The Mycobacterium tuberculosis type-7 protein secretion system ESX-1 is a major driver of its virulence. While the functions of most ESX-1 components are characterized, many others remain poorly defined. In this study, we examined the role of EspK, an ESX-1-associated protein that is thought to be dispensable for ESX-1 activity in members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. We show that EspK is needed for the timely and optimal secretion of EsxA and absolutely essential for EspB secretion in M. tuberculosis Erdman. We demonstrate that only the EsxA secretion defect can be alleviated in EspK-deficient M. tuberculosis by culturing it in media containing detergents like Tween 80 or tyloxapol. Subcellular fractionation experiments reveal EspK is exported by M. tuberculosis in an ESX-1-independent manner and localized to its cell wall. We also show a conserved W-X-G motif in EspK is important for its interaction with EspB and enabling its secretion. The same motif, however, is not important for EspK localization in the cell wall. Finally, we show EspB in EspK-deficient M. tuberculosis tends to adopt higher-order oligomeric conformations, more so than EspB in wild-type M. tuberculosis. These results suggest EspK interacts with EspB and prevents it from assembling prematurely into macromolecular complexes that are presumably too large to pass through the membrane-spanning ESX-1 translocon assembly. Collectively, our findings indicate M. tuberculosis EspK has a far more active role in ESX-1-mediated secretion than was previously appreciated and underscores the complex nature of this secretion apparatus.