I used to keep a box of fajita seasoning packets in the back of the pantry like a security blanket. One packet per pound of chicken, tear and pour, done. Easy. Convenient. Exactly the kind of thing I told myself was fine.
Then I started reading the back of the packet.
Maltodextrin. Silicon dioxide. Natural flavors, which is just a legal way of saying we are not telling you what this actually is. For something that is supposed to be salt, spices, and a little heat.
I made my own batch that afternoon out of curiosity. Same spices I already had. Ten minutes. One jar. And it was better. Not a little better. Noticeably, obviously, unmistakably better.
That was the last packet I ever bought.

Homemade fajita seasoning in a nutshell: Combine chili powder, cumin, smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, oregano, salt, black pepper, and a pinch of cayenne. Mix, store in an airtight jar, and it lasts up to 12 months. Real flavor, no fillers, and it costs a fraction of what packets charge you for the convenience of not measuring.
WHY HOMEMADE FAJITA SEASONING IS WORTH THE 5 MINUTES
Here is the thing nobody tells you about seasoning packets: you are not paying for the spices. You are paying for the packet, the branding, the distribution chain, and a shelf life that requires preservatives you would not choose to eat if you saw them listed on a restaurant menu.
A packet of fajita seasoning costs around $1.50 and seasons one pound of meat. A batch of this recipe costs pennies, seasons multiple meals, and lasts a year in a jar on your shelf.
That is the whole argument. You already have the spices. You are just not mixing them yourself yet.
For anyone building a self-sufficient pantry, whether you are stocking up for a Yellowstone winter, prepping for a camping trip, or just tired of running to the store every time you want fajitas, this is one of the easiest swaps you can make. If you want to see all the seasoning blends worth making from scratch, this post has the full list: Seasoning Blends
THE KODA KINGDOM FAJITA SEASONING RECIPE
This is a classic, balanced Tex-Mex blend. Not too smoky, not too spicy. Just the real flavor profile that makes fajitas taste like fajitas. The kind of seasoning that works on chicken, beef, shrimp, or vegetables without fighting the other flavors.

Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons chili powder
- 1 tablespoon ground cumin
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
- 1 teaspoon salt (I use Baja Gold Salt for the mineral content)
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper (adjust to your heat preference)
Yield: approximately 1/3 cup, enough for 4 to 5 meals Use: 1 tablespoon per pound of meat or vegetables
Instructions
- Measure all ingredients into a small bowl.
- Stir until fully combined and evenly mixed.
- Transfer to an airtight glass jar or mylar bag (The Mason Jar and Mylar Bags I use)
- Label with the date.
- Store in a cool, dark pantry for up to 12 months.
That is it. Five minutes, one bowl, one jar.

HOW TO USE HOMEMADE FAJITA SEASONING
For chicken or beef fajitas: Toss 1 pound of sliced meat with 1 tablespoon of seasoning and a drizzle of oil. Let it sit for 15 minutes if you have time. The spices bloom against the meat and the flavor goes deeper. Cook in a cast iron skillet over high heat.
For vegetables: Same ratio. Bell peppers, onions, zucchini, mushrooms. Toss with oil and seasoning and roast at 425°F or cook in a skillet until charred at the edges.
For camping: Pre-measure 1 tablespoon portions into small resealable bags before you leave. Each bag is one meal. No measuring in the field, no spills in the pack, no wasted seasoning. I pack mine in Mylar Bags so everything stays organized and dry on the trail.
For meal prep: Season your protein in the morning, let it marinate in the fridge all day, cook when you are ready. The flavor gets better the longer it sits.
Are you the kind of woman who brings real food on every adventure and figures the rest out as she goes? That is exactly who I write for.
The Adventure Ready Guide is my free resource for eating well and packing smart on any trip, whether you are gone for a weekend or six months. It covers the food system, the packing system, and the exact process I use to prep real meals before I ever leave the driveway.
HOW TO CUSTOMIZE THIS RECIPE
Want more heat? Double the cayenne to 1/2 teaspoon or add a pinch of chipotle powder for a smoky heat that builds slowly.
Want it smokier? Increase smoked paprika to 2 teaspoons and reduce regular chili powder slightly. Works especially well on beef.
Lower sodium? Cut the salt to 1/2 teaspoon and let people season to taste at the table. The rest of the blend carries plenty of flavor without relying on salt.
No smoked paprika? Regular paprika works fine. The flavor will be a little lighter and less complex but still completely delicious.
This recipe is yours to adjust. That is the whole point of making it yourself.
LONG-TERM STORAGE
Stored in an airtight glass jar in a cool dark pantry, this fajita seasoning stays fresh and potent for up to 12 months.

The enemy of dried spices is moisture and light. Keep the jar away from the stove where heat and steam kill potency fast, and out of direct sunlight.
A mason jar with a tight lid is all you need. Label it with the date so you know when you mixed it. Not because it goes bad, but because you will want to mix a fresh batch when it starts losing its punch around the 12-month mark.
If you want to extend that shelf life further, you can use a mason jar vacuum sealer to pull the oxygen out of the jar before storing. It dramatically slows the loss of potency and keeps the spice blend tasting fresher longer.
And if you have a Harvest Right freeze dryer, you can freeze dry the mixed seasoning and push that shelf life to 25 years. At that point you are not just making dinner. You are building a pantry that goes anywhere and lasts through anything. If you are wondering how much food to actually store for the long haul, this post breaks it down: How Much Food Do You Need to Stock for 6 Months
DOES THIS REPLACE THE STORE-BOUGHT PACKET?
Yes. And then some.
The packet gives you about 1 ounce of seasoning with fillers making up a portion of the weight. This batch gives you a full jar of pure spice blend with zero filler, more flavor per tablespoon, and the ability to scale it however you need.
One batch costs roughly $0.30 to $0.40 in spices depending on where you shop. A packet costs $1.50 to $2.00 at the grocery store. Over a year of weekly fajita nights that is real money staying in your pocket.
More than the money though, you know exactly what is in it. Every single ingredient. No surprises, no fine print, no silicon dioxide holding the spices together so they flow smoothly through a packet.
If you want to take this further and start replacing every seasoning packet in your pantry, start here: How to Make Taco Seasoning From Scratch

Homemade Fajita Seasoning From Scratch
This homemade fajita seasoning is a classic Tex-Mex blend made from scratch in 5 minutes using spices you already have. No fillers, no preservatives, no packets. Mix it once, store it in a jar, and have real fajita flavor ready for chicken, beef, shrimp, or vegetables any time. Stores for up to 12 months at room temperature.
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons chili powder
- 1 tablespoon ground cumin
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
Instructions
- Add all ingredients to a small bowl.
- Stir until fully combined.
- Transfer to an airtight glass jar.
- Label with today's date.
- Store in a cool dark pantry.
Notes
- Use 1 tablespoon per pound of meat or vegetables
- For more heat: increase cayenne to 1/2 teaspoon
- For smokier flavor: increase smoked paprika to 2 teaspoons
- Substitute regular paprika if smoked paprika is unavailable
- Pre-portion into 1-tablespoon bags for camping and travel
Storage
Airtight glass jar, cool dark pantry, up to 12 months. Vacuum sealed jar extends potency significantly. Freeze dried: 25-year shelf life.
Notes:
CONCLUSION
If you have been buying fajita seasoning packets your whole life, I am not judging you. I did too.
But once you make your own and taste the difference, the real cumin, the real garlic, the heat that actually comes from cayenne and not from spices in quotation marks, going back feels wrong in a way that is hard to explain.
This is one of those small things that quietly changes how you think about your kitchen. Not a big dramatic overhaul. Just a jar of something real sitting on your shelf, made by you, ready whenever you need it.
That is what a self-sufficient pantry actually feels like. Not intimidating. Not complicated. Just capable.
With love and adventure,
Mindy
Have you made homemade seasoning blends before or is this your first one? Drop a comment below and tell me what is on your fajita night menu. I genuinely want to know.
