The Best Grilled Salmon

Category: Dinner Recipes

Perfectly grilled salmon should come off the grate with crisp skin, clean grill marks, and flesh that flakes in big, moist pieces instead of drying out at the edges. The best version doesn’t need much beyond a short marinade and a hot grill, but those two things have to be handled with a little care or the fish either sticks, overcooks, or turns bland.

This version uses olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, and Dijon mustard to season the salmon without burying it. The mustard helps the marinade cling, the oil protects the surface, and the brief 15-minute rest is just long enough to season the fish without starting to cure it. That short window matters. Leave salmon in acid too long and the texture changes before it even hits the grill.

Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: getting the grates hot and oiled enough that the salmon releases on its own, plus the easiest way to judge doneness without guessing.

The skin crisped up beautifully and the salmon lifted off the grill without tearing. The Dijon-lemon marinade was light but gave the fish a bright, clean finish.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save this grilled salmon for the nights when you want crisp skin, juicy flakes, and a fast marinade that doesn’t overpower the fish.

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The Part That Stops Salmon From Sticking to the Grill

The biggest mistake with grilled salmon is turning it too soon. Once the skin hits a hot, clean grate, it needs time to sear and release. If you try to force it early, the skin tears and the fillet falls apart before the flesh has a chance to set.

Medium-high heat matters here because you want the surface to cook fast enough to develop color, but not so hot that the marinade burns before the center is done. The salmon also needs to be placed skin-side down first. That protects the flesh, helps the skin crisp, and gives you a more forgiving window if one fillet is thicker than the others.

  • Skin-on salmon — The skin acts like a built-in shield on the grill. It helps hold the fillet together and gives you that crisp, savory layer that skinless salmon can’t match.
  • Dijon mustard — This does more than add flavor. It helps the oil and lemon stay emulsified long enough to coat the fish evenly, which is why the seasoning clings instead of sliding off.
  • Lemon juice — A little brightens the salmon, but the short marinating time is important. Too much time in acid and the surface starts to firm up in an unpleasant way before cooking.
  • Fresh dill — Use it at the end, not in the marinade, so its fresh anise-like flavor stays clean and lively instead of going dull over heat.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing on the Grill

Grilled salmon crispy skin tender flaky

The olive oil coats the salmon and helps the surface brown instead of drying out. It also carries the garlic and Dijon across the fish so every bite gets seasoning, not just the top. Use a decent oil here, but it doesn’t need to be fancy.

Garlic should be minced fine so it doesn’t burn on the grill grates or sit in harsh little chunks on the finished fish. The mustard can be the standard yellow or Dijon-style you already keep in the fridge, but Dijon gives a deeper, sharper edge that works better with salmon. If you’re out of dill, parsley is the safest substitute, though it won’t give the same herbal lift.

Getting the Salmon From Raw to Just-Set

Mixing the Marinade

Stir the olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, Dijon mustard, salt, and pepper until the mixture looks slightly thickened and glossy. That means the mustard has helped it come together enough to coat the fish. Brush it over the salmon and let the fillets sit for 15 minutes, no longer. If they sit much longer, the lemon starts changing the surface texture before the heat does.

Heating and Oiling the Grates

Preheat the grill to medium-high and oil the grates well before the salmon goes on. The grates should be hot enough that the fish sizzles immediately, but not so blistering that the marinade scorches on contact. A clean, well-oiled grate is the difference between a fillet that lifts cleanly and one that leaves half its skin behind.

Cooking Skin-Side Down First

Set the salmon skin-side down and don’t move it for 6 to 8 minutes. You want the skin to crisp and the flesh on the bottom to turn opaque about halfway up the fillet. If the salmon clings to the grate, it usually needs another minute; when it’s ready, it releases naturally. That’s your cue, not the clock alone.

Finishing the Flip

Turn the salmon carefully and grill the second side for 2 to 3 minutes, just until the center reaches your preferred doneness. The fish should flake with a fork but still look moist in the middle. Pull it off a little early if you like a softer center, because carryover heat will keep cooking it while it rests. Finish with dill and lemon wedges right before serving so the bright flavors stay fresh.

How to Adapt Grilled Salmon Without Losing the Good Part

Dairy-Free and Naturally Gluten-Free

This recipe already fits both needs without changes, which is part of why it works so well for a crowd. Just keep an eye on any seasoning blends you add on the side and stick with plain mustard and spices rather than pre-mixed sauces that can hide flour or dairy.

No-Grill Oven Broiler Version

Set the salmon skin-side down on a well-oiled sheet pan and broil it a few inches from the heat. You’ll lose the smoky grill flavor, but you’ll still get good browning and a juicy center. Watch closely, because broilers go from browned to burned in a minute.

Swap the Herb at the End

Dill gives the cleanest match, but parsley, chives, or tarragon all work in different ways. Parsley keeps things mild, chives add a gentle onion note, and tarragon turns the dish a little more aromatic and assertive. Use the herb as a finishing touch so it stays bright.

If Your Fillets Are Thicker or Thinner

Thicker salmon needs the full grilling time on the skin side before you even think about flipping. Thinner pieces may only need a few minutes total and can dry out fast, so use color and texture instead of forcing them to match the clock exactly. The center should still look slightly glossy when you pull it.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The skin softens, but the salmon stays good for bowls, salads, or quick lunches.
  • Freezer: It freezes, but the texture is never as good after thawing. If you do freeze it, wrap it tightly and use it within 1 month for the best chance of keeping it from drying out.
  • Reheating: Warm it gently in a low oven, covered loosely with foil, just until heated through. High heat dries salmon out fast, and the skin won’t re-crisp well once it’s chilled.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I grill salmon without the skin?+

You can, but it’s harder to keep the fish intact on the grill. If you use skinless salmon, oil the grates very well and shorten the first side slightly so the fish firms up before you try to turn it. A grill pan or fish basket also helps a lot with skinless fillets.

How do I know when grilled salmon is done?+

The salmon should flake easily with a fork and look mostly opaque, but the center can still be slightly glossy if you want it juicier. If it feels firm all the way through, it’s probably gone a minute too far. Pull it early if you’re unsure, because it keeps cooking off the heat.

Can I marinate the salmon overnight?+

I wouldn’t. The lemon juice in the marinade will start to change the texture if it sits too long, and salmon is delicate enough that you’ll taste the difference. Fifteen minutes is enough to season the surface without turning the fish chalky.

How do I stop salmon from sticking to the grill?+

Start with hot, clean, oiled grates and put the salmon on skin-side down. Then leave it alone until it releases naturally. If you try to move it before the crust forms, it will tear, and that’s usually the reason people think grilled salmon is hard.

Can I use frozen salmon for this recipe?+

Yes, as long as it’s fully thawed and patted dry before marinating. Extra moisture keeps the skin from crisping and can make the salmon steam instead of grill. If the fillets look wet on the surface, blot them before adding the marinade.

The Best Grilled Salmon

Grilled salmon with crispy skin and tender, flaky flesh—marinated briefly in lemon, garlic, and Dijon, then cooked skin-side down for grill marks. This easy seafood main dish delivers bold flavor without complicated steps, with a healthy omega-3 boost.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Marinating 15 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

The marinade and seasonings
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 2 garlic
  • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 1 salt
  • 1 pepper
Salmon and serving
  • 4 salmon fillets skin-on 6 oz each
  • 1 fresh dill
  • 1 lemon wedges

Equipment

  • 1 grill

Method
 

Make the marinade
  1. In a bowl, mix olive oil, lemon juice, minced garlic, Dijon mustard, salt, and pepper until combined.
  2. Brush the marinade over the salmon fillets, then let them sit for 15 minutes to marinate.
Grill the salmon
  1. Preheat the grill to medium-high heat and oil the grates well so the skin crisps without sticking.
  2. Place salmon on the grill skin-side down and close the lid if possible.
  3. Grill for 6-8 minutes skin-side down without moving, until the edges look set and you see grill marks.
  4. Carefully flip the salmon and grill for 2-3 minutes until cooked to your desired doneness.
Serve
  1. Transfer salmon to plates and serve immediately with fresh dill and lemon wedges.

Notes

Pro tip: keep the salmon skin-side down and avoid moving it during the first 6-8 minutes for maximum crisping. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days; reheat gently so it stays flaky. Freezing is not recommended because the texture softens after thawing. For a lighter option, use reduced-sodium salt or omit added salt and increase black pepper and lemon for punch.

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