Burger King Secret Menu
This guide explains what the off-menu builds are and how to order them without fuss. Think of these as unofficial custom orders you can usually create from regular ingredients if your location stocks them.
Set expectations: there is no separate printed list. You use customization—swaps, add-ons, and combos—to make something unique. Staff familiarity and ingredient availability vary by restaurant, so describe the build rather than a nickname.
What follows is a simple listicle. You’ll see burger-style builds, chicken sandwich ideas, mashups, sides, and desserts and drinks. Each entry shows what it is, a cashier-friendly order line, and optional tweaks for lighter or neater versions.
Quick notes: these creations often cost more. Extras like patties, bacon, cheese, or sauces add up. Ask for a total before they ring it in. Some items, such as certain fried cheeses or seasonal flavors, may be unavailable at your nearby spot.
We’ll also include a real-time price instruction block so you can check local base pricing and typical add-on costs. The tone is friendly and practical. You’ll get clear build instructions so you can order confidently on the road or with family.
What “Secret Menu” Means at Burger King Right Now
What people call a secret menu here is really a set of custom swaps you can ask for at the counter. It isn’t an official list. Stores don’t train to a single off-list roster, so success depends on staff knowledge and what’s prepped at the time.
Why it’s unofficial and can vary by location
Each location may know different nicknames. If a cashier looks puzzled, describe ingredients instead of relying on a name. That helps turn regular menu parts into the build you want.
How “Have It Your Way” makes hidden options possible
The brand’s customization culture lets you swap sauces, add patties, or tuck in onion rings. Many creative builds are just combos of menu items and add-ons.
What to expect with pricing, availability, and customization
- Start from a regular menu base and pay for extras like patties, bacon, or cheese.
- Apps may not support complex swaps — in-person orders work best.
- If the secret name fails, ask: “Can I add X, remove Y, and swap Z?”
Burger King Secret Menu Burgers Worth Ordering

Here are reliable, easy-to-order builds that turn standard items into indulgent, familiar favorites. Each entry gives a cashier-friendly line so you avoid awkward nicknames and get the exact ingredients you want.
Suicide Burger (Quad Stacker)
What it is: four patties, four cheese slices, bacon, and special sauce.
Say this at the counter: “Can I get four beef patties with four slices of cheese, bacon, and your special sauce on a regular bun?”
Tip: If staff prefer, order two double cheeseburgers and combine them yourself for the same quad stacker effect.
Mustard Whopper swap
What it is: a Whopper with mayo swapped for mustard for a sharper bite.
Say this at the counter: “I’ll have a Whopper, hold the mayo, add yellow mustard instead.”
This simple swap keeps cost low and delivers a backyard, tangy flavor.
Rodeo Burger
What it is: a cheeseburger with BBQ sauce and onion rings tucked inside.
Say this at the counter: “One cheeseburger with BBQ sauce added and an order of onion rings inside, please.”
Note: onion rings availability varies, but most locations can add them if they’re on the side.
Big Whopp build
What it is: Double Whopper with cheese, an extra bun layer, and Stacker Sauce if available.
Say this at the counter: “Double Whopper with cheese, add an extra middle bun, and Stacker Sauce on it.”
Skip the extra bun or reduce sauce to keep it manageable for kids or travel.
BK BLT-inspired build
What it is: bacon-forward Whopper Jr. or Whopper with lettuce and tomato, hold onions and pickles for a classic BLT feel.
Say this at the counter: “Whopper Jr. with extra bacon, keep lettuce and tomato, no onions or pickles; mayo optional.”
- Say-it lines avoid nicknames and focus on ingredients.
- Reduce patties or sauce to lighten any build.
- Ordering two smaller items to combine can work when registers balk at large custom stacks.
| Base item | Typical add-on | Estimated extra |
|---|---|---|
| Whopper / Cheeseburger | Extra patty | $1.50–$3.00 |
| Any burger | Bacon | $0.75–$1.50 |
| Any burger | Cheese | $0.50–$1.00 |
| Any burger | Onion rings | $1.00–$2.50 |
| Any burger | Extra bun or sauce | $0.25–$1.00 |
Beef and balance: these builds fill up fast. Cut patties, use less sauce, or skip an extra bun for a tidier meal. For more tips and full ordering lines, see our full food guide.
Chicken Sandwich Secret Menu Items and Off-Menu Builds
You can turn a standard chicken sandwich into something new with just two or three swaps. These builds use the Original Chicken Sandwich or a smaller chicken option plus simple add-ons you can order separately.
BK Chicken Parm
Order an Original Chicken Sandwich, hold the mayo, and add marinara or a marinara dip. Then add mozzarella sticks or mozzarella fries and tuck them inside the sandwich.
Ask for extra marinara on the side if you want it saucier for dipping.
BK Club
Make the Original Chicken Sandwich club-style by adding bacon. Keep lettuce and tomato or simplify toppings to reduce mess for eating on the go.
Bird ’N Beef mashup
Order a chicken sandwich (or Chicken Jr.) plus a small double cheeseburger. Remove one set of buns to avoid too much bread and stack the proteins for a hearty two-protein bite.
Register-friendly tip: if the cashier hesitates, just order the two menu items and assemble at the table. No special approval needed.
Family/travel note: these are filling. Share a build and add fries or onion rings to stretch a meal for kids or a group.
| Base sandwich | Common add-on | Typical extra |
|---|---|---|
| Original Chicken Sandwich | Bacon | $0.75–$1.50 |
| Original Chicken Sandwich | Marinara (sauce) | $0.25–$0.75 |
| Original Chicken Sandwich | Mozzarella sticks or fries (cheese) | $1.50–$3.00 |
| Any chicken or burger item | Extra cheese | $0.50–$1.00 |
Over-the-Top Mashups When You Want More Than a Regular Menu Item

Want more than a standard sandwich? Try combining two regular items for a bold, hand-held mashup. These are best ordered as two-item builds you can join at the table when staff can’t do complex assembly.
Surf & Turf: Whopper + Big Fish
Order a Whopper and a Big Fish. Remove one set of buns and stack the fish filet on top of the beef patty. It’s rich, messy, and very satisfying if you like both profiles.
How to order: “Can I get one Whopper and one Big Fish? Please hold one bun so I can stack them.”
Simplify the stack: skip one bun layer and keep only the sauces you want so it doesn’t slide apart in the wrapper.
Angry-style Heat: Spicy Sauce, Jalapeños, and Bacon
To mimic out-of-season heat, ask for spicy sauce instead of ketchup, add jalapeños if available, and include extra bacon for crunch and salt.
How to order: “I’ll take one Whopper with spicy sauce, add jalapeños and extra bacon, please.”
Availability note: jalapeños and spicy sauces vary. If they’re not stocked, swap in extra pickles, a peppery sauce, or just add more bacon.
- Frame: always order two menu items, then combine—this avoids register confusion.
- Cost check: buying two sandwiches doubles the base price. Ask the total before you pay and consider sharing.
| Build | Quick order line | Typical extra cost |
|---|---|---|
| Surf & Turf | Whopper + Big Fish, hold one bun | $2.00–$4.00 (add-ons) |
| Angry-style | Whopper with spicy sauce, jalapeños, extra bacon | $1.50–$3.50 (add-ons) |
| Simplified stack | Skip middle bun; limit sauces | $0.00–$1.00 savings |
Secret Menu Sides: The Onion Rings Hacks People Miss
If you want a no-fuss off-menu win, start with the side station. Sides are the easiest hidden-order trick because you usually only ask for a split box or one extra cup of sauce.
Frings (half fries, half onion rings) for the indecisive order
How to order: “Can I get half fries and half onion rings in the same container?” Some stores will give two small portions instead. If staff hesitate, order two sides and combine at the table.
Try this during slower times; the fryer staff may need an extra step to portion rings and fries together.
Best dipping sauce pairings to ask for at the counter
- Onion rings: zesty or BBQ-style sauce pairs well.
- Fries: ketchup or spicy mayo work best.
- Be polite: ask for a small cup, or offer to pay for extra sauce if they limit free cups.
| Side | Typical price range | How Frings rings up |
|---|---|---|
| Small Fries | $1.00–$2.00 | Usually one side |
| Onion Rings | $1.50–$3.00 | Often separate; verify locally |
| Frings (split) | $1.50–$3.00 | May ring as one or two items |
For family travel, Frings make sharing simple. They satisfy different cravings without ordering extra full menu items. For more tips on off-menu items and polite phrasing, see this hidden items revealed.
Secret Menu Drinks and Desserts for a Sweet Finish
Finish your meal with a simple, craveable sweet hack that uses only a frozen drink and soft-serve. These ideas feel special but need no hidden ingredients—just a frozen soda or coffee and a scoop of ice cream.
Frozen Coke Float and other frozen flavors
Order a frozen coke and add a scoop or small cup of vanilla soft-serve to make a frozen coke float. Sip a little first to make room so it does not overflow.
If your location stocks other frozen sodas, try Blue Raspberry or Wild Cherry the same way. The technique is the same: frozen soda plus ice cream for a playful twist.
BK Affogato-style coffee + ice cream
Order BK Café coffee (hot or espresso-style) and a cup or cone of vanilla soft-serve. Pour the coffee over the ice cream for an affogato-style finish.
Want less sweetness? Ask for the coffee black and let the ice cream sweeten the drink. Machines do go down; if soft-serve or frozen drinks are unavailable, stick with plain ice cream or coffee as a backup.
| Item | Quick build | Typical extra |
|---|---|---|
| Frozen drink + soft-serve | Frozen coke + scoop of vanilla | $1.00–$2.50 |
| Other frozen flavor + soft-serve | Wild Cherry or Blue Raspberry + vanilla | $1.00–$2.50 |
| Coffee + soft-serve | Café coffee poured over vanilla | $1.50–$3.00 |
These easy dessert hacks are quick to order at the counter. Check local pricing and availability at your nearby Burger King before you buy to confirm current items and cost.
Ordering the Burger King Secret Menu Without the Awkwardness
Ordering a custom item works best when you keep the request short and specific.
Start with a regular menu base. Ask for two clear changes: add, hold, or swap. Keep the phrasing simple so staff can ring it up fast.
Use lines like: “Can I get a Whopper, no mayo, add mustard?” or “Cheeseburger with onion rings and BBQ sauce, please.” Avoid nicknames; list ingredients plainly so the kitchen knows what to prep.
Choose quieter times and be ready to repeat the request. Check the receipt for extra patty, bacon, cheese, and sauce charges before you leave.
If assembly is denied, order components and build it yourself. Remember: one smart swap often gives the same flavor without raising the price too much.