Gochujang glazes and Caribbean jerk rubs have moved into the American backyard grill and are not leaving anytime soon. Korean-inspired flavors and Caribbean jerk are two global influences showing up prominently in 2026 BBQ trend reporting, not by pushing the hickory smoke and the hot sauce off the table but by joining them. National Grilling Month this July is proof of how far the backyard has come.

Grilling has become a more frequent ritual for many grill owners, and the people behind those grills are cooking with a confidence and curiosity that looks nothing like the playbook from a decade ago. The burgers are still there, and the hot dogs are not going anywhere. They are sharing grate space with gochujang-glazed chicken thighs, jerk-rubbed pork ribs and sweet-heat pineapple glazes that would have raised eyebrows at a suburban cookout not long ago. The American backyard grill has become a more adventurous kitchen, and the flavors landing on it right now are the most interesting they have ever been.
How Americans grill has changed
HPBA research on mid-to-high-end grill owners found that grilling has become a year-round ritual, with two-thirds or more firing up multiple times a week across spring, summer and fall. The PS Seasoning 2026 BBQ Trends Report, a survey of avid BBQ enthusiasts, found that more than 80% cook with BBQ flavors at least monthly. More than half of those premium grill owners actively seek out new grilling or smoking recipes, which helps explain why global flavors find such a receptive audience at the grate.
Seoul comes to the suburb
Korean-inspired flavors are among the globally inspired flavors showing the most traction in the same 2026 BBQ trend reporting, and it is not hard to see why. Gochujang, the fermented Korean chili paste, brings a layered heat to the grill that lands somewhere between spicy, sweet and deeply savory, all at once. Home cooks across the country are reaching for the red tub in the international aisle and using it as a glaze on ribs, a marinade on chicken thighs and a compound butter melted over grilled corn.
The report shows that many grill owners are not abandoning traditional American BBQ sauces and rubs. They are adding to them, finishing a Kansas City-style rack with a gochujang lacquer or blending a smoky rub with fermented heat. The two approaches coexist beautifully.
Kingston heat lands at home
Caribbean jerk is the other global influence named in the same 2026 trend data, and it belongs on this list for a simple reason: jerk was built for fire. Its backbone of allspice, Scotch bonnet heat, thyme and smoke developed over centuries of outdoor cooking in Jamaica and performs spectacularly over a backyard grill.
The National Restaurant Association’s 2026 What’s Hot Culinary Forecast ranked global comfort foods seventh among the year’s top menu trends. Additionally, Caribbean curry bowls were cited as one example of that appetite for globally inspired flavors on American menus.
The sweet-heat profile of jerk connects directly to what the PS Seasoning 2026 BBQ Trends Report called the year’s defining flavor movement: “swicy,” or sweet plus spicy. Cherry, hot honey and pineapple ranked among the most requested emerging flavor profiles in the same survey. Jerk chicken finished with a pineapple-and-Scotch bonnet glaze is not a departure from American BBQ culture. It is that culture at its most creative and its most delicious.
The swicy wave goes global
The swicy movement is bigger than any single cuisine. Innova’s Top Global Flavor Trends 2026 report found that 51% of global consumers are actively seeking out cuisines from other countries, and that appetite is showing up in how people season, sauce and smoke at home. Hot honey on grilled chicken, mango chipotle on pork chops, cherry BBQ sauce on smoked brisket; the combinations are as personal as the cook behind them.
Many cooks are no longer stopping at one rub or sauce. Those surveyed in the PS Seasoning report found that nearly 80% customize their cooks with multiple rubs, sauces and seasoning combinations, indicating a growing appetite for layered, personalized flavor. The grill has become the place where people play.
Fire it up this July
National Grilling Month was always about gathering around the fire. The food was almost beside the point. What 2026 has made clear is that the food is very much the point now, and the American backyard is rising to meet that moment.
The grill has not changed, but what goes on it has, and the results are spectacular. This July, skip the plain burger for one cook and try a gochujang glaze, a jerk rub or a hot honey finish. The fire is the same, but the flavors are better than ever.
Jennifer Allen is a retired professional chef and long-time writer. Her work appears in dozens of publications, including MSN, Yahoo, The Washington Post and The Seattle Times. These days, she’s busy in the kitchen developing recipes and traveling the world, and you can find all her best creations at Cook What You Love.