Juicy grilled chicken, charred peppers, and onions, and a creamy spicy sauce that clings to every bite make these Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs the kind of dinner people reach for fast. The chicken stays tender on the grill, while the bang bang sauce brings sweet heat and just enough richness to turn a simple skewer into something worth repeating.
This version works because the chicken gets a short marinade-style rest with oil, salt, and pepper before it hits the grill, which helps the surface brown without drying out. The sauce is mixed separately, so the mayonnaise stays cool and creamy instead of breaking under heat, and the sweet chili sauce keeps the sriracha from taking over. A little honey rounds out the sharp edges and gives the whole dish that glossy finish people remember.
Below, you’ll find the small timing details that keep the chicken juicy, the best way to thread the skewers so the vegetables cook at the same pace, and a few smart swaps for making the sauce milder or hotter depending on who’s eating.
The sauce had the perfect balance of sweet and heat, and the chicken stayed juicy instead of drying out on the grill. I kept going back for just one more kabob.
Love the sticky sweet heat and juicy grilled chicken in these Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs? Save this one for your next skewer night.
The Trick to Grilled Chicken Kabobs That Stay Juicy Instead of Turning Tough
The biggest mistake with chicken kabobs is leaving the pieces too large or cooking them until the vegetables are soft and the chicken is past done. Cubed chicken breast cooks fast, but it also dries out fast if the grill is too hot or the pieces are uneven. Keeping the cubes similar in size means the kabobs finish at the same time, and the short rest after seasoning gives the salt a chance to pull the surface into better shape for browning.
Grill over medium-high heat, not screaming-hot flames. You want steady browning on the outside and juicy chicken at the center, with the peppers and onions just tender and a little blistered. If the skewers are crowded too tightly, the chicken steams instead of searing, so leave a little space between pieces.
What the Sauce and Skewer Ingredients Are Doing Here

- Chicken breasts — Breast meat stays lean and clean-tasting here, which gives the bang bang sauce room to shine. Cut it into even cubes so it cooks at the same pace on every skewer. If you swap in chicken thighs, you’ll get a little more forgiveness and extra juiciness, but the final bite will be richer.
- Olive oil — This helps the seasoning cling and encourages better browning on the grill. You don’t need an expensive bottle for this; a standard cooking olive oil is fine.
- Sweet chili sauce — This is the backbone of the sauce because it brings sweetness, vinegar, and a little heat all at once. There isn’t a perfect substitute that tastes the same, but in a pinch you can use a mix of honey, rice vinegar, and a pinch of red pepper flakes.
- Sriracha — This is where the sharp heat comes from. Start with the listed amount, then adjust after tasting the sauce if you want a gentler finish or more fire.
- Mayonnaise — It gives the sauce its creamy body and helps it cling to the kabobs instead of running off the plate. Use a mayo you already like the taste of, because its flavor comes through.
- Bell peppers and onions — These do more than fill space on the skewer. They add sweetness, color, and a little contrast against the chicken, but they need to be cut large enough that they don’t collapse before the meat is done.
Grilling the Kabobs and Finishing the Sauce at the Right Moment
Mix the Sauce First
Stir the mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, and honey together until the sauce looks smooth and glossy. Taste it before the chicken goes on the grill, because that’s the easiest moment to adjust the heat or sweetness. If it looks loose, don’t worry — it thickens slightly as it sits. Keep it out of the sun and drizzle it on after grilling so it stays creamy instead of melting off the kabobs.
Thread the Skewers with Even Spacing
Alternate chicken, peppers, and onions so each skewer has a balanced mix of ingredients. Leave a small gap between pieces instead of packing them tight, which lets heat move around the food instead of trapping steam. If your vegetables are cut too small, they’ll soften before the chicken is done, so keep them in sturdy chunks.
Grill Until the Chicken Is Just Cooked Through
Lay the skewers over medium-high heat and cook for 5 to 6 minutes per side, turning once the first side has good grill marks and the chicken releases without sticking. The chicken should feel firm but still springy, and the vegetables should show charred edges without turning limp. If the outside browns too fast before the chicken is cooked, move the skewers to a cooler part of the grill and finish them there.
Finish with Sauce and Garnishes
Drizzle the bang bang sauce over the hot kabobs after they come off the grill, then finish with sliced green onions and sesame seeds. Putting the sauce on at the end keeps the coating creamy and bright instead of scorched. If you want a heavier coating, serve extra sauce on the side and spoon more over the top at the table.
Three Ways to Adjust the Heat, the Protein, or the Grill Setup
Milder Kabobs for Mixed Heat Tastes
Cut the sriracha in half and add a little more honey if you want the sauce to lean sweet instead of hot. You’ll still get the creamy bang bang texture and the sweet chili backbone, just with a softer finish that works better for kids or anyone who doesn’t want a lot of burn.
Dairy-Free and Egg-Free Swap
Use a good vegan mayonnaise in place of regular mayo and keep the rest of the sauce the same. The texture stays creamy, though the flavor will be a touch lighter, so taste and add a little more sweet chili sauce if needed.
Chicken Thigh Kabobs
Boneless skinless thighs can replace the breasts one-for-one. They take a minute or two longer on the grill and stay a little more forgiving if your heat runs high, but they bring a richer, juicier bite that stands up well to the sauce.
Make-Ahead Grill Night
You can mix the sauce and cube the chicken a day ahead, then thread the skewers right before grilling. Keep the chicken chilled and wait to add the sauce until serving so the kabobs stay crisp at the edges instead of getting soggy.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store the cooked chicken and vegetables in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The sauce can be kept separately for the same amount of time.
- Freezer: The cooked kabobs freeze, but the vegetables soften after thawing. For the best texture, freeze the chicken only and make fresh skewers with new vegetables.
- Reheating: Warm the kabobs in a 325°F oven until heated through, or use a skillet over medium-low heat. High heat dries the chicken fast and can make the sauce separate if you’ve already added it.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Bang Bang Chicken Kabobs
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Season the cubed chicken with olive oil, salt, and pepper until evenly coated, then set it aside to marinate for 30 minutes.
- Thread the chicken and bell peppers and onions onto the soaked wooden skewers with even spacing.
- Grill the kabobs over medium-high heat for 5-6 minutes per side, turning once, until cooked through and lightly charred.
- Mix mayonnaise, sweet chili sauce, sriracha, and honey until smooth and pourable.
- Drizzle the bang bang sauce over the grilled kabobs so it streams in ribbons.
- Garnish with green onions and sesame seeds for a fresh finish and visible speckle.