the skillet a softer, sweeter base that plays well with smoky BBQ sauce. They cook a little faster than regular potatoes, so start checking them around the 8-minute mark and don’t let them get too soft before the chicken goes in.
Turn it into a camping meal
This recipe works well over a grill or campfire with a heavy skillet. Keep the heat steady and move the pan around if one side of the fire runs hotter than the other; uneven heat is the fastest way to scorch the potatoes before the chicken finishes.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The potatoes soften a little after chilling, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: It freezes, but the potatoes will turn a little mealy after thawing. If you do freeze it, cool it completely first and pack it tightly in a freezer-safe container for up to 2 months.
- Reheating: Reheat in a skillet over medium-low heat with a splash of water if the sauce has tightened up. The biggest mistake is blasting it in the microwave, which can dry out the chicken and make the potatoes rubbery before the center is hot.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

BBQ Chicken Potato Skillet
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Heat olive oil in a cast iron skillet on the grill over medium heat until it shimmers. Spread it evenly across the bottom so the potatoes start crisping right away.
- Add diced potatoes to the skillet and cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Keep the grill at medium so the potatoes soften and develop light browning.
- Add cubed chicken thighs, diced bell pepper, diced onion, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper to the skillet. Stir to distribute the seasonings through the potatoes.
- Cook for 12-15 minutes until the chicken is cooked through, stirring as needed. Look for no pink in the thickest pieces and lightly browned edges on the chicken and potatoes.
- Pour in BBQ sauce and stir to coat everything evenly. Continue cooking just until the sauce turns glossy and clings to the chicken and potatoes.
- Top with shredded cheese, then close the grill lid for 2 minutes to melt. Watch for the cheese to soften and turn gooey over the skillet.
- Serve hot directly from the skillet. Keep it on the table warm for the meltiest cheese topping.


