Smoked turkey is one of those dishes that goes from amazing to disappointing based on one variable: how juicy the white meat stays. The brine is the difference. After cycling through homemade recipes and pre-mixed brines for many Thanksgivings, here are the five turkey brines I would actually buy and use, whether you brine wet or dry.

BrineTypeYieldsBest For
Diamond Crystal Kosher SaltDIY base1 to many birdsCustom dry brine
Williams Sonoma Turkey BrineWet pre-mix1 large birdClassic wet brine
Pit Boss Pro Series Apple BrineWet pre-mix1 birdSweet apple smoke profile
Killer Hogs Hot RubDry brine plus rub1 to 2 birdsAll-in-one dry approach
Morton Tender Quick (curing)Cure saltMany birdsSmoke-cured ham-style turkey

Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt

For dry brining, plain Diamond Crystal kosher salt is the right starting point. Coarse grains cling to the skin and pull moisture evenly. Use one tablespoon of Diamond Crystal per 5 pounds of bird. (Use less if you use Morton kosher because the grains are denser.) Apply 24 to 72 hours ahead, uncovered in the fridge.

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Williams Sonoma Turkey Brine

The Williams Sonoma brine kit is the wet brine I recommend most. Premixed with kosher salt, sugar, herbs, citrus peel, and pickling spice. Just add water and you have a solid wet brine ready to go. Yields enough for a 14 to 18 pound bird with 12 to 24 hours of submersion.

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Pit Boss Pro Series Apple Brine

The Pit Boss apple brine is specifically tuned for smoker use. Apple, brown sugar, and a hint of cinnamon produce a turkey that complements apple, hickory, and pecan smoke. Sweeter than the Williams Sonoma - sugar carries flavor deep into the meat over a 12-hour wet brine.

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Killer Hogs Hot Rub

Killer Hogs Hot is technically a rub but functions as a dry brine when applied 24 to 48 hours before smoking. Salt, paprika, and spices that pull moisture and then redistribute as flavor. Skin gets a beautiful color from smoker heat. The all-in-one approach saves a step.

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Morton Tender Quick

For ham-style smoked turkey with a pink-cured look and deep cured flavor, Morton Tender Quick is the cure salt. Uses nitrate and nitrite plus salt for true curing. Different from a brine - the bird becomes a cured product. Best for specialty smoked turkeys, not Thanksgiving dinner.

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What Matters Most

Salt concentration is the only thing that really matters for moisture retention. Too little does nothing. Too much makes the meat inedible. Use measured recipes, not eyeballed amounts. After salt, brine duration. Going longer than recommended ruins texture as surely as too short does nothing. Finally, skin handling - wet brine produces rubbery skin unless you dry it overnight uncovered in the fridge after the brine.

My Setup

For smoker turkey I dry brine 48 hours ahead with Diamond Crystal kosher salt plus crushed peppercorns and dried sage. The bird sits uncovered on a wire rack in the fridge so skin dries evenly. The morning of cooking I rub butter under the skin and start the smoker at 275 degrees. Total time from brine start to plated turkey: about 56 hours, of which 5 hours are active.

Common Mistakes

Over-brining is the most common mistake. Twice as long does not mean twice as good - it means inedibly salty. The next mistake is brining a kosher or pre-brined supermarket turkey. They are already salted and will be ruined by a second brine. Read the label. Finally, do not skip drying the skin after a wet brine. Wet skin on the smoker becomes rubbery, not crispy.

Final Recommendation

For most smoker users dry brining with Diamond Crystal kosher salt is the right approach. For traditional wet brine the Williams Sonoma kit is convenient and reliable. For smoke-pairing flavor the Pit Boss apple brine is excellent. Killer Hogs is the all-in-one pick. Morton Tender Quick is for specialty cured turkey only.

Frequently asked questions

Wet brine or dry brine for smoked turkey?+

Both work, but they produce different results. Wet brine adds moisture and is more forgiving, but it can make skin rubbery and the meat slightly waterlogged. Dry brine pulls out moisture first then redistributes it, producing crispier skin and more concentrated flavor. For smoker use I usually prefer dry.

How long do I brine a turkey before smoking?+

Wet brine 12 to 24 hours, no longer. Dry brine 24 to 72 hours uncovered in the fridge. Over-brining makes meat unpleasantly salty and texturally mushy. Time matters as much as the brine recipe itself.

Independent video for additional perspective on 5 Best Turkey Brine For Smoker of 2026.

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TR
Author

Tom Reeves

Senior Electronics & TV Editor

Tom Reeves has reviewed consumer electronics for over a decade, with a focus on televisions, monitors, laptops, and smart home devices. He worked as a professional display calibrator before moving into editorial, and he brings that hands-on technical background to every TV and monitor review. At TheTestedHub, Tom covers display calibration, computer monitors, laptops and 2-in-1s, smart home platforms, home theater setups, and HDR performance.