There are certain meals that just feel like home. You know the ones — where the smell hits you before you even walk into the kitchen and everyone suddenly appears from wherever they were hiding in the house. This honey BBQ chicken and potatoes is exactly that kind of meal.
I first made this on a Sunday afternoon when I wanted something comforting but could not face a complicated recipe. Chicken thighs, baby potatoes, a good BBQ sauce, some honey — into the oven it went.
What came out was sticky, smoky, golden, and so satisfying that my family cleaned every last piece off the pan. It has been on regular rotation ever since.
The best part about this recipe is that the oven does most of the work. You prep, you season, you glaze, and then you walk away. Fifty-five minutes later you have a dinner that tastes like you put in way more effort than you actually did. Let's make it.
For the chicken:
For the honey BBQ glaze:
For the potatoes:
For garnish:
Key ingredient notes:
Chicken thighs: Bone-in skin-on thighs are the right call here. The bone keeps the meat juicy during the long roast and the skin crisps up beautifully under the broiler at the end. Boneless thighs work too but you will need to reduce the cook time by about 10 minutes. Chicken breasts can work in a pinch but they are far less forgiving — you risk drying them out under the high heat.
BBQ sauce: Use whatever BBQ sauce you love. A smoky hickory style pairs beautifully with the honey in this recipe. Sweet baby Ray's, Stubb's, or any good quality brand works great. If you want to control the sweetness and smokiness levels, homemade BBQ sauce takes about 10 minutes and is absolutely worth it.
Honey: Real honey only. It gives the glaze that sticky, lacquered finish that makes the chicken look and taste like something from a proper BBQ restaurant. Do not substitute with sugar or syrup — the texture and flavor will not be the same.
Apple cider vinegar: Just a tablespoon cuts through the sweetness of the honey and BBQ sauce and adds a subtle tang that keeps the glaze balanced. It also helps tenderize the chicken slightly. Do not skip it.
Baby potatoes: Baby potatoes are ideal here because they roast evenly, hold their shape, and have a naturally buttery flavor when cooked at high heat. Halving them gives you more surface area for caramelization and crispiness. If you only have regular potatoes, cut them into similar-sized chunks.
Smoked paprika: This is what gives the chicken its beautiful deep color before the glaze even goes on. It adds a subtle smokiness that complements the BBQ sauce perfectly. Regular paprika works but smoked paprika is a noticeably better choice here.
Preheat your oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit or 200 degrees Celsius. Line a large baking dish or sheet pan with foil for easy cleanup. Set aside.
Pat your chicken thighs dry with paper towels — this is important for getting a good crust. Drizzle with olive oil and season generously on both sides with garlic powder, onion powder, smoked paprika, cayenne, salt, and black pepper. Do not be shy with the seasoning — this is the flavor foundation under the glaze.
In a small bowl, whisk together BBQ sauce, honey, apple cider vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, and garlic powder until fully combined. Taste it. Adjust the honey for more sweetness or the vinegar for more tang. Set aside half the glaze for basting during cooking and keep the rest for serving.
In a large bowl, toss your halved baby potatoes with olive oil, garlic powder, dried thyme, salt, and black pepper until fully coated. Arrange them in a single layer on one side of your prepared baking pan.
Place your seasoned chicken thighs skin side up on the other side of the baking pan, nestled alongside the potatoes. Brush a generous layer of honey BBQ glaze over the top of each chicken thigh. Do not be stingy here — that first layer of glaze is what starts building the sticky caramelized exterior.
Place the pan in the preheated oven and roast for 35 minutes. At the 20-minute mark, pull the pan out and give the potatoes a quick toss so they brown evenly on all sides. Brush another generous layer of glaze over the chicken and return the pan to the oven for the remaining 15 minutes.
After 35 minutes, switch your oven to broil on high. Brush one final layer of glaze over the chicken and broil for 3-5 minutes until the glaze is deeply caramelized, sticky, and slightly charred at the edges. Watch it closely — broilers work fast and the honey in the glaze can go from perfectly caramelized to burnt in under a minute.
Pull the pan from the oven and let the chicken rest for 5 minutes before serving. This lets the juices redistribute so every bite stays moist and flavorful. Garnish with freshly chopped thyme or parsley and add a dollop of sour cream or cream cheese on the potatoes if you are feeling indulgent. Serve immediately.
Refrigerator: Store leftover chicken and potatoes in an airtight container for up to 4 days. Keep them together — the chicken juices continue to flavor the potatoes as they sit and everything tastes even better the next day.
Freezer: This recipe is a great freezer meal. Cool completely before freezing. Store chicken and potatoes in freezer-safe containers for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating.
Reheating: Reheat in the oven at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for about 15-20 minutes until warmed through. This keeps the skin on the chicken from going completely soft the way it would in a microwave. If you must use the microwave, cover and heat in 90-second intervals. Brush a little extra BBQ sauce over the chicken before reheating to bring the glaze back to life.
Note on the glaze: If you reserved extra glaze for serving, store it separately in a small jar in the refrigerator for up to a week. Warm it slightly before serving.
Honestly, this honey BBQ chicken and potatoes is the kind of recipe that earns you a reputation. Make it once for your family and they will be asking for it by name every single week. It is comforting, deeply flavorful, and the kind of meal that makes a regular Tuesday evening feel like something worth sitting down for.
Give it a go this week, make it your own, and let me know how it turned out in the comments below. Did you add extra vegetables? Try a different BBQ sauce? Put your own spin on the potatoes? I want to hear all of it. Let's cook, create, and celebrate good food together.
With gratitude, Kip.
This classic honey BBQ chicken and potatoes brings together juicy oven-baked chicken thighs glazed in a rich sticky honey BBQ sauce alongside golden herb-seasoned baby potatoes, all cooked in one pan. It is the kind of deeply comforting, crowd-pleasing dinner that looks impressive on the table but requires very little actual effort to pull off.