Dirt received critical acclaim, and is considered by many critics and fans alike as the group's
magnum opus. In a retrospective review, Steve Huey of
AllMusic said "
Dirt is Alice in Chains' major artistic statement and the closest they ever came to recording a flat-out masterpiece. It's a primal, sickening howl from the depths of Layne Staley's heroin addiction, and one of the most harrowing concept albums ever recorded. Not every song on
Dirt is explicitly about heroin, but Jerry Cantrell's solo-written contributions (nearly half the album) effectively maintain the thematic coherence—nearly every song is imbued with the morbidity, self-disgust, and/or resignation of a self-aware yet powerless addict." Chris Gill of
Guitar World called
Dirt "huge and foreboding, yet eerie and intimate," and "sublimely dark and brutally honest." Don Kaye of
Kerrang! described
Dirt as "an unflinching, brutally truthful and, yes, fiercely rocking testimonial to human endurance." At the
1993 Grammy Awards,
Dirt received a nomination for
Best Hard Rock Performance. The band also contributed the song "Would?" to
the soundtrack for the 1992
Cameron Crowe film
Singles, whose video received an award for
Best Video from a Film at the
1993 MTV Video Music Awards.
Dirt is often considered as one of the most influential albums to the
sludge metal subgenre, which fuses
doom metal with
hardcore punk. It was voted "
Kerrang! Critic's Choice Album of the Year" for 1992.
Dirt was also included in the 2005 book
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. In 2008,
Dirt was ranked as the fifth best album released in the previous two decades by
Close-Up magazine. In 2011, Joe Robinson of Loudwire named
Dirt as one of the best
metal albums of the 1990s, alongside other albums such as
Megadeth's
Rust in Peace and
Tool's
Ænima, writing "In the battle between metal and grunge, Alice in Chains are a rare band that is embraced by fans of both genres. The most metal of the Seattle bands, they were marketed as metal for 1990's 'Facelift,' then touted as grunge for 1992's 'Dirt.' The band members themselves didn't bother much with labels, they just churned out some of the finest alt-metal with classics like 'Would?,' 'Rooster' and 'Them Bones' leading their charge all the way to the headlining spot on Lollapalooza '93." In October 2011, the album was ranked number one on
Guitar World magazine's top ten list of guitar albums of 1992, with
The Offspring's
Ignition in second place and
Bad Religion's
Generator in third place. In June 2017,
Dirt was ranked at No. 26 on
Rolling Stone's list of the "100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time". In April 2019,
Rolling Stone ranked the album at No. 6 on its list of the "50 Greatest Grunge Albums". In 2024,
Loudwire staff elected it as the best hard rock album of 1992. In 2025, Em Casalena of
American Songwriter included the album in the site's list of "4 Grunge Albums That Are Way Better Than Nevermind". ==Tour==