It is one of the most common debates among Korean fried chicken fans, and it spills across TikTok comment sections constantly: Bonchon vs bb.q Chicken? Both are South Korean imports, both fry their chicken to a glassy crunch, and both have grown fast in the U.S. But order from each back to back and you will notice they are chasing slightly different things. Here is an honest, side-by-side breakdown to help you pick.

Quick verdict
- Choose Bonchon if you want a bigger overall menu, reliable soy-garlic excellence, and a location that is probably near you.
- Choose bb.q Chicken if you want the widest range of sauces to experiment with and you love an ultra-crispy skin built for flavor.
First, what is bb.q Chicken?
A lot of Americans assume “bb.q” means barbecue. It does not, it stands for “best of the best quality.” Founded in Seoul in 1995, bb.q has grown into one of the largest fried chicken brands on the planet, with thousands of units across dozens of countries and a rapidly expanding North American footprint. Its identity is built on flavor variety and a famously crackly skin.
Bonchon, meanwhile, came out of Busan, reached the U.S. in 2006, and built its name on double-fried, hand-brushed chicken and a menu that reaches well beyond wings.
Round 1: The crunch
Both chains deliver the signature Korean double-fried crispness, and honestly this round is close. bb.q is repeatedly praised for an exceptionally crackly skin many reviewers consider it a high point of the category. Bonchon’s crunch is also excellent and, crucially, very consistent across locations. Call it a near-tie, with bb.q getting a slight nod from texture purists.
Edge: bb.q, narrowly.
Side by side, bb.q’s skin is the crispier of the two right out of the bag, but Bonchon’s Soy Garlic is the one that reheats best the next day those sugars caramelize in the air fryer. If leftovers are likely, that tips the scale toward Bonchon.
Read More: How to reheat Bonchon Chicken?
Round 2: The sauces
This is bb.q’s strongest round. It offers well over a dozen flavors, anchored by the popular Original Golden and a light honey garlic, plus a smoky-sweet galbi sauce and rotating limited editions. If you like to explore, bb.q gives you the most to play with.
Bonchon keeps a tighter, highly refined lineup Soy Garlic, Spicy, Korean BBQ, Yangnyeom, and Classic Crunch with the option to split any order Half & Half. Fewer choices, but each one dialed in, and the Soy Garlic in particular is a benchmark.
Edge: bb.q for variety; Bonchon for that perfected soy garlic.
Read More: Bonchon Sauces Ranked
Round 3: The wider menu
Bonchon pulls ahead here. Beyond chicken, you can order bibimbap, bulgogi, fries, Korean street corn, japchae, and a Korean-style chicken sandwich – useful when you are feeding a group with mixed cravings. bb.q is more tightly focused on chicken in its many forms (whole, wings, boneless), which is great if chicken is all you want, but less flexible for a varied table.
Edge: Bonchon.
Round 4: Price and value
Both are premium relative to American fast food. They land in a similar range overall, with the better value usually coming down to local promotions and combo deals rather than a clear brand-wide gap. Bonchon’s combos and group boxes, plus deals like $1-wing days at some locations, can tip value in its favor.
Edge: Slight lean to Bonchon on deals and combos.
Round 5: Can you find one?
Bonchon currently has the broader, more established U.S. presence and is expanding into more cities. bb.q is growing quickly too, but for most people right now, a Bonchon is more likely to be within reach.
Edge: Bonchon.
The scorecard
| Category | Winner |
| Crunch | bb.q (narrow) |
| Sauce variety | bb.q |
| Signature sauce | Bonchon (soy garlic) |
| Menu range | Bonchon |
| Value / deals | Bonchon |
| Availability | Bonchon |
So who wins?
On the scorecard, Bonchon takes more rounds, on menu range, value, and availability while bb.q wins the two rounds flavor-and-texture obsessives care most about: crunch and sauce variety.
The honest takeaway: if you want a dependable, varied, easy-to-reach meal, Bonchon is the safer bet. If you specifically want to explore a big flavor menu on extra-crispy skin and have a bb.q nearby, it is genuinely worth it. Many fans simply keep both in rotation.
The deciding factor is simple and a little boring: availability and consistency. Bonchon is the one most people can reliably reach, and its reputation for consistency is well earned. bb.q is the one to seek out when you want to play the flavor field.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Bonchon or bb.q Chicken better?
Bonchon wins on menu range, value, and availability; bb.q wins on sauce variety and a slightly crispier skin. Your pick depends on whether you value convenience and variety (Bonchon) or flavor experimentation (bb.q).
Does bb.q stand for barbecue?
No. bb.q stands for “best of the best quality.” It is a Korean fried chicken chain, not a barbecue restaurant.
Which has more sauce options?
bb.q, with well over a dozen flavors. Bonchon offers five refined sauces plus Half & Half ordering.
Which has more U.S. locations?
Bonchon has the broader, more established U.S. presence right now, though bb.q is expanding quickly.
Which is crispier?
Both are excellent. bb.q’s skin earns a slight edge from texture purists, while Bonchon’s crunch is praised for consistency.

Alex Kim is the pen name of the lead writer and editor at BonchonMenuPrice.com. Every guide is research-based prices and nutrition details are compiled from official Bonchon menus and cross-checked across multiple US locations, with regular updates whenever the menu changes.
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