Make the famous Old El Paso taco seasoning at home in 5 minutes with 10 everyday pantry spices. This copycat blend tastes just like the packet, skips the fillers and excess sodium, and makes exactly enough to season 1 pound of meat — for a fraction of the price.

If you’ve ever flipped over an Old El Paso seasoning packet and read the label, you already know the secret: it’s mostly chili pepper, cumin, paprika, onion, garlic, salt, and a little sugar — spices you almost certainly already own. So why keep buying the packet? In the time it takes to find the scissors and tear one open, you can whisk together a homemade version that’s fresher, cheaper, and completely customizable.
This is one of those recipes that quietly changes the way you cook. Once you have a jar of this on the shelf, taco night stops being a “do we have a packet?” question and becomes a five-second scoop. Let’s make it.
Why Make Your Own Taco Seasoning?
Store-bought packets are convenient, but homemade wins on almost every front:
- It’s dramatically cheaper. A jar’s worth of homemade seasoning costs a few cents per batch compared to a dollar-plus per packet.
- You control the salt. Commercial packets can pack 400–600 mg of sodium per serving before you’ve added a single thing. With homemade, you decide.
- No fillers or mystery ingredients. Many packets include maltodextrin, silicon dioxide, “natural flavor,” and anti-caking agents. Yours is just spices.
- It’s endlessly customizable. Like it smoky? Lean into the paprika. Want more heat? Add cayenne. Watching salt? Cut it back. The recipe bends to your taste.
- It’s naturally gluten-free, dairy-free, keto, paleo, and Whole30-friendly when you leave out the cornstarch (more on that below).
If you love a good DIY blend, this slots right in next to the other homemade staples on Fork To Spoon — like this Chicken Taco Seasoning for poultry and this Homemade Fajita Seasoning (McCormick Copycat) for fajita night.

What’s Actually in Old El Paso Taco Seasoning?
Old El Paso’s original blend is built around chili pepper, salt, onion powder, garlic powder, and paprika, plus a touch of sugar that balances the heat and gives the mix its signature deep-red color. The commercial version also adds a small amount of starch, which is what thickens the pan sauce when you add water to your browned meat.
Our copycat recreates all of that — the warm cumin, the smoky paprika, the savory onion-and-garlic backbone, the gentle sweetness, and that craveable saucy “cling” — using ingredients straight from your spice cabinet.
Ingredients & Why Each One Matters

Each spice earns its place in this blend. Here’s the breakdown:
- Chili powder: does the heavy lifting, providing both the base flavor and that classic taco color.
- Ground cumin: brings the warm, earthy aroma you instantly recognize as “taco.”
- Paprika: adds depth and a signature reddish hue. Reach for smoked paprika instead of regular for a richer, smokier finish.
- Onion powder: lends savory sweetness without the raw bite of fresh onion.
- Garlic powder: rounds out the savory backbone.
- Salt: sharpens and lifts every other flavor in the mix.
- Sugar: balances the chili’s heat while deepening the color, exactly the way the real packet does.
- Dried oregano: contributes the herbal, Mexican-cuisine character that ties the blend together.
- Cornstarch (optional): thickens the pan sauce so it coats the meat packet-style. Leave it out for a gluten-free version.
- Cayenne pepper or crushed red pepper (optional): delivers clean heat for anyone who wants a kick.
- Black pepper: adds a little finishing warmth.
💡 Pro tip: Spices fade over time. If your jar of chili powder or cumin has been in the back of the cabinet for a couple of years, give it a sniff — faint aroma means faint flavor. Fresh spices make a noticeably better blend.
How to Make Old El Paso Copycat Taco Seasoning
It genuinely could not be simpler:
- Measure every spice into a small bowl.
- Whisk until the blend is one even, uniform color with no streaks.
- Use or store. Sprinkle onto a pound of browned meat, or funnel into an airtight jar for later.
That’s it — no cooking, no toasting, no special equipment. One bowl, one whisk, five minutes.

How Much to Use Per Pound of Meat
This recipe makes about 2 tablespoons, which equals one standard Old El Paso packet and seasons 1 pound of ground beef, turkey, chicken, or pork.
To use it the classic packet way: brown and drain your meat, sprinkle in the seasoning, add about ½ cup of water, and simmer for 3–5 minutes until the sauce thickens and clings. The cornstarch in the blend is what creates that glossy, restaurant-style coating.
Want to skip the measuring next time? Make a 10x batch and store it in a pint jar — then just scoop 2 tablespoons per pound whenever taco night rolls around.

Delicious Ways to Use Your Taco Seasoning
This blend is the starting point for so much more than tacos:
- Air Fryer Taco Meat — the fastest, juiciest taco filling, ready in minutes.
- Air Fryer Taco-Spiced Tortilla Chips — sprinkle the blend over tortillas for an addictive crunchy snack.
- Loaded nachos — pair seasoned beef with this Homemade Nacho Cheese Sauce for the ultimate game-day plate.
- Taco bowls and burritos — stir it into rice, beans, or roasted veggies.
- Drizzle it all together — finish your tacos with a cool, zesty Taco Bell Baja Sauce.
And if you’re building out a full homemade spice rack, don’t miss this Homemade Chili Seasoning Mix (McCormick Copycat) and the surprisingly versatile Best Meatloaf Seasoning blend — both follow the same “skip the packet, save the money” philosophy.

Variations & Customizations
- Mild: Skip the cayenne entirely and reduce the chili powder slightly.
- Extra smoky: Swap regular paprika for smoked paprika and add a pinch of chipotle powder.
- Hot: Bump up the cayenne or stir in crushed red pepper flakes.
- Low-sodium: Cut the salt in half — the spices still carry plenty of flavor.
- Gluten-free / Whole30: Leave out the cornstarch and the sugar.
How to Store Homemade Taco Seasoning
Keep your blend in an airtight jar in a cool, dark cabinet away from heat and moisture. It stays vibrant for about 6 months and remains safe well beyond that, since ground spices simply lose potency over time. Always use a dry spoon to avoid introducing moisture into the jar, and give it a sniff before each use. Faint aroma? Time for a fresh batch.

Frequently Asked Questions
Does this taste exactly like Old El Paso? Very close. The chili, cumin, paprika, onion, and garlic base with a touch of sugar mirrors the packet’s flavor profile. The biggest difference is that yours is fresher, less salty, and free of fillers, which most people prefer once they taste the two side by side.
Can I double or triple the recipe? Absolutely, and you should. Multiply every ingredient and store the extra in a jar. A 10x batch fills a standard pint jar perfectly.
Is homemade taco seasoning gluten-free? Yes, as long as you use a gluten-free chili powder and omit the cornstarch (or swap in arrowroot). Always check your individual spice labels to be safe.
How much equals one packet? About 2 tablespoons of this blend equals one store-bought packet and seasons 1 pound of meat.
Why is there sugar in taco seasoning? A small amount of sugar balances the heat of the chili powder and helps create that deep red color you see in commercial blends like Old El Paso. You can leave it out if you prefer.
Can I use this on chicken, turkey, or pork? Yes! Use the same two tablespoons per pound rule for any protein, including beef, turkey, chicken, pork, shrimp, or even roasted vegetables and beans.

Here’s a “Related Recipes” section using real, live forktospoon.com pages I verified. I grouped them so the internal linking reads naturally for both readers and search engines.
More Homemade Seasoning Blends
- McCormick Taco Seasoning Recipe (Copycat): the other big-brand taco packet, recreated in 5 minutes.
- Chicken Taco Seasoning (Better Than the Packet): a milder, smokier blend balanced for poultry.
- Homemade Fajita Seasoning (McCormick Copycat): cumin-forward with a citrusy note for fajita night.
- Homemade Chili Seasoning Mix (McCormick Copycat): your go-to for a big pot of chili.
Put Your Seasoning to Work
- Air Fryer Taco Meat: the fastest, juiciest taco filling.
- Air Fryer Taco-Spiced Tortilla Chips: turn this blend into a crunchy snack.
- 28 Easy Ground Beef Recipes: a roundup of frugal, family-friendly dinners.
Sauces & Toppings to Finish the Plate
- Taco Bell Baja Sauce (Copycat): a cool, zesty drizzle for tacos and fries.
- Homemade Nacho Cheese Sauce: silky queso for loaded nachos.

Homemade Old El Paso Copycat Taco Seasoning Mix
Description
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon chili powder
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 teaspoon paprika, smoked, for extra depth
- ½ teaspoon onion powder
- ½ teaspoon garlic powder
- ½ teaspoon fine sea salt
- ½ teaspoon granulated sugar
- ¼ teaspoon dried oregano
- ¼ teaspoon cornstarch, optional; thickens the pan sauce; omit for gluten-free
- ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper, optional, for heat
- ⅛ teaspoon black pepper
Instructions
- Add all ingredients to a small bowl.
- Whisk together until evenly combined and uniform in color, with no streaks.
- Use immediately, or transfer to an airtight jar and store in a cool, dark place for up to 6 months.
Equipment
- Mixing Bowl
- Whisk
Notes
- This single batch equals one Old El Paso packet and seasons 1 pound of meat.
- For a big batch, multiply every ingredient by 10 and it fills a pint jar perfectly.
- Gluten-free and Whole30: omit the cornstarch and sugar.
- Store in an airtight jar away from heat and moisture, and use a dry spoon to keep it fresh.
Nutrition
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