Slow cooker BBQ potatoes are the kind of low-effort side dish that earns a regular place in summer cooking, especially when the grill is already busy and you need something hearty that can quietly take care of itself. Using raw unpeeled red potatoes keeps prep simple and gives the finished dish a rustic texture, while barbecue sauce and a few pantry staples turn them into a sweet, smoky, crowd-friendly side that fits right in at cookouts, potlucks, and weeknight dinners.

Serve these potatoes alongside grilled chicken, burgers, ribs, pulled pork, or smoked sausage for an easy backyard-style meal. They also pair nicely with crisp coleslaw, corn on the cob, baked beans, or a simple green salad, since those fresher sides balance the rich, sticky barbecue coating on the potatoes.

4-Ingredient Slow Cooker Summer BBQ Potatoes

Servings: 6

Finished slow cooker BBQ red potatoes
Finished slow cooker BBQ red potatoes

Ingredients

2 pounds red potatoes, raw, unpeeled, quartered

1 cup barbecue sauce
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
1 teaspoon garlic powder

Directions

1. Wash the red potatoes well, leave the skins on, and quarter them into evenly sized pieces so they cook at the same rate.

2. Place the quartered potatoes in the slow cooker, then pour in the barbecue sauce, melted butter, and garlic powder.

3. Toss everything gently until the potatoes are evenly coated, cover, and cook on low for 4 to 5 hours or on high for 2 to 3 hours, stirring once or twice if convenient, until the potatoes are tender.

4. Once the potatoes are tender, give them a final gentle stir and transfer to a serving bowl. Spoon any extra sauce from the slow cooker over the top and serve warm.

Variations & Tips

Smokier flavor: Add a pinch of smoked paprika or a few drops of liquid smoke if you want the potatoes to taste more like they came off the grill. This is especially helpful when serving them with classic barbecue meats.

Sweeter sauce: If your barbecue sauce is more tangy than sweet, stir in a tablespoon or two of brown sugar before cooking. That will give the potatoes a stickier glaze and a more pronounced summer cookout flavor.

Make them a little spicy: A dash of cayenne, chili powder, or crushed red pepper flakes works well here if you like some heat. Add it with the garlic powder so the seasoning distributes evenly.

Keep the pieces uniform: Try to quarter the potatoes into similar sizes so they finish cooking together. If some potatoes are especially large, cut those into sixths rather than quarters to prevent uneven texture.

Avoid over-stirring: Red potatoes hold their shape fairly well, but once tender they can still break apart if stirred too much. A gentle toss at the start and one careful stir near the end is usually plenty.