There’s a particular kind of magic in walking through the door after a long day and being hit with the smell of pork that’s been slowly falling apart for eight hours. No babysitting, no standing over a smoker, no fancy equipment. Just a slow cooker, a handful of pantry staples, and a little patience.

Crockpot pulled pork shredded and piled in a white slow cooker
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This is the recipe I come back to again and again — for game days, for feeding a crowd, for meal-prepping a week of sandwiches and tacos. It’s nearly impossible to mess up, and it makes enough to leave you with leftovers you’ll actually look forward to. If you love a true set-it-and-forget-it dinner, it fits right in with our other dump-and-go crockpot meals.

Pulled pork tacos topped with pickled onions and cilantro

Why This Recipe Works

A pork shoulder is a tough, fatty, hard-working cut, and that’s exactly why it’s perfect for the slow cooker. Here’s what makes it foolproof:

  • The cut does the work. A fatty, collagen-rich pork shoulder is built to be cooked low and slow — it only gets better the longer it goes.
  • Low and slow melts the tough stuff. Gentle heat over many hours breaks down connective tissue and renders the fat, turning a stubborn roast into fork-tender meat.
  • No special equipment. No smoker, no Dutch oven, no searing required — just your slow cooker.
  • Hands-off cooking. The crockpot does all the heavy lifting while you go about your day.
  • It’s forgiving. An extra hour won’t ruin it, and the rub and sauce are endlessly adaptable to your taste.

Ingredients

Pork shoulder, onion, garlic, chicken broth, and spices laid out for crockpot pulled pork
  • Boneless pork shoulder: Also called pork butt Boston butt perfect for slow cooking tender shredded barbecue
  • Yellow onion: Sliced adds sweet savory flavor base
  • Garlic cloves: Bring bold aromatic savory depth
  • Chicken broth: Creates moist flavorful slow cooking liquid base
  • Brown sugar: Adds caramel sweetness balancing smoky savory flavors
  • Smoked paprika: Delivers deep smoky warmth rich color flavor
  • Chili powder: Brings mild heat earthy spice blend flavor
  • Salt: Enhances overall flavor and seasoning balance throughout dish
  • Black pepper: Adds sharp bite subtle heat finish
  • Ground cumin: Warm earthy spice with nutty undertones
  • Cayenne: Adds extra heat spicy kick level
  • Favorite barbecue sauce: Finishing glaze adds sweet tangy richness

How to Make It

Pork shoulder being rubbed with brown sugar and smoked paprika spice blend

Step 1: Combine the brown sugar, smoked paprika, chili powder, salt, pepper, cumin, and cayenne in a small bowl. Pat the pork dry with paper towels, then rub the spice mixture all over the surface, pressing it in.

Seasoned pork shoulder placed over sliced onion and garlic in a slow cooker

Step 2: Scatter the sliced onion and smashed garlic across the bottom of your slow cooker. Set the seasoned pork on top, then pour the chicken broth around the sides — not over the top, so you don’t wash off the rub.

Cooked pork shoulder in a crockpot, tender enough to pull apart with a fork

Step 3: Cover and cook on LOW for 8 to 10 hours or HIGH for 5 to 6 hours. You’ll know it’s ready when a fork twists easily in the meat and it pulls apart with almost no resistance.

Step 4: Transfer the pork to a large bowl and shred it with two forks, discarding any large pieces of fat. Spoon in a few ladles of the cooking liquid to keep everything juicy, then stir in barbecue sauce to taste.

Crockpot pulled pork shredded with two forks and mixed with barbecue sauce

Tips for the Best Results

  • Don’t skip the sear (if you have five minutes). Browning the pork in a hot pan before it goes in the crockpot adds a deeper, roastier flavor. Worth it, but not mandatory.
  • Fat is flavor, but trim the worst of it. Leave a thin layer for moisture and pull off any thick, hard caps before serving.
  • Reserve that liquid gold. The cooking liquid is packed with flavor. Skim the fat off the top and use the rest to moisten leftovers or thin out your sauce.
  • Make it ahead. Pulled pork tastes even better the next day, and it freezes beautifully for up to three months — making it a great pick for our list of freezer crockpot recipes.

Ways to Serve It

The classic move is a pile of pork on a soft brioche bun with a scoop of tangy slaw, but this is a recipe that goes everywhere:

  • Piled high on a bun with a scoop of copycat Popeyes coleslaw
  • Tucked into tacos with pickled onions and cilantro
  • Over rice with black beans for an easy bowl
  • Loaded onto nachos with melted cheese
  • Stuffed into baked sweet potatoes
  • Spooned into pulled pork chili for a hearty cold-weather meal
  • Crisped up in a hot skillet for next-morning hash with eggs
Crockpot pulled pork shredded and piled high in a white slow cooker

A Few Common Questions

Can I use a pork loin instead? You can, but it’s much leaner and won’t get that same fall-apart texture. Stick with shoulder if you can.

Do I really need a cup of liquid? Yes — the broth keeps things from scorching and creates steam that helps the pork break down. The pork also releases a lot of its own juices as it cooks.

Can I cook it overnight? Absolutely. Eight to ten hours on low is ideal, so starting it before bed means you wake up to dinner basically done.

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Crockpot pulled pork shredded and piled in a white slow cooker

Easy Crockpot Pulled Pork

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Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 8 hours
Total Time: 8 hours 15 minutes
Servings: 10 Servings

Description

This easy crockpot pulled pork is fall-apart tender, juicy, and made with just 10 minutes of prep. A simple spice rub and your slow cooker do all the work — perfect for sandwiches, tacos, and feeding a crowd.

Ingredients 

  • 4 lb boneless pork shoulder, pork butt / Boston butt
  • 1 large yellow onion, sliced
  • 4 cloves garlic, smashed
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp smoked paprika
  • 2 tsp chili powder
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp black pepper
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1/2 tsp cayenne, optional
  • 1 cup Barbecue sauce, for finishing

Instructions

  • Mix the rub. Combine brown sugar, smoked paprika, chili powder, salt, pepper, cumin, and cayenne. Pat the pork dry, then rub the mixture all over, pressing it in.
  • Build the base. Scatter onion and garlic across the bottom of the slow cooker. Set the pork on top and pour the broth around the sides (not over the top).
  • Cook. Cover and cook on LOW for 8–10 hours or HIGH for 5–6 hours, until the meat pulls apart easily with a fork.
  • Shred and sauce. Transfer to a bowl, shred with two forks, discard large fat pieces. Add a few ladles of cooking liquid to keep it juicy, then stir in barbecue sauce to taste.

Equipment

  • Slow Cooker
  • Tongs

Notes

  • Sear the pork first for deeper flavor (optional).
  • Skim and reserve the cooking liquid to moisten leftovers.
  • Freezes well for up to 3 months.

Nutrition

Serving: 1ServingCalories: 303kcalCarbohydrates: 17gProtein: 42gFat: 7gSaturated Fat: 2gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 3gTrans Fat: 0.03gCholesterol: 109mgSodium: 954mgPotassium: 818mgFiber: 1gSugar: 13gVitamin A: 574IUVitamin C: 2mgCalcium: 37mgIron: 2mg

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