Crockpot loaded steak and potato bake — the hearty, cheesy slow cooker dinner that does all the work for you

Total Time: 7 hrs 20 mins Difficulty: Beginner
The hearty, cheesy, set-it-and-forget-it slow cooker dinner loaded with tender steak, savory potatoes, melted cheddar, and crispy bacon
Close-up overhead shot of a crockpot loaded steak and potato bake with tender steak bites melted cheddar cheese crispy bacon crumbles and sliced green onions visible throughout pinit

Picture this. You walk through the door after a long day, and before you even put your keys down, the smell hits you. Tender beef, savory potatoes, melted cheese, and crispy bacon all slow-cooked together into something so deeply satisfying that your whole body just exhales. That is exactly what this crockpot loaded steak and potato bake delivers every single time you make it.

This is the kind of meal that earns permanent rotation status in your household. Tender seasoned steak bites cooked low and slow until they are melt-in-your-mouth tender, chunky potatoes that absorb every bit of that rich beefy flavor, a blanket of melted cheddar over the whole thing, and crispy bacon and sliced green onions scattered over the top. It looks like a restaurant dish and tastes even better — and the crockpot does ninety percent of the work while you go live your life.

If you have been looking for the one slow cooker recipe that becomes your signature dinner, this is it. Let’s get into it.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • The crockpot does everything. Season the steak, layer it with the potatoes, set the crockpot, and walk away. Come back hours later to a dinner that tastes like you put in serious effort. That is the beauty of slow cooking done right.
  • Tender, melt-in-your-mouth steak. Steak bites slow cooked for hours become incredibly tender in a way that high-heat cooking simply cannot replicate. Every piece pulls apart easily and is packed with flavor.
  • The potatoes absorb all that beefy goodness. Chunks of potato slow cooked alongside seasoned steak absorb every bit of the savory, beefy cooking juices and become incredibly flavorful and satisfying on their own.
  • Loaded with all the good stuff. Melted cheddar, crispy bacon, and fresh green onions on top — this is a proper loaded dish in every sense of the word. Nothing is held back.
  • One pot, minimal cleanup. Everything goes into the crockpot and that is it. The cleanup is as easy as the cooking and that combination is genuinely hard to beat on a weeknight. FYI this is the kind of recipe that makes weeknight cooking feel manageable.
  • Feeds the whole family generously. This recipe is hearty, filling, and makes enough to feed four to six people comfortably. Leftovers the next day are arguably even better than the first serving.

Ingredients with key notes

For the steak and potato bake:

  • 2 lbs sirloin steak, cut into bite-sized cubes — Sirloin is the ideal cut for this recipe. It has enough marbling to stay tender and juicy through the long slow cook without becoming dry. Cut the steak into roughly 1.5-inch cubes so they cook evenly and stay substantial enough to hold their own alongside the potatoes. Chuck steak is a more budget-friendly alternative that also works beautifully in the slow cooker — the longer cook time breaks down the tougher muscle fibers into something wonderfully tender.
  • 2 lbs Yukon gold potatoes, cut into chunks — Yukon gold potatoes are the right choice here because they hold their shape during the long cook time while still becoming fork-tender and creamy inside. Cut them into roughly 1.5-inch chunks to match the size of the steak pieces. Russet potatoes work as a substitute but they can become slightly mushy after hours in the slow cooker — Yukon gold holds up significantly better.
  • 6 strips thick-cut bacon — Cook until crispy and crumble over the top before serving. The bacon adds a salty, smoky crunch that contrasts beautifully with the tender steak and soft potatoes. Do not add the bacon to the crockpot during cooking — it will become pale and soggy. Always cook it separately and add it as a topping at the end.
  • 2 cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese — Sharp cheddar has enough assertive flavor to stand up to the rich, beefy cooking juices. Add it in the last 20-30 minutes of cooking so it melts into a beautiful blanket over the steak and potatoes rather than cooking down into the sauce for the entire duration.
  • 1 medium yellow onion, diced — Adds sweetness and aromatic depth to the base of the dish as it slowly cooks down over several hours.
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced — Essential aromatic flavor. Fresh garlic only.
  • 1 cup beef broth — Provides the liquid base that keeps everything moist and creates the rich, savory cooking juices that the potatoes absorb so beautifully. Use a good quality low-sodium beef broth so you can control the salt level yourself.
  • 2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce — The secret depth-of-flavor ingredient. Worcestershire adds a complex umami punch that elevates the beefy flavor of the whole dish considerably. Do not skip it.
  • 1 tbsp olive oil — For searing the steak before it goes into the crockpot. Optional but strongly recommended.
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika — Adds a subtle smoky warmth to the seasoning that complements the steak and bacon perfectly.
  • 1 tsp dried thyme — Adds an earthy, slightly floral note that pairs well with beef and potatoes.
  • Salt and black pepper to taste — Be generous. A well-seasoned dish at this stage means a deeply flavorful finished result.

For topping:

  • Crumbled crispy bacon
  • Extra shredded cheddar
  • Sliced green onions
  • Sour cream — optional but excellent

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1 — Season the steak

Place the steak cubes in a large bowl. Drizzle with olive oil and season generously with garlic powder, onion powder, smoked paprika, dried thyme, salt, and black pepper. Toss well until every piece of steak is evenly coated in the seasoning mixture. Do not be shy with the seasoning here — the steak will be cooking for several hours and bold seasoning at this stage is what gives you a deeply flavorful result rather than a bland one.

Step 2 — Sear the steak (optional but worth it)

Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat. Working in batches to avoid overcrowding, sear the seasoned steak cubes for 1-2 minutes per side until they develop a deep brown crust. You are not cooking the steak through — just building color and flavor. The browned crust that develops during searing adds a layer of depth that slow cooking alone simply cannot create. Transfer the seared steak to a plate and set aside. This step adds about 10 minutes to your prep time and makes a noticeable difference in the final flavor — it is optional but strongly recommended.

Step 3 — Prep the potatoes and aromatics

Cut the Yukon gold potatoes into roughly 1.5-inch chunks. Dice the onion and mince the garlic. In a small bowl, whisk together the beef broth and Worcestershire sauce.

Step 4 — Layer the crockpot

Place the diced onion and minced garlic at the bottom of the crockpot. Add the potato chunks in an even layer over the onion and garlic. Season the potatoes with a little extra salt and pepper. Place the seared or seasoned raw steak cubes on top of the potatoes. Pour the beef broth and Worcestershire sauce mixture evenly over everything. The liquid should come about halfway up the potatoes — not fully submerging everything.

Step 5 — Slow cook

Place the lid on the crockpot and cook on LOW for 7-8 hours or on HIGH for 3-4 hours. The steak is done when it is incredibly tender and falls apart easily when pressed with a fork. The potatoes should be completely fork-tender with no resistance. Resist the urge to lift the lid during cooking — every time you do you add approximately 20 minutes to the cook time and release the moisture that creates the rich cooking juices.

Step 6 — Add the cheese

About 20-30 minutes before you are ready to serve, scatter the shredded sharp cheddar cheese generously over the top of the steak and potatoes. Replace the lid and cook on HIGH for 20-30 minutes until the cheese is fully melted and slightly bubbly. The cheese should form a beautiful golden blanket over the top of the dish.

Step 7 — Cook the bacon and prep the toppings

While the cheese melts, cook the bacon strips in a skillet over medium heat until deeply golden and completely crispy. Drain on a paper towel lined plate and let cool before crumbling into generous pieces. Slice the green onions thinly.

Step 8 — Finish and serve

Once the cheese is melted and bubbly, scatter the crumbled crispy bacon and sliced green onions generously over the top. Serve directly from the crockpot with a large spoon, making sure each serving gets a good combination of steak, potatoes, melted cheese, bacon, and green onions. Add a dollop of sour cream on each serving if desired.

Serving suggestions

This crockpot loaded steak and potato bake is a complete meal on its own but here are a few ways to round out the dinner:

  • With warm crusty bread or dinner rolls — For soaking up the rich, beefy cooking juices at the bottom of the crockpot. Do not waste a single drop of that incredible liquid.
  • With a simple green salad — A light, crisp salad with a tangy vinaigrette cuts through the richness of the cheese and steak beautifully and adds a fresh element to the plate.
  • With steamed broccoli or green beans — Simple green vegetables alongside this rich, hearty dish make a well-rounded plate without competing with the main event.
  • With extra sour cream and chives — Really leaning into the loaded baked potato inspiration by setting out a bowl of sour cream and extra chives for people to add as they like.
  • With a cold beer — A cold lager or pale ale alongside this hearty steak and potato dish is a pairing that requires absolutely no justification.

Storage tips

Leftovers: Store leftover crockpot loaded steak and potato bake in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. The flavors deepen and improve significantly overnight making the leftovers genuinely outstanding.

Reheating: Reheat in a saucepan over medium-low heat with a splash of beef broth to loosen the cooking juices, stirring gently until heated through. You can also microwave in a covered dish in 60-second intervals, stirring between each. Add fresh toppings — bacon, green onions, and sour cream — after reheating rather than before.

Freezing: This dish freezes well for up to 3 months. The potatoes will be slightly softer after thawing but the steak holds up beautifully. Store in freezer-safe airtight containers. Thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating. Add fresh cheese, bacon, and green onion toppings after reheating for the best result.

Bacon storage tip: Store the crumbled bacon separately from the main dish if you are planning to have leftovers. Bacon stored in the dish absorbs moisture and loses its crispiness. Keep it in a separate sealed container at room temperature for up to 2 days and add it fresh when serving.

Wrapping it up

Crockpot loaded steak and potato bake is the slow cooker recipe that earns its place in your permanent weeknight dinner rotation from the very first time you make it.

Tender, flavorful steak, perfectly cooked potatoes, melted cheddar, crispy bacon, and fresh green onions — it delivers on every level without asking much of you in return.

Set it up in the morning, come home to the most incredible smell, and sit down to a dinner that feels genuinely special even on a regular Tuesday. Give it a try and let me know how it turns out — happy cooking 🙂

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 20 mins Cook Time 7 hrs Total Time 7 hrs 20 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 26
Best Season: Fall, Winter

Description

Seasoned sirloin steak cubes slow cooked with chunky Yukon gold potatoes, diced onion, garlic, beef broth, and Worcestershire sauce until melt-in-your-mouth tender, topped with melted sharp cheddar, crumbled crispy bacon, and sliced green onions. One pot, minimal effort, maximum comfort.

Ingredients

For the steak and potato bake:

For topping:

Instructions

  1. Toss steak cubes with olive oil, garlic powder, onion powder, smoked paprika, dried thyme, salt, and pepper until evenly coated.
  2. Sear steak cubes in a hot skillet over medium-high heat for 1-2 minutes per side until deeply browned. Transfer to a plate. This step is optional but recommended.
  3. Cut potatoes into chunks. Dice onion and mince garlic. Whisk beef broth and Worcestershire sauce together in a small bowl.
  4. Place diced onion and minced garlic at the bottom of the crockpot. Add potato chunks and season with salt and pepper. Place steak cubes on top. Pour broth mixture evenly over everything.
  5. Cover and cook on LOW for 7-8 hours or HIGH for 3-4 hours until steak is melt-in-your-mouth tender and potatoes are completely fork-tender.
  6. Scatter shredded cheddar over the top. Cover and cook on HIGH for 20-30 minutes until cheese is melted and bubbly.
  7. Cook bacon until crispy and crumble. Slice green onions.
  8. Top with crumbled bacon and sliced green onions. Serve directly from the crockpot with sour cream on the side if desired.
Keywords: crockpot loaded steak and potato bake, slow cooker steak and potatoes, crockpot steak bites and potatoes, loaded steak potato bake, easy crockpot steak dinner, slow cooker loaded potato steak, cheesy crockpot steak and potato
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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

What cut of steak works best for slow cooker recipes?

Sirloin is the best balance of flavor, tenderness, and value for this recipe. Chuck steak is a more budget-friendly option that actually becomes even more tender in the slow cooker as the connective tissue breaks down over the long cook time. Avoid lean cuts like tenderloin or filet in the slow cooker — they do not have enough fat or connective tissue to benefit from low and slow cooking and tend to dry out.

Do I really need to sear the steak first?

No — you can skip the searing step and add the raw seasoned steak directly to the crockpot and the dish will still be very good. However searing creates a deeply browned crust through a process called the Maillard reaction that adds a complex layer of flavor you simply cannot get from slow cooking alone. If you have the extra 10 minutes, sear the steak. You will taste the difference.

My potatoes are still firm after the recommended cook time — what should I do?

Potato doneness in the slow cooker depends on the size of the chunks, the specific crockpot model, and how cold the ingredients were when they went in. Simply replace the lid and continue cooking on HIGH for another 30-45 minutes. Always cut your potatoes into generous chunks — too small and they will become completely mushy, too large and they may not cook through in time.

Can I add other vegetables to this recipe?

Absolutely. Sliced mushrooms, diced bell peppers, or baby carrots all work well added to the crockpot alongside the potatoes. Avoid adding delicate vegetables like zucchini or spinach at the start — stir those in during the last 30 minutes of cooking so they do not completely disintegrate.

Can I use a different cheese?

Sharp cheddar is the classic and recommended choice but Colby Jack, Monterey Jack, pepper jack for some heat, or a combination of cheeses all work beautifully. Whatever cheese you choose, shred it freshly from a block rather than using pre-shredded — pre-shredded cheese contains anti-caking agents that prevent it from melting as smoothly.

How do I prevent the dish from becoming too watery?

The key is not to add too much liquid. The steak and potatoes release their own moisture as they cook so you only need enough broth to come about halfway up the potato layer — not to submerge everything. If the dish is still too watery at the end of cooking, remove the lid and cook on HIGH for an additional 20-30 minutes to allow some of the excess liquid to evaporate.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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