If you just picked up an electric smoker and you’re staring at that little chip tray wondering what to do next — you’re in the right place.
I’ve been smoking meat in my backyard for over 10 years, and I still remember the first time I fired up my electric smoker and ended up with food that tasted more like ash than apple wood. It wasn’t pretty. But it taught me a lot.
The truth is, using wood chips in an electric smoker isn’t complicated once you understand a few key things. In this guide, I’m going to walk you through the whole process — step by step — so you can start putting out clean, flavorful smoke from your very first session.
Whether you’re smoking a whole brisket over the weekend or just trying to get some decent smoke on chicken thighs for a weeknight dinner, these fundamentals will serve you for years.
Before we get into the how-to, let’s quickly cover the why. Wood chips are small pieces of hardwood — typically between a half inch and an inch in size — that you add to your smoker to generate smoke. That smoke is what gives smoked meat its distinctive flavor.
When wood burns (or more precisely, smolders) in your smoker, it releases hundreds of flavor compounds including guaiacol and syringol — the chemicals responsible for that classic smoky taste you’re chasing. Different wood species produce different concentrations of these compounds, which is why hickory smells and tastes completely different from apple wood.
You’ll often see these three options at the hardware store or online:
For most electric smokers, chips are your go-to. They fit the tray, they ignite quickly, and they give you enough smoke for the critical early hours of your cook.
Unlike charcoal smokers or offset smokers, electric smokers use a heating element to maintain temperature — not burning fuel. That means there’s no natural source of smoke. Without wood chips, you’re basically just cooking in a fancy oven.
The chips sit in a dedicated tray directly above the heating element. When the element heats up, it gets the chips hot enough to smolder and produce smoke. Simple, but effective — as long as you do it right.
👉 New to smoking? Start with a beginner-friendly wood chip variety pack to figure out your favorite flavors before committing to one type.
This is the core of what you need to know. Follow these five steps and you’ll be producing clean, flavorful smoke every time.
Before you even think about adding wood chips or meat, you need to preheat. Set your electric smoker to 225°F and let it run for 20 to 30 minutes.
Here’s why this matters: when your chip tray is already hot, it’ll ignite the wood chips almost immediately when you add them. If you put chips into a cold smoker, they’ll just sit there until the element heats up — wasting valuable smoke time during the most important phase of the cook.
Preheating also helps you dial in your temperature so you’re starting the cook stable, not chasing a moving target.
💡 Pro Tip: Run your smoker empty for the very first use (called a seasoning session) at 275°F for 2-3 hours with a handful of chips. This burns off any factory oils and coats the interior walls with a protective layer of smoke.
Once your smoker has preheated, it’s time to add your chips. For most electric smokers, a good starting amount is 1/2 to 1 cup of chips — roughly a small handful.
Do not overload the tray. This is one of the most common beginner mistakes, and I’ve made it myself. Too many chips at once creates thick, heavy white smoke, which produces a bitter, acrid flavor that coats the meat in a way that ruins the cook. You want thin blue smoke — more on that in the next step.
If your smoker has a dedicated chip loader tube on the side, load it from the outside so you don’t have to open the door and lose heat.
💡 Foil Hack: Line your chip tray with heavy-duty aluminum foil before each cook. It makes cleanup dramatically easier and extends the life of your tray by preventing buildup of ash and carbon deposits.
This step trips up a lot of beginners. Once you add your chips, wait a few minutes before adding your meat.
Watch the smoke coming out of your smoker vent:
Patience here pays off. Five extra minutes waiting for clean smoke is worth it every single time.
Now you’re ready for the main event. Place your meat in the smoker and close the door firmly. Try to position thicker cuts near the top, away from the direct heat of the element at the bottom.
Make sure your meat has been out of the fridge for 20 to 30 minutes before going in. You want a slight chill to it — not ice cold — but you also don’t want a fully room-temperature surface, because:
💡 Pro Tip: Smoke sticks better to cold, slightly moist surfaces. Apply your dry rub early (ideally the night before), leave it uncovered in the fridge overnight, and pull it out about 20-30 minutes before smoking. The salt in the rub pulls moisture to the surface, creating a tacky layer that smoke adheres to much more effectively.
Electric smokers will burn through a tray of chips every 30 to 60 minutes, depending on your temperature and chip size. Plan to check and refill as needed during the first 2 to 3 hours of your cook.
After the 2 to 3-hour mark, the meat’s bark (that flavorful outer crust) has formed and started to set. Once the bark is established, it actually slows down how much additional smoke the meat can absorb. At this point, you can stop adding chips and just let the heat do its job.
🔥 Problem/Solution: If your electric smoker keeps stopping smoke between refills, it’s often because the heating element cycles on and off to maintain temperature — and during the off cycle, the chip tray cools down too much to keep smoking. The fix: bump your temp up by 5-10°F briefly to reignite the chips, then drop back to 225°F. Alternatively, invest in an external pellet tray (like the A-MAZE-N, covered in the accessories section below).
The short answer: No, you don’t have to — but you absolutely should if you want actual smoked food.
Here’s the honest breakdown:
Think of it this way — if someone served you a piece of smoked brisket that had been cooked in a regular oven, you’d probably enjoy it. But the moment you tasted real smoked brisket, you’d immediately know the difference. The smoke isn’t a nice-to-have; it’s the whole point.
For most cuts of meat, stop adding wood chips after 2 to 3 hours. Here’s why:
For long cooks like a 12-hour brisket or 8-hour pork shoulder, resist the urge to keep adding chips throughout. Add consistently for the first 2 to 3 hours, then let the heat finish the job.
If you’re running a vertical charcoal smoker (like a Weber Smokey Mountain or a generic barrel-style smoker), the process is slightly different from electric but follows the same core principles.
Most vertical smokers have a charcoal chamber at the bottom and either a built-in water pan or a dedicated spot for wood chips or chunks. Here’s how to do it:
Vertical smokers have a steeper learning curve than electric models, mainly because you’re manually managing the fire. But once you’ve got the airflow dialed in, they produce exceptional smoke flavor that rivals much more expensive rigs.
💡 Andy’s Note: I started on a cheap vertical smoker before moving to a larger offset. If budget is a concern and you don’t mind the extra attention, a vertical charcoal smoker is a great place to learn the fundamentals of smoke management.
This question comes up constantly, and I want to give you a straight answer: No, you should not soak your wood chips.
For years, the conventional advice was to soak chips in water for 30 minutes to an hour before adding them. The idea was that this would make them smolder longer rather than catching fire. Sounds logical. But here’s what actually happens:
Every pitmaster I know — and every major BBQ resource published in the last decade — agrees: dry chips produce better results. Here’s a quick comparison:
| Factor | Soaked Chips | Dry Chips |
| Smoke start | Delayed — steam first | Immediate ignition |
| Smoke quality | Inconsistent, often white/thick | Clean, thin blue smoke |
| Burn consistency | Unpredictable | Steady and predictable |
| Flavor impact | Weaker — steam dilutes flavor | Fuller, cleaner smoke flavor |
| Recommended? | No | Yes |
Bottom line: skip the soak. Use dry chips, manage your quantity, and focus on keeping that smoke thin and blue.
Choosing the right wood for your meat isn’t complicated, but it makes a big difference. The general rule is: bold meats can handle bold smoke, and delicate meats need lighter smoke.
| Meat | Best Wood Chips | Flavor Profile |
| Beef (Brisket, Ribs) | Hickory, Oak | Bold, strong, earthy |
| Pork (Butt, Ribs) | Apple, Cherry | Sweet, mild, fruity |
| Chicken / Poultry | Apple, Pecan | Light, slightly sweet |
| Fish / Seafood | Alder, Apple | Delicate, subtle |
| Lamb | Hickory, Cherry | Rich, slightly sweet |
| Vegetables | Pecan, Apple | Mild, nutty |
A few extra notes from my experience:
👉 Not sure where to start? A wood chip variety pack lets you experiment with multiple flavors before committing to a large bag of one type. It’s the smart beginner move.
Here’s a simple framework that works for most electric smokers and most types of meat:
Every smoker is slightly different. Pay attention to your vent output — if you stop seeing any smoke and the chips look fully ashed, it’s time to refill. If smoke is still flowing, give it another 15 minutes.
💡 Pro Insight: Meat is most receptive to smoke when it’s cold and moist — at the start of the cook. That’s when the smoke ring forms and when most of the flavor compounds are absorbed. By the time the surface temperature rises and the bark starts to form (usually around the 160°F mark internally), the meat’s ability to take on more smoke drops significantly. Front-load your smoking, not your whole cook.
Let me save you some ruined cooks by running through the mistakes I see most often — many of which I’ve made myself.
More chips does not mean more smoke flavor. It means more thick, bitter smoke that deposits creosote on your meat. Stick to 1/2 to 1 cup at a time and replenish as needed.
Adding meat to a cold smoker causes uneven cooking and delayed smoke production. Always preheat for at least 20 minutes before loading the chamber.
Every time you open that door, you lose heat and smoke. A 10-second peek can drop your smoker temperature by 25 to 50 degrees and add 15 to 30 minutes to your cook. Trust the process and keep that door shut.
Beginners often think thick white smoke means the smoker is working harder. It doesn’t. White or gray smoke is a sign of incomplete combustion and will make your food taste bitter and acrid. You want thin blue smoke — so light you can barely see it.
The dial thermometers on most electric smokers are notoriously inaccurate — sometimes off by 30 to 50 degrees. Always verify with a reliable probe thermometer. Your meat’s internal temperature is the only number that really matters.
This is probably the most common reason home-smoked BBQ doesn’t taste as good as restaurant BBQ. Adding chips for 8 hours straight on a brisket creates a bitter outer layer. Two to three hours is enough for most cuts. Let the meat breathe after that.
🔥 Advanced Tip — The Chip Starvation Fix: If your chips keep going out between the heating element cycles, here’s the fix: bump your temperature up by 5-10°F for 10 minutes to get the chips fully ignited, then drop back to your target temp. If this is a recurring problem, it’s worth investing in an external smoke generator (see the A-MAZE-N tray below) that burns independently of the heating element.
Here are the accessories that have genuinely made a difference in my smoking setups over the years. No fluff — just the stuff that actually earns its place.
Before you spend money on a huge bag of one type of wood, try a variety pack. You’ll quickly discover which flavors work best for the proteins you cook most often.
Top Pick: Western Premium BBQ Products Variety Pack — covers hickory, apple, cherry, and mesquite. Four flavors in one purchase, widely available, and excellent quality for the price.
Premium Pick: Weber Apple & Hickory Chips — Weber’s chips are consistently sized and burn cleanly. Great for people who already know they like a sweet-savory combo on pork and chicken.
Best for: Anyone who is just getting started or expanding their wood chip repertoire.
👉 Start with a variety pack — it’s the lowest-risk, highest-learning way to figure out your flavor preference.
This is probably the single biggest upgrade I’d recommend for electric smoker users. The A-MAZE-N tray sits inside your smoker and burns wood pellets independently of the heating element.
That means you get 6 to 12 hours of continuous, consistent smoke without touching the smoker at all. No refilling every 30 minutes. No smoke gaps during heating element off-cycles.
It completely changed how I use my electric smoker. Instead of babysitting the chip tray, I load the pellet tray, light both ends, and let it run the whole cook.
Best for: Anyone doing long cooks (brisket, pork shoulder, whole turkey) or anyone frustrated by inconsistent smoke output from their electric smoker.
👉 Upgrade to continuous smoke — the A-MAZE-N tray pays for itself in convenience on your very first long cook.
If there’s one thing I’d tell every new smoker owner, it’s this: stop relying on the built-in thermometer. They’re almost always wrong. A good digital probe thermometer is essential — not optional.
Budget Pick: ThermoPro TP19H — Fast-reading, accurate to within 1 degree, and under $25. If you’re just getting started and don’t want to invest a lot, this is your thermometer.
Pro Pick: Meater 2 Plus — Wireless, app-connected, and monitors both internal meat temperature and ambient smoker temperature simultaneously. You can literally monitor your brisket from your couch or the grocery store. Worth every penny for serious cooks.
Best for: Everyone, no exceptions. Food safety alone is reason enough, but perfect doneness is the real win.
A clean smoker is a well-functioning smoker. Grease buildup blocks airflow and can cause temperature spikes. Dirty glass doors mean you can’t monitor your smoke without opening the door.
What you actually need:
I clean my smoker every two to three cooks. It takes 20 minutes, and it keeps everything running at its best.
👉 Keep your smoker clean and it’ll keep your food great — grab a citrus degreaser and a grill brush to start.
After years of experimenting, here’s what I keep coming back to:
The best smoked meat you’ll ever eat is usually the result of simple fundamentals executed consistently — not secret ingredients or expensive equipment. Learn the basics well, and everything else becomes easier.
No — your food will cook fine without them. But without chips, there’s no smoke, and without smoke, it’s just an oven. For actual smoked food, chips are essential.
Refill every 30 to 60 minutes during the first 2 to 3 hours of the cook. After the bark forms, you can stop adding chips entirely.
No. Modern BBQ consensus is firmly against soaking. Wet chips produce steam and inconsistent smoke. Dry chips ignite faster and produce cleaner, more flavorful smoke.
Most likely cause: the heating element cycled off and the tray cooled down. Try bumping the temperature up by 5 to 10 degrees temporarily to reignite. If it’s a consistent issue, use an external smoke generator like the A-MAZE-N tray.
Technically, partially burned chips can be reused if they haven’t fully ashed over. But in practice, the smoke output from used chips is weak and inconsistent. Fresh chips are cheap enough that it’s rarely worth it. Start fresh each cook.
Mastering wood chips in an electric smoker really comes down to four things: preheat properly, don’t overload, chase thin blue smoke, and stop adding chips once the bark sets. Do those four things consistently and you’ll be miles ahead of most backyard pitmasters.
Start simple. Pick one wood type, smoke one familiar protein, and focus on the process over perfection. Once you’ve nailed a basic smoked chicken or rack of ribs, you’ll have the confidence and knowledge to tackle bigger cooks.
And when you’re ready to step up your setup — whether that’s a pellet tray for continuous smoke, a wireless thermometer to stop hovering, or a proper wood chip variety pack to start experimenting with flavors — the accessories section above covers everything worth investing in.
Good luck, and go make something delicious.
— Andy, BarbecueMen.com
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