Pellet Grill Smoked Bacon Wrapped Pork Tenderloin

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Bacon-wrapped pork tenderloin on a pellet grill gives you the best of both worlds: juicy pork with a smoky edge and bacon that turns crisp around the outside instead of steaming into limp strips. The tenderloin stays lean, so the bacon does the heavy lifting here, keeping the meat protected while the smoke works its way into every slice. When it’s done right, you get a clean slice with a pink center, a sticky-spiced crust, and bacon that actually holds on.

The trick is to treat the rub and the bacon as two separate jobs. The brown sugar and paprika build a lightly lacquered exterior, while the bacon wrap shields the tenderloin from drying out at low heat. I like apple pellets for a softer smoke or hickory when I want a deeper BBQ flavor, but either way the grill stays steady at 225°F so the bacon can render slowly instead of burning before the pork reaches temperature.

Below you’ll find the timing cue that matters most, the reason a quick rest makes slicing cleaner, and a few smart ways to adapt this for different pellet grill setups.

The bacon crisped up beautifully and the pork stayed juicy all the way through. I pulled it at 145°F and after a 10-minute rest the slices held together perfectly.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save this pellet grill smoked bacon wrapped pork tenderloin for the nights when you want smoky pork with crisp bacon and almost no cleanup.

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The Part Most People Miss: Bacon Needs Time to Render, Not Just Brown

Pork tenderloin cooks fast, but bacon doesn’t. That’s the tension in this recipe. If the heat is too high, the outside of the bacon tightens before the fat has a chance to render, which leaves you with chewy patches and uneven color. Low-and-slow at 225°F gives the bacon time to do its job while the pork stays tender.

The other mistake is pulling based on color alone. Bacon-wrapped meat can look done long before the center reaches 145°F, especially if your grill runs hot near the edges. Use a thermometer and check the thickest part of the tenderloin, not the bacon seam. That’s the difference between a clean pink slice and an overcooked one.

What the Rub and Wrap Are Each Doing Here

Pellet Grill Smoked Bacon Wrapped Pork Tenderloin smoky crispy bacon
  • Pork tenderloins — These are lean, mild, and cook fast, which makes them perfect for the pellet grill. Don’t swap in pork loin and expect the same timing; loin is thicker and needs a longer cook.
  • Bacon — Thin-cut bacon wraps and renders more evenly than thick-cut here. Thick-cut bacon can stay floppy by the time the pork reaches temperature, especially on a shorter smoke.
  • Brown sugar — This adds a light tacky glaze and helps the rub cling. If you want less sweetness, cut it back a little, but don’t drop it entirely unless you’re fine with a drier-looking crust.
  • Paprika, garlic powder, and onion powder — These build the BBQ backbone without overpowering the pork. Smoked paprika works if you want deeper smoke flavor, but regular paprika keeps the profile cleaner.
  • Apple or hickory pellets — Apple gives a softer, sweeter smoke that matches the bacon nicely. Hickory is stronger and a little more old-school BBQ; use it if you want the smoke to read louder in every slice.

Building the Smoke, Then Letting the Thermometer Decide

Mixing the Rub

Stir the brown sugar, paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper together until the mixture looks even and a little sandy. Press it onto the pork tenderloins instead of dusting it lightly; the surface should look coated all the way around. If the sugar seems damp, that’s fine. It will melt into the bark as the smoke heat hits it.

Wrapping the Bacon

Lay the bacon slices around each tenderloin with a slight overlap so there are no bare spots. Keep the wrap snug, but don’t stretch the bacon tight or it can shrink back and pull away in the smoker. If a strip won’t stay put, tuck the end underneath the tenderloin. The bacon sets as it cooks and helps hold the shape.

Smoking Low and Steady

Preheat the pellet grill to 225°F before the pork goes on. Place the tenderloins directly on the grates and close the lid so the temperature stays stable. The bacon will start to turn glossy first, then slowly take on color. Pull the pork when the center hits 145°F, even if the bacon looks like it could go longer, because carryover heat will finish the job without drying the meat out.

The Rest Before the Slice

Give the tenderloins 10 minutes before cutting into them. That rest lets the juices settle so they don’t run out onto the cutting board. Slice across the grain into thick medallions and you’ll see the bacon wrap hold neatly around the outside with the pork still juicy inside. If you cut too soon, the juices spill and the slices fall apart faster.

How to Adjust This for Different Pellet Grill Setups

Use thick-cut bacon for a meatier bite

Thick-cut bacon gives you a sturdier wrap and a bigger bacon-forward bite, but it needs more time to render. If you use it, stay patient and rely on the thermometer, not the color of the bacon, because the exterior can look done before the fat softens properly.

Make it lower-carb by skipping the brown sugar

Leave out the brown sugar and increase the paprika a bit for a drier, more savory bark. You’ll lose some of the sticky crust, but the bacon and smoke carry the dish fine on their own. The pork still stays juicy as long as you don’t overcook it.

Swap in maple seasoning for a sweeter finish

A little maple seasoning in the rub leans this closer to sweet BBQ without needing a sauce. It works best with apple pellets, where the smoke reads softer and the bacon tastes rounder. Use it when you want a glazed look without brushing on anything sticky during the cook.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The bacon softens a little after chilling, but the pork stays sliceable.
  • Freezer: Freeze sliced portions wrapped tightly for up to 2 months. Thaw in the fridge overnight so the bacon and pork reheat more evenly.
  • Reheating: Warm slices in a covered skillet over low heat with a splash of water, or use a low oven until just heated through. High heat dries out tenderloin fast and makes the bacon tough.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use pork loin instead of pork tenderloin?+

You can, but the cook time will be longer and the texture will be a little firmer. Pork loin is thicker and less tender than tenderloin, so use temperature as your guide and don’t expect the same 60-90 minute window.

How do I keep the bacon from falling off?+

Overlap the bacon slightly and place the seam side down on the grill. If a strip is loose, tuck the end under the tenderloin before it goes on. As the bacon warms and starts to render, it tightens around the meat and stays put.

Can I prep the pork tenderloin ahead of time?+

Yes. You can season and wrap the tenderloins a few hours ahead, then keep them covered in the fridge until the grill is ready. I wouldn’t push it much longer than that because the salt can start pulling moisture from the pork and the bacon may soften too much.

How do I know when the pork is done?+

The safest and best texture is 145°F in the thickest part of the tenderloin. Don’t wait for the bacon to look fully crisp before pulling it, because the pork will keep cooking while it rests. A thermometer is the only cue that keeps this from drying out.

What do I serve with smoked bacon wrapped pork tenderloin?+

Anything that can handle smoky, salty pork works well: roasted potatoes, grilled vegetables, coleslaw, or cornbread. I like sides with a little acidity or crunch so the bacon doesn’t dominate the plate.

Pellet Grill Smoked Bacon Wrapped Pork Tenderloin

Pellet grill smoked bacon wrapped pork tenderloin with a smoky flavor and crispy bacon. The pork stays juicy with a pink interior, smoked until it hits 145°F, then rests before slicing.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 30 minutes
resting 10 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 55 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American BBQ
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

Pork tenderloin
  • 2 lb pork tenderloins (1-1.5 pounds each)
Bacon
  • 12 bacon slices
Dry rub
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp paprika
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • 0.5 tsp pepper

Equipment

  • 1 pellet grill

Method
 

Make the rub
  1. Mix brown sugar, paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper until evenly combined, with a uniform reddish-brown color and no dry clumps.
Season and wrap
  1. Rub the spice mixture all over the tenderloins until coated on all sides, pressing lightly so it adheres.
  2. Wrap each tenderloin with bacon slices, overlapping slightly so the bacon forms a continuous layer over the surface.
Pellet grill smoking
  1. Preheat the pellet grill to 225°F and load apple or hickory pellets for steady smoke before cooking.
  2. Smoke the tenderloins at 225°F for 60-90 minutes until the internal temperature reaches 145°F, watching for active smoke and a browned bacon exterior.
Rest and slice
  1. Let the bacon-wrapped tenderloin rest 10 minutes before slicing, so juices redistribute and the bacon firms up for cleaner cuts.

Notes

For the crispiest bacon, keep the pellet grill closed as much as possible and remove the tenderloins right when they hit 145°F for juicy slices. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 3 days; freeze cooked tenderloin up to 2 months. For a lower-sodium option, use a reduced-salt seasoning blend in place of the salt while keeping the rest of the rub the same.

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