Golden chicken thighs, tender potatoes, and a buttery garlic-Parmesan coating make this the kind of slow cooker dinner that disappears fast. The chicken stays juicy because the thighs cook over the potatoes, and the potatoes catch every bit of seasoned butter and drippings as they soften. Then a quick broil at the end turns the skin from soft to crisp, which is the part that keeps this recipe from tasting flat or mushy.
The key here is balance. Bone-in, skin-on thighs hold up beautifully in the crockpot, while baby Yukon Gold potatoes stay creamy instead of falling apart. The Parmesan goes on top rather than mixed deep into the liquid, so it forms a savory crust instead of melting into a dull sauce. That little shift gives you more texture and a much bigger payoff at the table.
Below, I’ve included the one step that makes the skin worth eating, plus a few swaps that help this dish work when you’re short on an ingredient or need to stretch it for a different diet.
The potatoes came out buttery and tender, and the Parmesan on the chicken formed a salty crust that my husband kept picking at before dinner was even on the table.
Save these garlic Parmesan crockpot chicken thighs and potatoes for a low-effort dinner with crisp skin, creamy potatoes, and hardly any cleanup.
The Hidden Step That Keeps the Chicken Skin from Going Soft
Slow cooker chicken often turns out tender but pale, and the skin can go rubbery if it sits in steam for hours. This recipe avoids that by keeping the thighs on top of the potatoes instead of sinking them into the broth, so they cook above the liquid and absorb flavor without losing all structure.
The other part that matters is the broil at the end. That short blast of high heat is what tightens and browns the Parmesan crust and crisps the skin before serving. If you skip it, the dish still tastes good, but you lose the contrast that makes each bite taste finished instead of just cooked.
- Chicken thighs — Bone-in, skin-on thighs are the right cut here because they stay juicy over a long cook. Chicken breasts can work, but they dry out faster and won’t give you the same rich result.
- Baby Yukon Gold potatoes — These hold their shape and turn creamy without turning chalky. Russets break down more easily, and waxy potatoes can stay a little too firm if they’re cut too large.
- Parmesan — Grated Parmesan gives you the salty crust on top. Freshly grated melts and clings better than the shelf-stable shredded kind, which can stay grainy.
- Butter and olive oil — Butter brings the flavor, while olive oil keeps the coating from feeling heavy and helps the seasoning spread evenly over the chicken.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Slow Cooker

- Garlic — Minced garlic perfumes the butter and seeps into the chicken as it cooks. Jarred garlic works in a pinch, but fresh cloves give a sharper, cleaner taste.
- Italian seasoning, garlic powder, onion powder, paprika — This mix builds the savory base without needing a long ingredient list. Paprika adds color and a little warmth, and the powders help the seasoning stick to the chicken instead of sliding off.
- Chicken broth — Just enough broth prevents the potatoes from scorching on the bottom while they soften. More liquid would steam everything and wash away the seasoning, so keep it measured.
- Fresh parsley — This isn’t just garnish. It cuts through the richness at the end and makes the whole dish taste brighter.
How to Layer the Potatoes, Chicken, and Broiler Finish
Start with the Potatoes
Spread the halved potatoes across the bottom of the slow cooker and pour the broth over them. That lower layer acts like a rack and a sponge at the same time, protecting the chicken from sitting in liquid while catching the drippings that fall during cooking. If the potatoes are cut unevenly, the small pieces will turn mushy before the larger ones are tender, so keep the halves close to the same size.
Coat the Chicken Thoroughly
Mix the melted butter, olive oil, garlic, and seasonings into a loose paste, then coat the chicken thighs well on all sides. The seasoning sticks best when the chicken is patted dry first; wet skin makes the butter mixture slide off and leaves you with bland spots. Set each thigh skin-side up on top of the potatoes so the skin stays as dry as possible while it cooks.
Let the Slow Cooker Do the Work
Cook on low for 6 to 7 hours or on high for 3 to 4 hours, until the chicken reaches 165°F and the potatoes yield easily to a fork. If your slow cooker runs hot, start checking early, because overcooked thighs will still be safe but the potatoes can go from tender to collapsing. The Parmesan will melt into the chicken as it cooks, which is exactly what you want before the broiler step.
Broil for the Final Crust
Transfer the chicken to a baking sheet and broil for 3 to 4 minutes, watching closely the whole time. This is not the moment to walk away; Parmesan can go from bronzed to burnt fast. Once the skin looks crisp and the cheese has browned in spots, pull it out, spoon the potatoes onto plates, and finish with parsley and extra Parmesan.
How to Adapt This for Different Pans, Diets, and Leftovers
Use Chicken Breasts Instead of Thighs
Chicken breasts work if that’s what you have, but they need less time and they won’t stay as juicy. Check them early and pull them as soon as they reach temperature, or they’ll dry out before the potatoes are done.
Make It Dairy-Free
Swap the butter for a plant-based butter that melts well and leave off the Parmesan, then finish with extra garlic, parsley, and a pinch more salt. You’ll lose the cheesy crust, but the chicken still picks up plenty of flavor from the garlic seasoning and drippings.
Make It Gluten-Free Without Changing the Texture
This recipe is naturally gluten-free as written, as long as your broth and Parmesan are certified gluten-free. That makes it a good one to serve to a mixed group without changing a thing.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The potatoes soften a little more after chilling, but the flavor holds up well.
- Freezer: Freeze the chicken and potatoes for up to 2 months, though the potatoes will be softer after thawing. Wrap portions tightly and thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating.
- Reheating: Reheat in a 325°F oven, covered, until warmed through, then uncover for a few minutes to wake up the skin. The microwave will heat it faster, but it turns the chicken skin rubbery and can make the potatoes watery.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Garlic Parmesan Crockpot Chicken and Potatoes
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Add the halved baby Yukon Gold potatoes to the bottom of the slow cooker and pour the chicken broth over them so they’re evenly moistened.
- In a bowl, mix the melted butter, olive oil, minced garlic, dried Italian seasoning, garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, salt, and black pepper until combined.
- Coat the chicken thighs with the butter mixture, then place them on top of the potatoes in an even layer.
- Sprinkle the grated Parmesan cheese generously over each chicken thigh to create a visible layer.
- Cook on low for 6–7 hours or high for 3–4 hours, until the chicken is cooked through and the potatoes are fork-tender, with the mixture bubbling gently around the edges.
- Transfer the crockpot insert contents to a broiler-safe surface or keep chicken on top, then broil on high for 3–4 minutes until the skin is crisp and the Parmesan looks lightly golden in spots.
- Garnish with fresh parsley and extra Parmesan right before serving for bright color and added savory flavor.


