GAGs bind to both the monomeric and dimeric forms of CXCL8, helping to form a concentration gradient of the chemokine that facilitates the recruitment of neutrophils to an injury site and supports other biological functions. In this study, atomistic molecular dynamics simulations were conducted to investigate the binding behavior of two hexameric GAGs sulfated at two different positions, chondroitin sulfate (CS) and heparan sulfate (HS), with the monomer (SIL8) and dimer (DIL8) forms of the CXCL8 protein. The results support that the conformational diversity of CS and HS appeared to be more when binding with monomer SIL8 than dimer DIL8. CS gained more configurational entropy from glycosidic linkage flexibility when bound to SIL8 than DIL8, with a higher energy barrier, whereas HS exhibited a lower energy barrier for configurational entropy when bound to SIL8 and DIL8. The monomer SIL8 exhibited more favorable and preferential binding with GAGs compared to DIL8. Formation of hydrogen bonds with the basic amino acids of SIL8 and GAG was more rigid and required higher activation energy to break than the other identified hydrogen bondings. Water molecules involved in hydrogen bonding with GAGs, excluding those with basic amino acids of DIL8, showed longer lifetimes and slower relaxation compared to SIL8. This suggests that water-mediated interactions also favor binding of DIL8 with GAGs. Despite having more basic amino acids, DIL8 did not display stronger binding than SIL8, indicating the significant role of basic residues in stabilizing the GAG-protein interactions in the monomers. The reason could be that the greater number of nonbasic amino acids in dimeric CXCL8 stabilizes the complex by forming water-mediated hydrogen bonds, reducing the conformational preferences for binding with GAGs. In contrast, the monomeric form of CXCL8 exhibits a higher conformational preference for protein-GAG interactions.