Crispy-skinned chicken thighs with a sticky honey-buffalo glaze hit that sweet spot between bold and balanced. The skin gets blistered and crackly on the grill, then the sauce clings in a glossy layer that tastes sharp, buttery, and just sweet enough to round out the heat. It’s the kind of chicken that disappears fast, whether you set it out for game day or serve it with celery and blue cheese dressing for an easy dinner.
The trick is building the glaze before the chicken ever hits the grill. Honey helps the sauce cling and caramelize, while butter softens the vinegar and buffalo sauce so the finished coating tastes rich instead of harsh. A short marinade is enough here; any longer and the sugar can start working against the skin’s texture. You want the thighs seasoned, brushed, and ready to cook, not swimming in sauce.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: how to get the skin crisp before the glaze starts to darken, plus the small tweaks that keep the sauce sticky instead of burnt. I’ve also included a few smart swaps for when you want more heat, less heat, or a dairy-free version.
The glaze thickened up beautifully on the grill, and the skin stayed crisp even with the basting. My husband kept going back for “just one more piece” until the pan was empty.
Save these grilled honey buffalo chicken thighs for the nights when you want crispy skin, sticky glaze, and a little heat without turning on the oven.
The Heat Stays Manageable Only If You Let the Skin Do Its Job
Most grilled chicken thighs fail in one of two ways: the skin turns soft and rubbery, or the glaze burns before the meat is done. This recipe avoids both by starting skin-side down over medium heat, which renders the fat slowly enough to crisp the skin before the sugars in the sauce have a chance to scorch. That first stretch on the grill matters more than anything else in the recipe.
Once the skin is crisp, the flip-and-baste stage becomes much more forgiving. The sauce builds in thin layers, and each pass adds shine instead of puddling on the chicken. If your heat is too high, the honey will darken fast and the outside will look done long before the thighs reach 165°F. Keep the grill at a steady medium, and use the sauce like a glaze, not a marinade you’re trying to boil on the surface.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Glaze

- Chicken thighs — Bone-in, skin-on thighs stay juicy on the grill and handle the basting better than breasts. The skin renders into a crisp shell that stands up to the sticky glaze. Boneless thighs work in a pinch, but you’ll lose some of the texture that makes this dish worth grilling.
- Buffalo sauce — This gives the chicken its tang and heat. Use a sauce you already like eating straight from the bottle, because it’s the backbone of the final flavor. If yours is extra salty or very sharp, the honey and butter will mellow it, but they won’t erase it.
- Honey — Honey is what makes the glaze cling and caramelize instead of sliding off. It also softens the burn of the hot sauce, so the chicken tastes balanced instead of aggressive. Maple syrup can work, but it tastes darker and less classic here.
- Butter — Melted butter rounds out the sauce and helps it gloss over the skin. It also keeps the glaze from tasting thin. If you skip it, the sauce can taste harsher and look less sticky.
- Apple cider vinegar — The vinegar sharpens the sweetness and keeps the sauce from tasting flat. A little goes a long way. If you use too much, the glaze turns sour, so measure it carefully.
- Blue cheese dressing and celery — These aren’t garnish for looks; they cool the heat and give each bite a clean finish. The creamy dressing is especially useful if your buffalo sauce runs hot. Ranch works too, but blue cheese gives the classic buffalo pairing.
Getting the Thighs Crispy Before the Glaze Thickens
Mix the Sauce First, Then Hold Back a Portion
Stir the buffalo sauce, honey, melted butter, and vinegar until the mixture looks smooth and glossy. Reserve one-third cup before the chicken touches it so you’ve got a clean basting sauce later. If you use the same bowl for raw chicken and basting, the flavor is still fine, but the sauce can get murky and harder to brush on evenly.
Season and Coat Without Flooding the Skin
Pat the thighs dry, then season them with salt and pepper before brushing on a thin layer of sauce. You want the surface coated, not dripping. Too much sauce at this stage slows down browning and makes the skin steam instead of crisp once it hits the grill.
Start Skin-Side Down and Let the Fat Render
Set the thighs skin-side down over medium heat and leave them alone for 8 to 10 minutes. You should hear a steady sizzle and see the skin turn deep golden with rendered fat pooling around the edges. If you keep lifting them too early, the skin won’t have time to crisp and release cleanly.
Flip, Baste, and Watch for Sticky Edges
Turn the thighs over and baste frequently with the reserved sauce as they cook for another 8 to 10 minutes. The glaze should bubble lightly and start to look lacquered, not wet. If it starts to blacken fast, move the thighs to a cooler part of the grill and finish there; honey can go from sticky to burnt in a minute.
Use Temperature, Not Guesswork, for the Finish
Pull the chicken once the thickest part reaches 165°F and the glaze looks tacky and set. Let the thighs rest briefly before serving so the juices settle and the coating stays on the meat instead of running onto the plate. That short rest keeps the skin a little crisp instead of soggy from carryover steam.
How to Adjust the Heat, the Sweetness, or the Cooking Method
Make it milder without losing the buffalo character
Use a milder buffalo sauce and add a little extra honey, but don’t overdo the sweetener or the glaze starts tasting more like barbecue than buffalo. You’ll keep the tang and color while taking the edge off the heat.
Dairy-free version that still glazes well
Swap the butter for a neutral oil or plant-based butter. The sauce won’t taste quite as round, but it will still cling and caramelize on the grill. Keep the vinegar amount the same so the flavor doesn’t flatten out.
No grill? Finish these under the broiler
Sear the thighs skin-side down in an oven-safe skillet until the skin is crisp, then transfer the pan to the broiler to finish with the sauce. Watch closely, because the honey will brown fast under direct heat. This version won’t have grill marks, but it still gives you crisp skin and a sticky finish.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The skin softens a bit, but the flavor holds up well.
- Freezer: These freeze well for up to 2 months, though the skin won’t stay crisp after thawing. Wrap tightly and freeze with a little extra sauce if you want to protect the meat from drying out.
- Reheating: Reheat in a 375°F oven or air fryer until hot. Skip the microwave if you want any chance of keeping texture; it softens the skin and makes the glaze greasy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Grilled Honey Buffalo Chicken Thighs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Mix buffalo sauce, honey, melted butter, and apple cider vinegar in a bowl until smooth. Set aside 1/3 cup of the mixture for basting.
- Season the chicken thighs with salt and pepper, then brush with some of the sauce. Distribute remaining sauce over the meat.
- Marinate the chicken for 30 minutes. Keep refrigerated while the chicken rests to absorb flavor.
- Preheat the grill to medium heat, then place thighs skin-side down and grill for 8-10 minutes until the skin is crispy. Close the lid as much as possible to hold steady heat.
- Flip the thighs and grill for 8-10 more minutes, basting frequently with the reserved sauce. Continue until the internal temperature reaches 165°F and the glaze looks sticky and glossy.
- Serve the grilled thighs with blue cheese dressing and celery sticks. Spoon any extra sticky glaze from the grill over the chicken before eating.


