Ají dulce
Mild, smoky, and aromatic
0 SHU to 500 SHU
Best known for sofrito, seasoning bases, Caribbean stews.
PepperRank The Pepper Database Explore the full chart, narrow it with filters, and open any pepper for its own reference entry. Learn about the Scoville scale (SHU).
Mild, smoky, and aromatic
0 SHU to 500 SHU
Best known for sofrito, seasoning bases, Caribbean stews.
Mild, tangy
0 SHU to 500 SHU
Best known for pickled, stuffed, raw ingredient in foods.
Crunchy, grassy, and mildly sweet
0 SHU
Best known for fresh salads, stuffing, roasting.
Big Jim pepper is a famously large New Mexico chile cultivar bred for long, thick-walled pods with very mild heat. It is commonly harvested green and roasted, making it a staple pepper for classic New Mexican green chile dishes.
0 SHU
New Mexico chile is a regional Capsicum annuum group shaped by Pueblo, Hispano, and university breeding traditions in the American Southwest. The category includes peppers used green or red in iconic New Mexican dishes, with heat levels that range from very mild to distinctly hot.
0 SHU to 100,000 SHU
Sandia pepper is a New Mexico chile cultivar grown for larger pods and more heat than many everyday state varieties. It is commonly roasted green for chile dishes or ripened red and dried for powders, stews, and adovada-style cooking.
0 SHU
Slightly sweet and mild
0 SHU to 999 SHU
Best known for fresh roasting, pickling, Southwestern cooking.
Bright, grassy, and lightly smoky when blistered
0 SHU
Best known for blistered appetizers, tempura, skewers.
Habanero-like, fruity, and punchy
2 SHU to 175,000 SHU
Best known for condiments, turned into sauces, sandwich spreads.
Sweet, soft, and aromatic
100 SHU to 500 SHU
Best known for pimento cheese, stuffed olives, roasting.
Tender, sweet, and lightly peppery
100 SHU to 1,000 SHU
Best known for frying, stuffing, sofrito.
Mild, slightly bitter, and sweet
100 SHU to 500 SHU
Best known for fresh salads, sauteing, stuffing.
Grassy, nutty, and occasionally sharp
500 SHU to 2,500 SHU
Best known for tapas, pan-frying, blistered peppers.
Sweet, crisp, and juicy with mild to moderate heat that becomes more noticeable at full ripeness
1,000 SHU to 3,000 SHU
Best known for paprika powder, stuffing, roasting, pickling, soups and stews.
Mild, slightly smoky, and savory
1,000 SHU to 5,000 SHU
Best known for harissa, lablabi, Tunisian sauces.
Tangy, bright, and medium-hot
1,000 SHU to 15,000 SHU
Best known for pickling, stuffing, paprika-style cooking.
Earthy, rich, and slightly smoky
1,000 SHU to 1,500 SHU
Best known for chiles rellenos poblanos.
Nutty, woody, and gently smoky
1,500 SHU to 2,500 SHU
Best known for mole, sauces, soups.
Mild, grassy, and slightly sweet
1,500 SHU
Best known for fresh banchan, stuffing, general Korean cooking.
Juicy, bright, and apple-like
2,400 SHU to 250,000 SHU
Best known for rocoto relleno, salsas, table sauces.
Bright, fruity, and sharper than jalapeno
2,500 SHU to 10,000 SHU
Best known for hot sauces, salsas, ceviche.
Sweet, fruity, and berry-like with a mild heat
4,000 SHU
Bright, vegetal, and slightly grassy
4,000 SHU to 8,500 SHU
Best known for salsas, pickling, nachos.
Bright, sharp, and moderately hot
5,000 SHU to 30,000 SHU
Best known for seafood dishes, hot sauces, pickling.
Clean, spicy, and brighter than standard Korean chili
10,000 SHU
Best known for fresh slicing, Korean cooking, drying.
Crisp, grassy, and sharp
10,000 SHU to 25,000 SHU
Best known for hot sauce, fresh salsa, garnishes.
Nutty, grassy, and sharp
15,000 SHU to 30,000 SHU
Best known for salsas, oil infusions, dry toasting.
Chiltepin is a tiny wild pepper widely considered one of the closest ancestors of domesticated Capsicum annuum. Its small, round fruits deliver fast, intense heat and have long been spread through the wild by birds across parts of the Americas.
20,000 SHU to 140,000 SHU
Fruity, sunny, and slightly raisiny
30,000 SHU to 50,000 SHU
Best known for aji sauces, ceviche accompaniments, Peruvian stews.
Lean, dry heat with light fruitiness
30,000 SHU to 50,000 SHU
Best known for spicy dishes, powder, in its whole form, cooking spicy dishes.
Dundicut is a small, dark red South Asian chili usually sold dried and valued for full-bodied heat rather than sheer intensity. It is used in regional spice blends and cooking where a compact pepper with strong color and punch is useful.
30,000 SHU to 65,000 SHU
Citrusy and nutty
30,000 SHU to 60,000 SHU
Best known for pickling, salsas, sauces, soups, vinegars.
Sharp, juicy, and punchy
30,000 SHU to 50,000 SHU
Best known for tabasco sauce, followed by peppered vinegar.
Guntur Sannam is an Indian Capsicum annuum grown around the Guntur region and prized for strong red color, reliable heat, and dried-chile versatility. It is an important trade pepper and carries protected geographical-indication status in Andhra Pradesh.
35,000 SHU to 40,000 SHU
Clean, sharp, and quick-building
50,000 SHU to 100,000 SHU
Best known for stir-fries, curries, fish sauce condiments.
Fresh, grassy, and moderately spicy
50,000 SHU
Best known for sinigang, dinuguan, pinangat, kilawin, paksiw.
Sharp, bright, and punchy
60,000 SHU to 100,000 SHU
Best known for Brazilian sauces, pickling, vinegar condiments.
Sharp, bright, and intensely pungent
80,000 SHU to 100,000 SHU
Best known for sawsawan, vinegar condiments, Filipino stews.
Fruity, floral, and full-bodied
100,000 SHU to 500,000 SHU
Best known for fresh sauces, Surinamese dishes, pepper pastes.
Both hot and sweet
100,000 SHU to 300,000 SHU
Best known for pepper sauces, mustards, seafood sauces.
Tropical, floral, and intense
100,000 SHU to 350,000 SHU
Best known for hot sauces, other spicy foods.
Fruity, with hints of mango and pineapple
100,000 SHU to 350,000 SHU
Best known for Surinamese cooking, fresh sauces, stews.
Sweet, fruity, and floral
100,000 SHU to 350,000 SHU
Best known for jerk marinades, pepper sauces, stews.
Fruity, citrus
125,000 SHU to 400,000 SHU
Best known for fresh salsas, marinades, hot sauces.
Fruity, intense, and sharper than standard habanero
350,000 SHU to 577,000 SHU
Best known for fresh salsas, hot sauces, superhot cooking.
Smoky, sweet, and deeply lingering
855,000 SHU to 1,040,000 SHU
Best known for superhot sauces, powders, challenge foods.
Trinidad Scorpion Butch T is a superhot Capsicum chinense selection known for aggressive heat and the pointed tail that gives scorpion peppers their name. Named through Butch Taylor and the Hippy Seed Company, it became one of the defining peppers of the early superhot era.
1,000,000 SHU to 1,463,700 SHU
Fruity, floral, and intensely delayed
1,207,764 SHU
Best known for superhot sauces, powders, challenge products.
Naga Viper is an English-bred superhot Capsicum chinense known less for culinary use than for its brief world-record fame. Guinness recognized it in 2011, and it remains notable as one of the peppers that pushed the modern superhot arms race forward.
1,382,118 SHU
Sweet upfront, then searing and persistent
1,641,183 SHU
Best known for hot sauce, pepper mash, novelty products.
Earthy, floral, and brutally hot
2,693,000 SHU
Best known for limited hot sauces, novelty products.