Grilled shrimp boil in foil packets gives you all the best parts of a seafood boil without hauling out a giant pot. The shrimp stay juicy, the potatoes turn buttery, the corn picks up the seasoning from the sausage and Old Bay, and every packet opens up like a little built-in dinner reveal.
The trick is par-cooking the potatoes before everything hits the grill. That keeps them tender by the time the shrimp are done instead of leaving you with firm, undercooked pieces while the seafood is already overcooked. Heavy-duty foil matters here too, because you want a tight seal and enough strength to hold up over high heat without tearing.
Below you’ll find the timing that keeps the shrimp from getting rubbery, the ingredient swaps that still make sense, and the one step that makes cleanup almost laughably easy.
The potatoes came out perfectly tender, and the shrimp stayed plump instead of turning chewy. I opened the packets at the table and everyone went straight for the sausage and corn first.
Save these grilled shrimp boil foil packets for the nights when you want smoky sausage, tender shrimp, and Old Bay corn without washing a stockpot.
The Timing Trick That Keeps the Shrimp Tender
A shrimp boil in foil packets lives or dies on timing. The potatoes need a head start because they take longer than everything else, and if they go in raw they’ll still be hard when the shrimp are done. Parboiling them for 8 minutes gives them a head start without turning them to mush, which matters because they still need enough structure to hold up on the grill.
The other thing that protects the shrimp is the packet itself. Once sealed, the steam inside finishes the seafood fast and evenly, but it also means there’s no room to recover from overcooking. Pull the packets as soon as the shrimp are pink, curled, and opaque. If they tighten into little C-shapes, they’re ready; if they curl into tight O-shapes, they’ve gone too far.
What the Butter, Old Bay, and Sausage Are Doing Here

- Large shrimp — Bigger shrimp hold up better on the grill and stay juicy in the packet. Medium shrimp cook faster and can get rubbery before the potatoes are ready, so large is the safer call here.
- Baby potatoes — These are the backbone of the packet. Halving them helps them cook through during the grill time, and the parboil keeps the centers soft instead of chalky.
- Smoked sausage — This brings salt, fat, and a little charred, savory depth that plain seafood doesn’t have on its own. Kielbasa or andouille both work; andouille gives you more heat, while kielbasa keeps it milder.
- Old Bay seasoning — There isn’t a real substitute that tastes the same, because Old Bay is doing the heavy lifting for the whole boil-style flavor. If you have to improvise, use a mix of paprika, celery salt, black pepper, and a little cayenne, but expect a different result.
- Heavy-duty foil — This is one place where the sturdy stuff matters. Thin foil tears more easily when you’re folding and flipping packets over hot grates.
How to Build the Packets So Everything Finishes at the Same Time
Parboil the Potatoes First
Bring the potatoes to a boil and cook them just until a fork slips in with a little resistance, about 8 minutes. You want them partially cooked, not fully soft, because the grill will finish the job. Drain them well so the packets don’t turn watery, which can dilute the seasoning and make the vegetables steam instead of roast a bit inside the foil.
Season the Butter, Then Coat Everything
Stir the melted butter, Old Bay, and garlic together before it touches the food. That gives you an even coating instead of streaks of seasoning in one packet and bland spots in another. Tossing the ingredients in the seasoned butter before sealing is what helps the shrimp, potatoes, corn, and sausage all taste like they came from the same pot.
Seal the Foil Tight and Grill Hot
Divide the mixture among the foil sheets, fold each one into a tight packet, and crimp the seams well. You want steam to stay inside, but you don’t want the packets so tight that they burst when the butter bubbles. Grill over medium-high heat for 12 to 15 minutes, then open one packet and check the shrimp. If they’re pink and opaque and the potatoes are tender all the way through, they’re ready.
Finish With Lemon at the Table
Open the packets carefully because the steam will rush out fast. Lemon wedges cut through the butter and sausage richness, and fresh parsley gives the whole dish a cleaner finish. Serve the packets opened for presentation or keep them closed until the table if you want the full steam-show effect.
How to Adapt These Foil Packets for Different Grills and Diets
Make It Dairy-Free Without Losing the Buttered Finish
Swap the butter for olive oil or a plant-based butter. Olive oil gives you a cleaner, lighter finish, while vegan butter keeps that classic rich coating. Either one still carries the Old Bay and garlic well, though you’ll lose a little of the round, buttery sweetness.
Use Kielbasa for a Milder Packet
Kielbasa gives you the same smoky backbone without much heat. If you’re serving kids or anyone who doesn’t love spicy food, it’s the easiest swap and doesn’t change the cook time. Andouille works too, but it pushes the dish toward sharper spice and more pepper.
Make It Low-Carb by Swapping the Potatoes
If you want a lower-carb version, replace the potatoes with cauliflower florets or chunks of zucchini added near the end of cooking. Cauliflower holds up better than zucchini, which softens fast, but neither has the same hearty bite as potatoes. Add them only after the sausage and corn are in the packet so they don’t turn mushy.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The shrimp is best the first night, and the potatoes will hold their texture better than the seafood.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing the finished packets. Shrimp tends to get watery and grainy after thawing, and the vegetables lose their best texture.
- Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of water or butter, or warm in a 300°F oven until hot. High heat is what dries out the shrimp and makes the sausage casing split.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Grilled Shrimp Boil in Foil Packets
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a pot of water to a boil, then cook baby potatoes for 8 minutes until partially cooked; drain and set aside.
- In a bowl, mix melted butter, Old Bay seasoning, and minced garlic until evenly combined.
- Lay out 4 large sheets of heavy-duty foil and divide shrimp, partially cooked potatoes, corn, and sliced smoked sausage among them.
- Drizzle the seasoned butter mixture over the contents of each packet so everything is lightly coated.
- Fold the foil over the filling to seal into tight packets, leaving no gaps for steam to escape.
- Grill the sealed packets over medium-high heat for 12-15 minutes, until shrimp are pink and cooked through.
- Open carefully and serve immediately with lemon wedges and fresh parsley.