There are barbecue joints, and then there is Q39. Tucked into the heart of Midtown Kansas City on McGee Street, this place occupies a category entirely its own — part competition pit master laboratory, part soulful neighborhood dining room, and entirely the kind of restaurant that makes you rearrange your afternoon plans just to linger a little longer.
Q39 was opened by Chef Rob Magee, a Kansas City native and competition barbecue champion who wanted to bring the precision and obsession of the competition circuit to a sit-down restaurant experience. The result is something that feels both elevated and deeply unpretentious. The space itself is warm and industrial — exposed brick, dark wood, open kitchen energy — with a buzz that tells you immediately this is not a place people stumble into by accident. Everyone here came on purpose.
Let’s talk about the food, because that is, without question, the whole reason to make the trip. The burnt ends are the stuff of local legend: tender, caramelized cubes of brisket with a bark so perfectly developed it practically shatters. If you have never understood why Kansas City considers itself the barbecue capital of the world, one order of these will settle the debate permanently. The smoked chicken deserves equal attention — impossibly juicy, with a smoke ring so pronounced it looks like a textbook illustration. Order the half chicken and you will not regret a single calorie.
The sides are not an afterthought here. The crispy Brussels sprouts with bacon and a sweet-tangy glaze have converted more than a few vegetable skeptics, and the mac and cheese is rich enough to qualify as a full commitment. If you are bringing a group, do yourselves the favor of ordering a sampler platter and sharing everything. The conversation around that table will be lively.
What sets Q39 apart from the classic Kansas City barbecue experience — the walk-up counters, the butcher paper, the folding tables — is the full-service setting without any sacrifice of authenticity. You get a real cocktail menu, attentive service, and a thoughtfully curated beer list alongside the smoke and sauce. It is a genuinely complete dining experience rather than a quick meal on the way somewhere else.
Midtown Kansas City is an excellent neighborhood to explore before or after your meal. You are a short drive from the 18th and Vine Jazz District, the Crossroads Arts District, and some of the city’s best independent coffee shops and boutiques. But honestly, after a full spread at Q39, a slow walk around the block is about all the ambition most visitors can muster — and that is perfectly fine.
Go hungry, go with people you like, and go ready to talk about it for weeks afterward. Q39 is the kind of place that earns its reputation every single day, and Kansas City is better for having it.