
I’ve spent the last two summers cooking on every style of open-fire grill I could get my hands on, and nothing has changed my backyard cooking the way the best Santa Maria grills have. If you have ever wanted restaurant-quality tri-tip, a perfectly seared steak with smoke flavor that gas simply cannot deliver, or the ability to hang sausages vertically the way Argentine gauchos have done for centuries, a Santa Maria style grill is the tool for the job.
A Santa Maria grill is an open-fire barbecue grill originating from California’s Santa Maria Valley, featuring an adjustable grate system that raises and lowers meat over a wood or charcoal fire for precise temperature control. The signature feature is a hand crank (or wheel) that lets you move the cooking surface up and down, sometimes across a 2-foot range, so you can slide food from direct searing heat into a slower roasting zone without picking it up. The result is charcoal and wood flavor with unmatched control, the exact reason this style has spread from California’s Central Coast to backyards across the country.
I pulled together ten of the best Santa Maria grills available right now, from a $169 portable option to a $2,799 XL setup, and cooked on each one to see how they actually perform. I focused on material thickness, grate height range, fire management, and how easy they were to live with on a normal patio. Below is my full breakdown, starting with the top three picks for 2026 and then a deep dive on every model.
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BIG HORN Santa Maria Grill
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Backyard Discovery Premium Argentine
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GREEN PARTY Argentine Grill
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BRANDMAN ASADO Grill
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Backyard Discovery XL
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BIG HORN Portable
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Ash & Ember Kettle Attachment
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Flintex Argentine
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Backyard Discovery Heritage
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Built-In 36x24 Argentine
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40.8W x 17.9D x 49H inches
Powder-coated steel
Cart-style with wheels
I set this BIG HORN up on my back patio in about 40 minutes, and that includes the moment I realized I’d put the side-table bolts in backward. Once righted, the cart configuration feels sturdy, and the lockable wheels let me roll it out of the way when the kids want to play. The V-shaped grates are the standout feature at this price. They channel rendered fat down into a drip system instead of letting it flare up onto the meat, which is the exact problem you get on cheap open grills.
Cooking on it, the adjustable handwheel works smoothly. I could lower a tri-tip to within an inch of the coals for a hard sear, then crank it up to slow-roast the thick end. The build is powder-coated steel rather than heavy gauge carbon steel, so it won’t last a lifetime like a Lone Star Grillz, but for under $300 it absolutely delivers the Santa Maria experience. A reviewer on Amazon summed it up as “great value for the price,” and I agree.

The folding side table is genuinely useful. I keep a plate of seasoned meat and a tray of vegetables on it, and when I’m done it folds flat for storage. The bottom shelf is roomy enough for a bag of lump charcoal, though I’d cover the grill or move it under shelter because the shelf will collect rainwater otherwise. That’s a common issue on cart-style charcoal grills and not a deal-breaker.
Where this grill falls short is the grate cleaning process. The V-shape is great for grease but harder to scrub than a flat grate, and the surface area is generous but the materials feel a bit thin if you baby your gear. For a first Santa Maria grill or a budget backyard setup, though, this is the one I’d recommend to a friend.

It runs well on lump charcoal, and I had no problem mixing in a few chunks of oak or hickory for smoke. The firebox is open on this model, so there’s no brasero separation, which means a touch more flare-up risk, but the V-groove design largely solves that. Beginners will get the hang of it after two cooks.
Anyone who wants authentic Santa Maria cooking without dropping four figures. It’s also a great pick for renters or anyone who needs to roll the grill into a garage each winter, since the wheels actually work.
723 sq in cooking surface
374.79 lbs
5-year limited warranty
The first time I lifted a grate out of the box on this Backyard Discovery, I got it. The 304 stainless steel is heavy. The powder-coated body is heavy. Even the firebricks are heavy. This is the grill you buy when you want a permanent backyard feature, not something you’ll tuck into a corner in November. After 92 reviews averaging 4.6 stars, I am not the only one who thinks so.
The 723 square inch cooking surface handled eight chicken thighs, two tri-tips, and a tray of vegetables all at once for a Sunday family cookout. The crank-driven grate moves smoothly across a 2 to 24 inch range, which is more travel than most Santa Maria grills in this price range, and it let me move food from a hard sear to a slow finish without ever picking up a pair of tongs. The included 4 stainless steel S-hooks are the right touch for hanging sausages Gaucho-style.

What really sold me was the heat retention. The refractory firebricks and ceramic fire-insulated side walls keep temperature stable even when I open the front to add a log, and the 304 stainless steel brasero directs airflow into the coals. I cooked a 4-pound pork shoulder low and slow, then cranked everything up for a reverse-seared ribeye, all on the same fire. That’s the whole point of a Santa Maria style grill, and Backyard Discovery nailed it.
Assembly is the trade-off. The BILT app with 3D interactive instructions helps, but I still needed a friend and about four hours. Some reviewers report missing threaded inserts, which is a real quality control issue for a $1,800 grill. Backyard Discovery’s 5-year warranty covers defects, though, and customer support is responsive. Once built, this thing is rock solid.

Most outdoor grills in this category offer one or two years. Backyard Discovery’s five-year coverage is a strong signal that the company expects this grill to last. The warranty covers defects in materials and workmanship, which is exactly the kind of peace of mind you want on a heavy investment.
Anyone who cooks outdoors at least once a week and wants a Santa Maria grill that will outlive their next car. Also a great pick for homeowners building out a dedicated outdoor kitchen space, since the matching Heritage and XL models in this lineup stack nicely.
537 sq in cooking surface
Alloy steel 12-gauge
1-year warranty
GREEN PARTY is not a name you’ll find on a lot of grills yet, but after cooking on this one, I’m paying attention. The 537 square inch cooking surface is smaller than the Backyard Discovery but plenty for a family of four, and the porcelain-enameled grates are easier to clean than the V-shaped steel on the BIG HORN. The side wheel adjusts grate height smoothly, and the included 304 stainless steel warming rack above the main surface is a nice touch.
Every review on this model is 5 stars, though I’ll note the sample is small. I can see why early buyers are happy. The build is 12-gauge alloy steel, which is in the same range as the Backyard Discovery Heritage. The foldable front table is convenient, and the integrated tool holder and towel bar are small details that make a real difference during a long cook.

I cooked a full Santa Maria tri-tip dinner on this grill, and the heat retention was impressive. The 12-gauge body held temperature well, and the side wheel let me drop the grate down to within a couple of inches of the coals for the sear, then raise it to finish the roast. The S-hooks handled a row of chorizo sausages without issue, and the warming rack kept tortillas warm while I finished the meat.
Downsides: the rotisserie mounts are on both sides, but no rotisserie kit is included, despite the listing mentioning it as a feature. The grill is also not Prime eligible, so you’ll pay for shipping. Assembly took me about 90 minutes with a friend. For the price, the value is hard to beat, but I’d love to see more long-term reviews roll in.

This grill supports grilling, rotisserie, and smoking on the same fire, which is rare in this price range. The grates can be removed and swapped for the included warming rack, giving you a two-level setup. Just budget for a separate rotisserie kit if that’s a feature you want.
Buyers who want Backyard Discovery-style features without the Backyard Discovery price. Also a smart pick for anyone with a smaller patio who doesn’t need 700+ square inches of cooking surface.
764.7 sq in cooking surface
302 lbs
Stainless steel 3-layer chamber
BRANDMAN packs a lot into this Argentine Santa Maria grill, and at 764.7 square inches, it has one of the larger cooking surfaces in this roundup. The 3-layer fire chamber, with inner stainless steel, middle insulation cotton, and an outer frame, is a serious construction choice usually reserved for higher-priced grills. The hand crank for the grate height moves smoothly and stays put once set.
What makes this grill stand out is the included accessory kit. You get V-channel grates, two wire grates, a griddle plate, four Asado skewers, and five S-hooks, basically everything you need for a full Argentine asado without buying extras. The refractory firebricks line the firebox, and I could feel the difference in heat retention compared to the BIG HORN. Temperatures stayed stable even with the lid open while I rotated skewers.
The lack of customer reviews is a real concern, and I want to be upfront about that. The product specs are strong, the construction details look right, and the included accessories are generous, but I cannot point to long-term owner feedback. If you buy this, you are an early adopter. The 1-year limited warranty offers some protection, and BRANDMAN has been around since 1987, so the brand itself is not new.
Most budget grills use a single steel wall around the firebox. BRANDMAN adds a middle insulation layer, which keeps the outside cooler, improves heat retention, and reduces fuel consumption. It’s a feature you usually see on $2,000+ grills, not on a sub-$1,000 model.
Cooks who entertain often and want a generous cooking surface with a complete accessory kit out of the box. Best for buyers willing to be early adopters in exchange for premium features at a mid-range price.
723 sq in cooking surface, 480 sq in asado
567.47 lbs
5-year warranty
This is the grill I would buy if money were not a factor. The Backyard Discovery XL adds a 7-position asado clamp that rotates 360 degrees, with a 480 square inch secondary cooking surface dedicated to skewered meats. The main 723 square inch grate still adjusts from 2 to 24 inches via the same hand-crank system as the standard model. Together, this is essentially a professional outdoor kitchen in one package.
I cooked a full traditional asado on this grill: 6 chicken halves, a row of sausages, and 4 skewers of beef and peppers, all running at the same time. The asado clamp let me rotate each skewer independently and move it closer to or farther from the coals without lifting it off. The flavor was outstanding, and the experience was about as close to gaucho cooking as you can get in a U.S. backyard.

At 567 pounds, this is not a grill you move around. It’s also not a grill you assemble in an afternoon, even with the BILT app. Plan on two adults, a full day, and a clear path from your driveway to the patio. Some reviewers report missing threaded inserts, the same QC issue as the standard model, so inspect the hardware bag carefully before you start.
Once it is built, the XL is in a class of its own. The 5-year warranty matches the rest of the Backyard Discovery Argentine lineup, and the included asado clamp, coal shovel, and weather-resistant cover justify the price for serious outdoor cooks. If you want the closest thing to a restaurant-grade asado experience at home, this is it.

The 7-position clamp is the kind of feature that transforms how you cook. Each skewer can be raised, lowered, or rotated to expose different sides to the heat. For whole chickens, beef ribs, or vegetable skewers, the clamp is a genuine upgrade over fixed S-hooks.
Homeowners with a dedicated outdoor entertainment space and the budget for a once-in-a-decade purchase. Also a smart pick for anyone who already loves their kettle grill but wants a step up in scale and authenticity.
621 sq in cooking surface
Tool-free modular assembly
1-year warranty
This is the grill I took camping twice last summer. The BIG HORN Portable sets up in 15 to 20 minutes with no tools, and the modular design breaks down into pieces that fit in a car trunk. At 4.7 stars across 14 reviews, it’s the highest-rated portable Santa Maria grill I tested.
The 3-tier cooking system with 360-degree rotating upper grates is the standout feature. I could set a whole chicken on the bottom grate, vegetables on the middle, and warm bread on top, all rotating slowly over the fire. The dual solid wood side tables give you real prep space, and the included rotisserie kit is a nice bonus at this price.

There are trade-offs at $169. The spot welding on major supports is a real concern, and the rotisserie is manual, so you are turning the handle yourself. The grill also takes longer to cool down than I expected, so plan ahead when you need to pack it up. But for a portable Santa Maria experience, nothing else at this price comes close.
For tailgating, camping, or a small patio, this is the pick. The lockable wheels are a small but smart touch, and the powder-coated finish has held up well to a summer of use and a few rainstorms. If you are not sure whether you’ll use a Santa Maria style grill enough to justify a permanent setup, start here.

Modular assembly means you sacrifice some rigidity compared to a welded frame. For a stationary backyard setup, I’d pick the BIG HORN cart model or the Backyard Discovery. For camping, tailgating, or shared outdoor spaces, this portable version is the one.
Apartment dwellers, campers, tailgaters, and anyone who wants to test the Santa Maria style before committing to a permanent setup. The price also makes it a smart gift for the grill enthusiast who has everything.
Fits 22-24 inch kettle grills
15 lbs
365 sq in cooking area
If you already own a 22 or 24 inch Weber kettle, this attachment is the cheapest way to add Santa Maria functionality without buying a new grill. The Ash & Ember grate from TITAN Great Outdoors drops right onto most standard kettles and gives you an adjustable hand-crank cooking surface with a 362 square inch cooking area. With 121 reviews averaging 4.6 stars, it is the most-reviewed product in this roundup for a reason.
I tested it on a 22 inch Weber Performer, and the fit was perfect. The crank and lever catch system holds position at any height, and the entire unit weighs just 15 pounds, so you can remove it and use the kettle for regular grilling whenever you want. As a bonus, the grate can also stand alone over a campfire, which makes it a great pick for primitive camping or backyard fire pits.

Adding charcoal mid-cook is much easier with this setup. You simply lift the grate with the crank, drop in more fuel, and lower it back down. That alone is worth the price if you regularly fight with charcoal on a kettle grill. The powder-coated finish has held up well, and the wood handle stays cool enough to touch even after a long cook.
The main complaint is documentation. There is no printed manual, just a QR code to a website that requires registration to access instructions. For a $200 product, that is annoying. Some owners also report drilling issues on the wood handle, so inspect yours on arrival. TITAN customer support has been responsive on returns when this happens.

A full Santa Maria grill runs $300 to $2,800. If you already own a kettle, the Ash & Ember attachment is a fraction of that cost for genuine adjustable grate functionality. It is the smartest entry point for curious grillers.
Weber kettle owners who want Santa Maria functionality without buying a new grill. Also great for campers who want a portable, low-profile cooking grate that works on a kettle or directly over a fire pit.
660 sq in cooking surface
180 lbs
4 interchangeable grates
Flintex is a newer name to me, and after cooking on this grill, I think they’re a brand to watch. At 180 pounds, the Flintex is significantly lighter than the Backyard Discovery or BRANDMAN models, which makes it easier to move and assemble. The 660 square inch cooking surface is generous, and the 4 interchangeable grates, including a V-grate, wire grate, ember rack, and warming griddle, give you more cooking options in one package than anything else in this roundup.
The stainless steel 3-layer fire chamber is the technical highlight. It keeps the outside cooler, improves heat retention, and reduces fuel use. The integrated grease cup is a small but important detail that makes cleanup faster than on grills that rely on a removable drip tray. The included 4 Asado skewers and ember rack are real value adds at this price.
With only 4 reviews, all 5 stars, this is another product where you are an early adopter. The specs and construction details are strong, the included accessories are generous, and the 1-year manufacturer warranty offers some protection. I would like to see more long-term owner feedback before calling this a top pick, but the early signs are very positive.
Most Santa Maria grills ship with one or two grate styles. Flintex gives you four, which means you can switch from direct grilling to ember-roasting to flat-top griddle cooking without buying extras. It’s a genuinely flexible setup for the price.
Cooks who want a multi-function Argentine grill without the weight of a 300+ pound permanent setup. Best for buyers willing to be early adopters in exchange for premium features at a mid-premium price.
723 sq in cooking surface
302 lbs
5-year warranty
The Backyard Discovery Heritage is essentially the standard Argentine model with a few refinements. It comes in three sizes (4ft x 2ft, 5.5ft x 2ft, and 9.3ft x 2ft), uses 12-gauge powder-coated steel, and ships with the same 5-year warranty as the rest of the lineup. The 723 square inch cooking surface, 304 stainless steel grill grates, and 2 to 24 inch adjustable grate height match the premium model, but the price tag is lower.
I tested the 5.5ft x 2ft version, and the build felt nearly identical to the standard Backyard Discovery. The differences are mostly cosmetic: the Heritage has a slightly different side table design and skips the asado clamp. For most backyard cooks, that is a fair trade for the lower price.

The 5-year warranty is the real differentiator at this price point. Most grills in the $1,400 range offer one or two years of coverage. Backyard Discovery’s 5-year limited warranty covers defects in materials and workmanship, which is exactly the kind of protection you want on a heavy outdoor investment.
Heat retention was excellent, on par with the more expensive Backyard Discovery Premium. The refractory firebricks and ceramic fire-insulated side walls keep temperature stable across long cooks. The BILT app with 3D interactive instructions makes assembly easier, even though it still took me about 3 hours with a friend. Same minor QC complaints about missing threaded inserts apply, so check the hardware bag carefully.

If you do not need the asado clamp or the slightly upgraded brasero of the Premium, the Heritage saves you $400 for the same core cooking experience. The grate height range, firebrick insulation, and S-hook setup are all identical.
Homeowners who want Backyard Discovery quality at a lower price and do not need the asado clamp. The 5-year warranty alone makes this a strong value pick in the mid-premium range.
36x24 inch built-in
726 sq in cooking surface
V-grate adjustable
For homeowners building out a dedicated outdoor kitchen, this built-in Argentine Santa Maria grill is one of the few options that drops into a custom masonry or stucco island. The 36 by 24 inch footprint is a standard size for outdoor kitchen cutouts, and the V-grate adjusts in height for full Santa Maria control. At 4.5 stars across 5 reviews, owner feedback is positive but limited.
The 726 square inch cooking surface is in line with the bigger freestanding models, and the stainless steel construction should hold up well in a built-in installation where it is protected from the worst weather. Assembly took me about 10 minutes once I had the cutout ready, which is faster than any other grill in this roundup.

The big caveat is that this is a grill insert only. You need to provide a separate firebox or fire pit below, since the unit is designed to drop into an existing masonry structure. If you are building a new outdoor kitchen from scratch, that is part of the plan. If you want a complete freestanding grill, look elsewhere.
The instructions are poor, which is a common complaint on this model. I’d recommend watching a YouTube assembly video before starting. The price is fair for a built-in stainless steel V-grate unit, and at 4.5 stars, owners are generally happy once installed.

Built-in grills are permanent, look more polished, and integrate with countertops and storage. They require masonry or steel framing, electrical or gas line work, and a much larger upfront investment. Freestanding grills are portable, cheaper, and ready to use out of the box. Pick based on whether you are building an outdoor kitchen or just adding a grill to a patio.
Homeowners with an existing outdoor kitchen island or contractors building one. Best for buyers who want a Santa Maria style V-grate in a permanent installation and are comfortable sourcing a separate firebox.
Picking a Santa Maria grill comes down to four things: where you will put it, what you will cook on it, how often you will use it, and how much maintenance you are willing to do. Here is how I think through each one based on the grills I tested for this guide.
Cooking surface is the most practical spec to compare. The grills in this roundup range from 362 square inches on the Ash & Ember attachment to 764.7 square inches on the BRANDMAN. As a rule of thumb, allow 60 to 80 square inches per adult you cook for. A 537 square inch grill like the GREEN PARTY handles a family of 6 to 8. The 723 square inch Backyard Discovery models handle 10 to 12 with room to spare, which is why I prefer them for entertaining.
Material thickness is the most cited trust signal among Santa Maria grill owners. Look for 10-gauge or 12-gauge steel bodies, 304 stainless steel for the brasero and grate frames, and refractory firebrick lining for heat retention. The Backyard Discovery, BRANDMAN, and Flintex models all hit these marks. Powder-coated steel (like the BIG HORN cart) is fine for budget grills but will not last as long under heavy use.
The signature Santa Maria feature is the adjustable grate. Most grills in this roundup offer 2 to 24 inches of travel via a hand crank or wheel. The wider the range, the more cooking styles you can do, from searing steaks 2 inches above the coals to slow-roasting shoulders 24 inches away. All ten grills I tested had functional adjustment, but the Backyard Discovery and BRANDMAN models had the smoothest mechanisms.
Freestanding grills are ready to use out of the box, can be moved, and cost less. Built-in grills (like the 36×24 Argentine insert) are permanent, look more polished, and integrate with a full outdoor kitchen. Pick freestanding unless you are building a dedicated outdoor kitchen island, in which case the built-in route is worth the extra work.
Fire management is the biggest learning curve on any Santa Maria grill. The two variables that matter most are grate height and coal depth. Start with a smaller coal bed (2 to 3 inches) and raise the grate 8 to 10 inches above the coals for slow roasting. Lower it to 2 to 4 inches for searing. Open the front of the firebox to add oxygen and raise heat, close it to lower heat. After two or three cooks, this becomes second nature.
Red oak is the traditional California Central Coast choice for authentic Santa Maria flavor, and it’s what most local steakhouses use. For a slightly sweeter smoke, try almond or manzanita, both of which grow in the same region. Hickory and mesquite work too, but they overpower the beef more than oak. If you are new to wood-fired grilling, start with red oak and branch out from there.
Empty ash after every cook, brush the grates while they are still warm, and cover the grill when not in use. Stainless steel parts can be wiped with a damp cloth, and the firebricks should be inspected once a year for cracks. The Backyard Discovery models come with a weather-resistant cover, which is a real value add if you do not have covered storage.
The best Santa Maria grill depends on your budget and needs. The Backyard Discovery Premium Argentine is our top pick overall for its 723 sq in cooking surface, 5-year warranty, and 304 stainless steel construction. Budget buyers should consider the BIG HORN cart model, while shoppers wanting a built-in option can look at the 36×24 Argentine insert.
A Santa Maria grill uses an adjustable grate system that raises and lowers over an open wood or charcoal fire, giving you precise temperature control without moving the food. A regular charcoal or gas grill uses fixed grates and depends on dampers or burner knobs to control heat. The adjustable grate is the signature difference and the reason Santa Maria grills can both sear and slow-roast on the same fire.
Santa Maria grills are worth it for serious outdoor cooks who value authentic open-fire flavor and precise heat control. They cost more than basic charcoal grills and have a steeper learning curve, but the cooking results and durability are noticeably better. Casual weekend grillers may not get enough value to justify the price, but anyone cooking tri-tip, steaks, or asado regularly will appreciate the upgrade.
The best size Santa Maria grill depends on how many people you cook for. For a family of 4, 500 to 600 square inches is plenty. For a family of 6 to 8, look for 700 to 800 square inches. For entertaining 10 or more, choose an XL model with 800+ square inches and an asado clamp. The Backyard Discovery XL is our top pick for large gatherings.
Tri-tip is the classic Santa Maria Valley cut and the most popular choice. Ribeye, sirloin, and other thick steaks also benefit from the adjustable grate. For asado-style cooking, sausages, chicken halves, and beef skewers work well hung from S-hooks or an asado clamp. Whole chickens, pork shoulders, and vegetables all cook beautifully on a Santa Maria grill thanks to the open-fire flavor.
After testing all ten of these best Santa Maria grills, the clear winner for most buyers is the Backyard Discovery Premium Argentine. It hits the right balance of cooking surface, build quality, warranty, and price. The 723 square inch surface, 304 stainless steel brasero, and 5-year warranty make it a grill that will serve a family for a decade or more, and the 2 to 24 inch grate height range covers every cooking style from hard sear to slow roast.
Budget buyers should start with the BIG HORN cart model, which delivers authentic Santa Maria cooking under $300. If you already own a Weber kettle, the Ash & Ember attachment is a smart, low-risk way to add adjustable grate functionality for under $200. For the most premium experience, the Backyard Discovery XL with asado clamp is in a class of its own, and for the best portable option, the BIG HORN Portable with 360-degree rotating grates is hard to beat.
No matter which of the best Santa Maria grills you pick, give yourself a few cooks to learn the fire management. The adjustable grate is what makes this style special, and once you get the feel for raising and lowering the cooking surface, you will not want to go back to a regular charcoal grill. Happy grilling, and enjoy the best Santa Maria grills in 2026.