Let me tell you what Sheet Pan Shrimp Fajitas are not. They are not a compromise. They are not “fajitas but easier and therefore worse.” They are the version you make when you have figured out that standing over a screaming hot skillet, flipping things and sweating into your dinner, is entirely optional. The oven does the work. We just show up.

The spice blend here is built from scratch and it is good enough that you will stop buying those little seasoning packets forever. Bold claim. Stand by it. Everything goes on one pan, bakes for 12 minutes, and comes out with perfectly cooked shrimp, slightly caramelized peppers, and enough flavor that your family will think you actually worked really hard.
Why the Sheet Pan Method Actually Works

High heat and a single layer. That is the whole science. We roast at 425°F, which is hot enough to start caramelizing the edges of the peppers and onions before the shrimp overcook. The key word in that last sentence is single layer, and we are going to come back to it because it is the most important thing in this recipe.
When vegetables and shrimp are crowded on a pan, they steam instead of roast. Steamed peppers are sad. Steamed shrimp are sadder. We spread everything out with purpose, give each piece some room to breathe, and let the dry oven heat do what a skillet would do but without us standing there babysitting it. Sheet pan cooking is not lazy cooking. It is smart cooking. There is a difference.
The Most Important Tip In This Recipe
Use a large sheet pan. If everything is crowded and overlapping, you will get steamed soggy fajita filling and you will be disappointed. Use two pans if you need to. Do not crowd the pan.
Let’s Talk About the Spice Blend

- Chili powder is the base. It brings warmth and color and does the heavy lifting.
- Smoked paprika is what separates a good fajita from a great one. It adds a subtle smokiness that makes people think you grilled these, which is a pleasant lie the oven tells on your behalf.
- Garlic powder and onion powder are not the same as fresh garlic and onion. In a dry spice blend that coats shrimp going into a hot oven, powder distributes evenly and sticks. Fresh garlic would burn. Use the powder, save the fresh garlic for something else.
- Cumin is earthy and warm and non negotiable in a fajita seasoning. If you think you don’t like cumin, you have been using too much of it. Half a teaspoon is the right amount here.
- Cayenne is optional but it shouldn’t be. A quarter teaspoon adds a gentle background heat that builds slowly. It does not make this dish spicy. It makes it interesting. There is a difference.
- Lime juice goes in the bowl with the olive oil before the spices. It starts breaking down the surface of the shrimp slightly, helping the seasoning penetrate, and it brightens everything after cooking. Do not skip it.
How To Make Sheet Pan Shrimp Fajitas

Preheat the oven to 425°F and line a large sheet pan with parchment paper. In a large bowl, combine the shrimp, sliced bell peppers, and sliced onion. Add the olive oil and lime juice and toss to coat. Sprinkle every spice over the top and toss again until everything is evenly coated and your kitchen smells like a taqueria.

Spread everything in a single layer on the sheet pan. Single layer. We just talked about this. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes until the shrimp are pink and curled and the vegetables have some color on them. If you want more char on the vegetables, which you probably do, hit the broiler for 2 minutes at the end. Watch it closely because broilers have no chill.

Serve immediately with warm tortillas and whatever toppings you have on hand. Sour cream, guacamole, salsa, shredded cheese. All of it. None of it. Your fajitas, your rules.
Swaps that Actually Work
- Shrimp: Chicken breast or thighs sliced into strips work well here with the same seasoning. Increase the cook time to 20 to 25 minutes and check for an internal temperature of 165°F. Thinly sliced steak also works. Flank or skirt steak, seasoned the same way, roasts beautifully at high heat. Cook to your preferred doneness and rest before slicing.
- Bell peppers: Any color works. Red, yellow, and orange are sweeter. Green is more bitter and holds up better to the heat without getting too soft. Use whatever you have or mix them for color.
- Chili powder: If you are out, you can approximate it with a mix of paprika, cumin, oregano, and a pinch of cayenne. It will not be identical but it will be close enough for a weeknight.
- Tortillas: Flour or corn, both work. Corn tortillas are more traditional and naturally gluten free. Flour tortillas are more pliable and less likely to crack when you overfill them, which we all do. Warm them directly over a gas flame or in a dry skillet before serving. Cold tortillas are a crime.
- Lime juice: Fresh is better. Bottled works in a pinch. Lemon juice is a reasonable backup but the flavor profile shifts slightly. Still good, just different.

When Things Go Sideways
The shrimp are rubbery: Overcooked. Shrimp cook fast, faster than you think, and they keep cooking for a minute after they come out of the oven. Pull them the moment they turn pink and curl into a C shape. If they curl into an O shape, they are overdone. Remember it this way: C is for Cooked, O is for Oh no.
The vegetables are soggy and sad: The pan was overcrowded. See above. Also make sure the vegetables are dry before they go on the pan. If they were freshly washed and still wet, that surface moisture turns to steam in the oven and you get braised peppers instead of roasted ones. Pat them dry or let them air out for a few minutes before seasoning.

Storing Leftovers
The filling keeps in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat in a hot skillet for 2 minutes rather than the microwave, which will finish off whatever the oven started with the shrimp texture. Do not freeze. Shrimp do not survive the freezer a second time with any dignity.
Questions We Get Asked
You can mix the seasoning and slice the vegetables ahead of time, but do not marinate the shrimp for more than 30 minutes before cooking. The lime juice will start to chemically cook the shrimp and the texture suffers. Season everything right before it goes on the pan.
Yes, but thaw them completely first and pat them very dry before seasoning. Frozen shrimp carry a lot of water and that water will steam the whole pan if we are not careful. Thaw overnight in the fridge or run them under cold water for 10 minutes.
The filling is completely gluten free. Just use corn tortillas for serving and you are covered.
Yes and honestly the air fryer version is excellent. Cook at 400°F for 8 to 10 minutes, shaking the basket halfway through. Same single layer rule applies, so work in batches if your air fryer is on the smaller side. The shrimp get a little more color and the edges of the peppers crisp up nicely. Same doneness cues apply: pink, curled into a C, done.

Try These Recipes Next
- Tuscan Pork Tenderloin Sheet Pan Dinner
- Sheet Pan Maple Mustard Sausage and Potatoes
- Sheet Pan Honey Butter Glazed Salmon with Veggies

Sheet Pan Shrimp Fajitas
Ingredients
- 1½ pounds large shrimp, peeled and deveined
- 2 medium bell peppers, sliced
- 1 large onion, sliced
- 3 tablespoons olive oil
- 2 tablespoons lime juice
- 2 teaspoons chili powder
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- 1 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon onion powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon black pepper
- ½ teaspoon cumin
- ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper, optional
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425°F / 220°C and line a large sheet pan with parchment paper.
- In a large bowl, combine 1½ pounds shrimp, 2 sliced bell peppers, and 1 sliced onion.

- Add 3 tablespoons olive oil and 2 tablespoons lime juice and toss to coat. Sprinkle 2 teaspoons chili powder, 1 teaspoon smoked paprika, 1 teaspoon garlic powder, 1 teaspoon onion powder, 1 teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon black pepper, ½ teaspoon cumin, and ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper over everything and toss until evenly coated.

- Spread the shrimp and vegetables in a single layer on the sheet pan.

- Bake for 10 to 12 minutes until the shrimp are pink and cooked through and the vegetables are slightly roasted. Remove from oven and serve immediately with warm tortillas.

Recipe Notes
- Do not overcook the shrimp. I cannot stress this enough. Shrimp go from perfect to rubber eraser in about 90 seconds. The moment they turn pink and curl into a C shape, they are done. Pull them out. If they curl all the way into an O, you have gone too far and no amount of salsa is going to fix that.
- Spread everything in a single layer. If the shrimp and vegetables are piled on top of each other, they will steam instead of roast and you will end up with soggy fajita filling. Not the goal. Use a large sheet pan, or split everything between two pans. Give each piece room to do its job.
- Want more char? Broil for 2 minutes at the end. The edges of the peppers will blister and the shrimp will get a little color that makes the whole thing look and taste like it came off a grill. Watch it closely though. Broilers work fast and they do not accept apologies.







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