The best part about slow cooker honey mustard chicken is that it delivers a sticky, tangy glaze with almost no active work. You layer a few pantry ingredients over bone-in chicken, set the heat, and walk away while the meat turns fork-tender. This version uses a balanced sauce so the mustard sharpness stays bright instead of turning sour.
What you get is a practical dinner that holds up to reheating and pairs with plain starches or roasted vegetables. The method keeps the chicken moist because the low, steady heat never pushes the proteins past their juicy window. It’s a solid choice when you want a real meal without standing at the stove. If you enjoyed this, our honey garlic chicken is worth trying next. Making this slow cooker honey mustard chicken at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You’ll Love These Slow Cooker Honey Mustard Chicken
- Hands-off cooking: the slow cooker does the braising so you aren’t monitoring a pan.
- Budget-friendly protein: bone-in thighs stay juicy and cost less than breasts.
- Balanced sauce: honey softens the mustard so kids and adults both eat it.
- Meal prep friendly: the leftovers reheat without drying out.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 2.5 lbs bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs (about 6 pieces) – the bone keeps meat moist during long cooking.
- 1/3 cup Dijon mustard – gives a smooth, sharp base without grainy texture.
- 1/4 cup whole grain mustard – adds pops of seed texture and milder heat.
- 1/3 cup honey – balances acidity and builds the glaze.
- 2 tbsp olive oil – helps the sauce coat and prevents sticking.
- 4 cloves garlic, minced – aromatic depth without overpowering.
- 1/2 cup low-sodium chicken broth – keeps the environment moist, not boiled.
- 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar – lifts the sauce so it isn’t flat sweet.
- 1 tsp salt – controls seasoning in the braise.
- 1/2 tsp black pepper – light spice background.
- 1 tbsp cornstarch – mixed later to thicken the released liquids.
Ingredient Substitutions
Bone-in chicken thighs: Replace with 2.5 lbs boneless skinless thighs if you prefer less fat and easier serving. Boneless pieces cook faster, so check doneness at the 4-hour mark on low instead of 6. The meat will be slightly less rich because the bone and skin render less gelatin into the sauce. The slow cooker honey mustard chicken works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Dijon mustard: Use an equal amount of yellow mustard for a softer, more American-diner tang. Yellow mustard is less complex, so add 1 tsp of prepared horseradish if you want back some bite. The color stays pale and the sauce reads milder overall. Storing leftover slow cooker honey mustard chicken correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Honey: Swap with an equal volume of maple syrup for a darker, woodsy sweetness. Maple thickens a bit more under heat, so thin the sauce with 1 extra tbsp broth if it looks tight. Expect a less floral top note and a slightly heavier coat on the chicken. For the best results with this slow cooker honey mustard chicken, read through all the steps before starting.
Apple cider vinegar: Replace with fresh lemon juice at the same amount for a citrus-led brightness. Lemon pushes the sauce toward a sharper finish, so cut the Dijon by 1 tbsp if you are sensitive to tang. The glaze will look a touch lighter and smell more like a picnic chicken.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Pat the chicken thighs dry with paper towels and season both sides with salt and pepper. Dry skin helps the braise stay saucy rather than watery.
- Whisk Dijon, whole grain mustard, honey, olive oil, garlic, broth, and vinegar in a bowl until smooth. Pour half into a 6-quart slow cooker.
- Place chicken thighs skin-side up in the cooker and pour the remaining sauce over them. The liquid should reach halfway up the meat, not submerge it.
- Cover and cook on low heat for 6 hours, until the meat pulls from the bone with no resistance. Avoid lifting the lid before hour 5 to keep temperature steady.
- Remove chicken to a plate and stir 1 tbsp cornstarch with 2 tbsp cold water, then whisk into the hot liquid. Set the cooker to high heat for 15 minutes until the sauce thickens to a gravy coat.
- Return chicken to the sauce and spoon glaze over the top. The skin won’t crisp but the surface should look glossy and coated before serving.
Pro Tips
Brown the thighs in a skillet over medium-high heat for 3 minutes per side before braising if you want deeper color. The Maillard notes carry into the sauce even after long cooking.
Make the sauce the night before and store it covered in the fridge, then pour over raw chicken in the morning. Cold sauce slows early bacterial growth and saves you ten minutes at night.
For safe reheating of poultry, bring leftovers to an internal temperature of 165°F as noted by Serious Eats in their poultry guidance. A quick microwave stir at halfway prevents cold centers.
Spoon the thickened glaze over the chicken twice during the last step so the top gets a sticky finish. One coat tends to slide off bone-in pieces when plated.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using only Dijon makes the sauce sharp and one-note; the whole grain mustard adds texture that keeps it from tasting like straight condiment. Keep both for balance.
Skipping the cornstarch step leaves you with thin broth instead of glaze. The braise releases a lot of liquid, so a short high heat reduction is needed.
Cooking on high for the full time toughens thigh meat because the collagen doesn’t melt slowly. Low and slow is the point of the method.
Serving Suggestions
Plate the chicken over chicken noodles to catch the extra glaze. The sweet-savory sauce clings to ribbon pasta better than to rice.
Add a sharp side like lemon chicken style greens if you want contrast on the table. Roasted broccoli with salt works too.
Leftover meat shreds well into pot roast style sandwiches with the same glaze as spread. Use a sturdy roll so it doesn’t fall apart.
Storage and Reheating
Cool the chicken to room temperature within 2 hours of cooking, then refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The sauce firms when cold but loosens on reheating.
Freeze portions in flat bags for up to 3 months; thaw overnight in the fridge before warming. Reheat covered in a 350°F oven until the center hits 165°F.
Yes, this freezes well for up to 3 months. Label the bag with the date so the oldest batch gets used first.
Recipe Variations
Smoked Mustard Ribs Style
Swap the chicken for 2.5 lbs pork ribs and use mustard ribs style seasoning in place of salt and pepper. Cook on low for 8 hours so the connective tissue breaks down fully. Expect a deeper smoke note and meat that slides off the bone.
Spicy Honey Version
Add 1 tsp crushed red pepper to the sauce with the garlic for a warm finish. The heat builds slightly during the braise, so start conservative. Serve with cooling chicken milanese style salad on the side.
Breast Meat Swap
Use 2 lbs boneless skinless breasts and cut the cook time to 4 hours on low. Breasts dry faster, so keep them sauced and check at hour 3. The result is leaner and slices cleaner for meal prep.
Crispy Top Finish
After the braise, move chicken to a broiler pan and broil 3 minutes to set the glaze. Watch closely so the honey doesn’t burn. This adds chew to the edge without changing the slow cooker step.
Slow Cooker Honey Mustard Chicken
Description
This slow cooker honey mustard chicken delivers a sticky, tangy glaze with almost no active work by layering pantry ingredients over bone-in thighs and walking away. The low, steady heat keeps the meat fork-tender and juicy, making it a practical dinner that reheats well.
Ingredients
Instructions
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Pat and season chicken
Pat the 2.5 lbs bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs dry with paper towels and season both sides with 1 tsp salt and 1/2 tsp black pepper. Dry skin helps the braise stay saucy rather than watery, so do not skip the drying step before seasoning.
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Whisk the sauce
Whisk 1/3 cup Dijon mustard, 1/4 cup whole grain mustard, 1/3 cup honey, 2 tbsp olive oil, 4 cloves minced garlic, 1/2 cup low-sodium chicken broth, and 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar in a bowl until smooth. This balanced sauce should look uniform with no streaks before you stop whisking.
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Layer in cooker
Pour half of the sauce into a 6-quart slow cooker and place the chicken thighs skin-side up inside. Pour the remaining sauce over them so the liquid reaches halfway up the meat, not submerging it, which keeps the tops glazed.
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Slow cook low
Cover and cook on low heat for 6 hours until the meat pulls from the bone with no resistance. Avoid lifting the lid before hour 5 to keep the temperature steady and let the collagen melt slowly.
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Remove and thicken
Remove chicken to a plate and stir 1 tbsp cornstarch with 2 tbsp cold water, then whisk into the hot liquid in the cooker. Set the cooker to high heat for 15 minutes until the sauce thickens to a gravy coat that clings to a spoon.
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Coat and rest
Return chicken to the sauce and spoon glaze over the top so each piece is covered. The skin won't crisp but the surface should look glossy and coated before serving, signaling the glaze has set.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 6
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 420kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 24g37%
- Saturated Fat 6g30%
- Cholesterol 120mg40%
- Sodium 680mg29%
- Total Carbohydrate 22g8%
- Dietary Fiber 1g4%
- Sugars 18g
- Protein 30g60%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Cool the chicken to room temperature within 2 hours of cooking, then refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 4 days; the sauce firms when cold but loosens on reheating.
- Make ahead: Make the sauce the night before and store covered in the fridge, then pour over raw chicken in the morning to slow bacterial growth and save time.
- Reheating: Reheat covered in a 350°F oven until the center hits 165°F, and do not reheat the same portion more than once for safety.
- Variation: For a pork twist, see our mustard baby ribs using a similar tangy mustard approach.
