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Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan

My Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan gives you all those cozy Italian-inspired flavors you love without standing over the stove frying chicken. The chicken gets coated in seasoned breadcrumbs and parmesan, layered into the crockpot with mozzarella and marinara, and slow-cooked until it's tender enough to cut with a fork and the cheese is melted into everything. You're going to love this one — I promise. If you're a fan of my Instant Pot Chicken Parmigiana, this version has the same payoff but with even less active time.

I love recipes where the slow cooker handles the hard part, especially on busy nights when dinner needs to happen but energy levels are running low. This gives you that classic chicken parmesan comfort food feeling with a much easier method. The big thing I figured out early on is that the breading has to be pressed on firmly and the chicken has to go into the pot in a single layer. The first time I stacked the pieces, the top chicken steamed instead of getting that nice coating set, and it basically dissolved into the sauce. Lesson learned!

overhead shot slow cooker chicken parmesan with fresh parsley garnished served on a white plate

About This Recipe

Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan is a no-fry slow cooker dinner made with breaded boneless chicken breasts, Italian seasoned breadcrumbs, parmesan, mozzarella, and jarred marinara. It serves 4 to 6, takes 15 minutes of active prep, and cooks on Low for 6 hours or High for 2.5 to 3 hours. The chicken goes in raw and breaded, not pre-browned, so the slow cooker does the heavy lifting. One thing to know upfront: the chicken needs to sit in a single layer for the breading to hold together properly through the cook.

Recipe Snapshot

  • No frying required: The slow cooker does the cooking start to finish — no hot oil, no stovetop mess, no splatter on the backsplash.
  • Genuinely hands-off: Once the lid goes on, you're free. Set it and come back to melted cheese and a kitchen that smells like an Italian restaurant.
  • The breading actually holds: As long as you press it firmly and layer single pieces, the coating stays intact through the full cook — no soggy mush.
  • Better the next day: Leftovers are arguably more delicious once the chicken has had time to soak into the sauce overnight. This is a great make-ahead dinner.
  • Flexible on sauce: Marinara is classic, but vodka sauce, basil tomato, or even pesto completely change the dish with zero extra effort.
  • Best For: Weeknight family dinners, Sunday meal prep, casual entertaining, and anyone who wants chicken parm without the frying.

💡 David's Tip: Line the bottom of your slow cooker with a sheet of aluminum foil before adding the oil. When it's done, you can lift the whole thing out cleanly by the foil edges and transfer it to a serving dish without losing half the cheese on the bottom. Game changer for cleanup.

SUMMARIZE AND SAVE THIS RECIPE CONTENT ON:

Why You'll Love This Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan

  • Serves a crowd easily: Double the recipe and use a bigger slow cooker. The method scales without any changes to technique or timing.
  • It actually tastes like chicken parm: This isn't some watered-down approximation. The breading, the cheese, the sauce — it all comes together into the real thing. Just without the frying.
  • 15 minutes of prep, then you're done: Dip, bread, layer, lid. The slow cooker handles the next 3 to 6 hours entirely on its own.
  • One pot, easy cleanup: Everything cooks in the slow cooker insert. Line it with foil and cleanup takes about 30 seconds.
  • Kids love it, adults love it: I have never once served this to someone who didn't go back for more. It's that universally crowd-pleasing combination of cheese, sauce, and tender chicken.
  • Works on either cook setting: Low and slow for maximum tenderness, or High if you need dinner on the table faster. Both work well.
slow cooker chicken parmesan ingredients to make it flavorful placed on a marble background

The Ingredient Breakdown

  • 3 boneless skinless chicken breasts, sliced in half lengthwise give you 6 thinner cutlets, which cook more evenly in the slow cooker and give you more surface area for breading. Full thick breasts can end up uneven — fully cooked on the outside but slightly underdone in the center. Slicing them in half solves that. I press each piece to an even thickness with my palm before breading to make sure they're consistent.
  • 1 cup Italian seasoned breadcrumbs form the coating. Italian seasoned is the move here because the herbs are already built in — oregano, basil, garlic — so you don't need to add much else. If you only have plain breadcrumbs, add a teaspoon of Italian seasoning and a pinch of garlic powder and you're right back on track. Panko works too, but the coating will be a little lighter and less dense. I actually tested panko once thinking I'd get a crispier result, and what I got was a coating that was too delicate for the moisture in the slow cooker. Regular Italian breadcrumbs hold up better.
  • 1/3 cup parmesan cheese goes directly into the breadcrumb mixture, not just on top, and that's important. It adds saltiness and a nutty depth that plain breadcrumbs alone can't give you. I use finely grated parmesan — the kind that almost looks like powder — because it incorporates into the breading evenly. Shaved or chunky parmesan doesn't coat the chicken the same way.
  • 1/2 teaspoon each black pepper and kosher salt season the breading. Don't skip the salt in the breadcrumb mix — it seasons the chicken from the outside in as it cooks. Unseasoned breading produces flat-tasting chicken no matter how good your sauce is.
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil coat the bottom and sides of the slow cooker insert. This prevents sticking and helps the bottom layer of the breaded chicken develop a little more texture rather than just steaming against bare ceramic. It also adds a subtle richness to the finished dish.
  • 1 egg, beaten is your binder. It's what makes the breadcrumbs stick to the chicken instead of falling off the moment you pick up the cutlet. I add a small splash of water to the beaten egg — about a tablespoon — to thin it slightly and help it coat more evenly. Just something I started doing after noticing the coating went on smoother that way.
  • 2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese, divided go in two layers: one cup between the chicken and the sauce, and the second cup added in the last 20 to 30 minutes of cooking so it melts fresh and stays gooey rather than rubbery. That second-layer timing matters. Mozzarella that cooks for the full 3 to 6 hours gets tough and grainy. Add it late and it comes out perfectly melted and stretchy.
  • 1 (24 oz) jar basil tomato sauce or marinara is the final layer. A good jarred sauce is completely fine here — this is a slow cooker recipe, not a Sunday sauce situation. Look for one with a short ingredient list and real tomatoes near the top. I like Rao's for this recipe because it's rich without being sweet, but use whatever you have. The sauce is going to meld with the cheese and chicken juices over hours of cooking, so it gets better no matter what brand you start with.

Top Tip for a Fabulous Finish

Mix the breadcrumbs, parmesan, salt, and pepper in a wide shallow bowl or rimmed plate — not a deep bowl. A flat surface lets you press the chicken down into the coating and get full coverage on both sides in one motion instead of trying to pack it on.

slow cooker chicken parmesan side by side

How to Make Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan (Step-by-Step)

Step 1: Prep the Slow Cooker and Breading Stations

Line the bottom of your slow cooker insert with a sheet of aluminum foil, then coat the foil and sides with the 2 tablespoons of olive oil. Set up two shallow bowls: one with the beaten egg (plus a splash of water), and one with the breadcrumbs, parmesan, salt, and pepper mixed together. You want everything ready before the chicken touches anything — once you start breading, your hands are messy and you don't want to be scrambling for ingredients.

Step 2: Bread the Chicken

Working one cutlet at a time, dip the chicken into the egg wash and let the excess drip off for a second — you want a thin, even coat, not a pool of egg. Then press the chicken firmly into the breadcrumb mixture, flip, and press again. You want to hear a slight crunching sound as the coating adheres. That's how you know it's on there properly. Set each breaded piece aside on a clean plate before moving to the next.

Step 3: Layer in the Slow Cooker

Place the breaded chicken pieces in a single layer on the foil-lined bottom of the slow cooker. Do not stack or overlap — if the pieces need to be slightly angled to fit, that's fine, but they need their own space. Scatter 1 cup of the shredded mozzarella evenly over the top of the chicken. Then pour the full jar of marinara sauce over everything. The sauce will look like a lot — that's correct. It settles around and under the chicken as it cooks.

Step 4: Slow Cook

Place the lid on and cook on Low for 6 hours or High for 2.5 to 3 hours. The first sign that it's getting close is the smell — when the kitchen starts smelling like bubbling Italian sauce and toasted breadcrumbs, you're probably within the last 30 minutes. Don't lift the lid before then. Every time you peek, you add 15 to 20 minutes to the cook time.

Step 5: Add the Second Cheese Layer

With about 20 to 30 minutes left on the cook time, open the lid and scatter the remaining cup of mozzarella evenly across the top. Replace the lid and let it finish cooking. The cheese will melt into a glossy, bubbling layer that pulls apart in stretchy strings when you serve it. If you want to get the cheese lightly browned on top, carefully transfer the finished chicken to a foil-lined baking sheet and broil for 2 to 3 minutes — just keep a close eye on it.

David's Tip

Slow cooker chicken breast can go from tender to dry if it cooks too long. Once it reaches temperature, switch your slow cooker to warm instead of letting it continue cooking.

crock pot chicken parmesan on a fork served on a white plate

Fun Variations

Vodka Sauce Chicken Parm: Swap the marinara for your favorite vodka sauce. It's creamier, a little sweeter, and completely changes the character of the dish. My Slow Cooker Cajun Chicken Pasta fans tend to love this direction.

Pesto Chicken Parmesan: Use a jar of basil pesto instead of marinara and top with fresh mozzarella slices instead of shredded. It's a completely different dish — lighter, herby, and really good in warmer months.

Eggplant Parmesan: Skip the chicken entirely and use 1/4-inch eggplant rounds instead. Salt them and let them sit for 30 minutes to draw out moisture, then pat dry before running through the egg wash and breadcrumbs. Layer and cook the same way on Low.

Extra Cheese Blend: Replace half the mozzarella with fontina or asiago for a sharper, more complex rich cheese flavor. Pecorino-Romano mixed into the breadcrumbs instead of parmesan is also amazing.

Chicken Parm Sliders: Shred the finished chicken (it will be tender enough), pile it onto slider buns with extra sauce and mozzarella, and run them under the broiler for 2 minutes. A serious crowd-pleaser for game day.

Storage and Make-Ahead Instructions

Make-Ahead Tip: This is one of those recipes that genuinely improves overnight. The chicken absorbs the sauce, the flavors deepen, and reheated leftovers are absolutely worth looking forward to. I make it Sunday, refrigerate, and reheat portions through the week.

Refrigerator: Store cooled leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days. Reheat in the microwave at 50% power so the chicken warms through without the cheese getting rubbery, or reheat in a 325°F oven covered with foil for about 15 minutes.

Freezer: For best results, freeze before cooking: bread the chicken, wrap individual pieces tightly in foil, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before layering in the slow cooker and cooking as directed. If freezing leftovers, wrap tightly and freeze up to 2 months — expect the texture to soften slightly on reheating.

chicken parmesan in a crock pot

Serving Suggestions

  • As a party dish: Transfer to a serving platter, top with a shower of freshly chopped parsley and extra parmesan, and set it in the center of the table with crusty bread and a big green salad. It looks impressive for how little work it actually was.
  • Over pasta: The classic pairing. Spaghetti, penne, or rigatoni all work. Toss the pasta in a little of the sauce from the slow cooker before plating the chicken on top — it ties the whole plate together.
  • With Italian Parmesan Bread: Serve alongside my Italian Parmesan Bread for soaking up every bit of that marinara. It's the move.
  • With roasted vegetables: Keep it lighter by serving alongside Oven Roasted Vegetables instead of pasta. The brightness of the vegetables cuts through the richness of the cheese and sauce nicely.
chicken parmesan on a wooden ladle with parsley on top

This Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan is the kind of dinner that makes everyone at the table think you spent way more time and effort than you actually did. Tender breaded chicken, bubbling marinara, melted cheese — it checks every box. And if you line that slow cooker with foil, cleanup is practically nothing. That's my favorite kind of recipe.

Give it a try and leave a comment below — I'd love to know what sauce you used and whether you snuck in an extra cheese layer. No judgment either way.

More Yummy Italian Recipes You'll Enjoy

If you like this Slow Cooker Chicken Parmesan, you'll want to try some of our other easy Italian recipes! Try any from the list below.

Homemade Vegetarian Lasagna
Italian Parmesan Bread Recipe
Spinach Cheese Tortellini With Italian Sausage
Instant Pot Feta Pasta (TikTok Pasta)
Penne Pasta With Sausage

David Murphy

Crock Pot Chicken Parmesan

Tender breaded chicken breasts slow-cooked in rich marinara with two layers of melted mozzarella — all the flavor of classic chicken parm with none of the frying.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 3 hours
Total Time 3 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 4 -6 servings
Course: Crockpot Recipes
Cuisine: Entree
Calories: 496

Ingredients
  

  • 3 boneless skinless chicken breast sliced in half
  • 1 cup Italian Seasoned Bread Crumbs
  • 1/3 cup Parmesan Cheese
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 2 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 egg beaten
  • 2 cups Shredded mozzarella cheese divided
  • 1 – 24 oz jar basil tomato sauce or favorite sauce of choice

Instructions
 

  1. Evenly spread the olive oil into the bottom and sides of your slow cooker.
  2. Place egg in a bowl, and beat with a fork. Set Aside. In another bowl, mix together: bread crumbs, parmesan cheese, salt, and pepper.
  3. Dip the chicken into the egg, then into the bread crumbs mixture, coating all sides.
  4. Place the chicken breast pieces in the bottom of the slow cooker.
  5. Layer 1 cup of mozzarella cheese on top of chicken, and pour sauce over the cheese and chicken.
  6. Close lid and cook on LOW for 6 hours or HIGH for 3 to 2 1/2 hours.

Nutrition

Serving: 1ServingCalories: 496kcalCarbohydrates: 23gProtein: 39gFat: 27gSaturated Fat: 11gPolyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 11gTrans Fat: 0.01gCholesterol: 145mgSodium: 1317mgPotassium: 474mgFiber: 2gSugar: 3gVitamin A: 630IUVitamin C: 2mgCalcium: 450mgIron: 2mg

Notes

Pro Tips for the Best Slow Cooker Chicken Parmesan

  • Press the breading on firmly: This is the most important technique step. A light dip into the crumbs gives you a coating that falls off. A firm press gives you a coating that holds. Take an extra 10 seconds per piece and press both sides.
  • Single layer is non-negotiable: Stacked chicken steams against itself and the breading turns to mush. If you're making a larger batch, use a bigger slow cooker or cook in batches.
  • Don't lift the lid early: I know it's tempting. Every time the lid comes off, the trapped steam escapes and you lose cooking momentum. Check it with 30 minutes left and not before.
  • Add the second cheese layer late: Mozzarella that cooks for the full duration gets rubbery and loses its stretch. Adding it in the last 20 to 30 minutes keeps it soft, melty, and gorgeous.
  • Use good sauce: The sauce is one of three main components and it's going to cook for hours, so quality matters. A sauce with real ingredients and good tomato flavor makes a noticeable difference in the final dish.
  • Let it rest before serving: Give it 5 minutes after you pull the lid off before lifting pieces out. The cheese and sauce settle, the chicken firms up slightly, and everything slices and serves much more cleanly.

Tried this recipe?

Let us know how it was!

FAQs: Chicken Parm in the Crockpot, Sorted

Can I use chicken thighs instead of chicken breasts?

Yes — boneless skinless chicken thighs work well and come out even more tender. They're slightly fattier so the sauce will be a little richer. Keep the cook time the same. Thighs don't need to be sliced in half since they're already a thinner, more even cut.

Will the breading get soggy in the slow cooker?

It won't be crispy the way fried chicken parm is — the slow cooker is a moist cooking environment, so the breading softens as it cooks. What you get is a coating that holds its shape and absorbs flavor rather than staying crunchy. If you want crispy edges, transfer the finished chicken to a baking sheet and run it under the broiler for 2 to 3 minutes before serving.

Can I use frozen chicken?

I don't recommend it for this recipe. The breading won't adhere properly to frozen chicken, and you'll end up with most of it sliding off into the sauce. Thaw completely first, pat the chicken dry, and then bread it. Dry chicken takes the egg wash much better than wet or partially frozen pieces.

What's the best cheese to use?

Shredded low-moisture mozzarella is your best bet for this recipe — it melts smoothly and holds together. Fresh mozzarella has too much moisture for the slow cooker and can make the sauce watery. For extra flavor, mix in some shredded fontina or asiago with the mozzarella. And always use freshly grated or finely ground parmesan in the breading, not the shelf-stable canister kind, which doesn't incorporate the same way.

Can I make this ahead of time?

Absolutely, and I actually recommend it. The finished dish reheats beautifully and the flavor improves after a night in the fridge. You can also bread the chicken up to 24 hours ahead, refrigerate the pieces uncovered on a rack so the breading dries slightly, and then assemble and cook the next day. That overnight rest actually helps the coating adhere even better.

Why did my breading fall off?

Two most likely culprits: the chicken was wet when you breaded it (always pat dry first), or the coating wasn't pressed on firmly enough. A light toss in the crumbs gives you a dusting that slides right off in the slow cooker. You need to press both sides with some real intention. Also, make sure you're not moving or rearranging the pieces once they're in the pot — leave them exactly where you placed them until they're done.

Can I make this in the Instant Pot instead?

The Instant Pot version has a slightly different technique but the same great flavor — check out my Instant Pot Chicken Parmigiana for that version. The slow cooker gives you a more relaxed, hands-off experience, while the Instant Pot cuts the cook time down dramatically if you're short on time.

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