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There’s nothing better than a warm bowl of Slow Cooker Ham and Beans on a chilly day. This easy recipe turns leftover ham, veggies, broth, and simple seasonings into a comforting meal the whole family will love.

This recipe is sponsored by Hurst’s HamBeens though all opinions are mine alone.
Featured Comment
This was absolutely fabulous. Used a ham shank. Added a couple of extra cups of broth at the end. Sublime.
– Kevin
Are you a Ham and Bean soup fan? My family sure is. There is a little diner we go to that has Ham and Beans on the menu daily and I have to get it every time we go. You won’t believe how easy it is to make restaurant-quality ham and beans at home easily by throwing everything in your slow cooker and WITHOUT soaking the beans.
Key Ingredients
Here is what you need to make this EASY ham and beans recipe. The full recipe is in the recipe card below the images.
- Hurst’s Hambeen’s Great Northern Beans – These beans can be found at most grocery store (especially Walmart) the pack of beans come with a ham flavoring packet. The ham flavor packet is that it is vegetarian, so if you are not wanting real ham in your soups but want the flavor, you can get it!
- Vegetables – Carrots, celery and onion which is a mirepoix and perfect for making soups in the crockpot.
- Diced Ham – This is a great way to use leftover ham from the holidays.
- Other Ingredients – Chicken broth, dried thyme, salt and pepper.


How to make Crockpot Ham and Beans
- Combine beans, ham, vegetables, seasonings, and broth in the crockpot.
- Slow cook until the beans are tender and the flavors have blended.
- Stir in the ham flavor packet, adjust seasoning, and serve warm.

Variations
Here are some ways to change up this meal.
- If you don’t have chicken broth on hand, you can use 4–5 chicken bouillon cubes instead. Just unwrap them and add them directly to the slow cooker with 8 cups of water — they’ll dissolve as the soup cooks.
- For a different flavor, you can use 1–2 ham hocks or shanks instead of diced ham. After cooking, remove the hock, shred off any meat, and stir it back into the soup. To remove excess grease, lay a paper towel over the surface of the soup and lift it away.
- Smoked sausage or cooked bacon are also great additions if you want even more flavor.
- Want to change it up even more? Try using a 15-bean mix instead of Great Northern beans for a heartier and more colorful soup.

Serving Ideas
- Toppings: If you want to add toppings, add crushed saltines, sour cream, green onions and hot sauce.
- Sides: Cornbread is a favorite side for ham and beans, but you can also serve it with garlic bread or breadsticks.

Do I need to soak beans before adding to the slow cooker?
There is no need to soak beans before adding them to the slow cooker. If you cook on high, they will cook up perfectly.
Can I use Canned Beans?
I recommend using dry beans for this recipe — they slowly soak up all the delicious flavors while they cook. Canned beans can break down too much in the crockpot and end up mushy.

Slow Cooker Ham and Beans Recipe
How to Video
Ingredients
- 20 oz. pkg. Hurst’s Hambeens Great Northern Beans with Ham flavoring, (save the ham flavor packet for the end of the cooking time)
- 2 cups diced ham, leftover ham works great
- 1 yellow onion, diced
- 3 carrots, peeled and diced
- 3 celery ribs, diced
- 2 tsp. dried thyme
- 1/4 tsp. pepper
- 8 cups chicken broth
- salt to taste
Instructions
- Place the beans in a colander and sort out any debris, rinse beans in cold water and add to the slow cooker.
- Add the ham, onion, carrots, celery, thyme, pepper and chicken broth, stir. Wait to add the ham flavor packet.
- Cover and cook on HIGH for 6-7 hours without opening the lid during the cooking time.
- When the cooking time is done, add the ham flavor packet and stir. Add salt to taste. Serve and enjoy!
Nutrition
Nutrition info is auto-generated. This information is an estimate; if you are on a special diet, please use your own calculations.
How can I make this into a freezer meal?
This meal makes a GREAT freezer meal, here is how I do it:
- Place raw veggies, diced ham, dried thyme and pepper into a ziplock bag. Don’t add the beans or chicken broth, leave those in your pantry until you are ready to use your frozen meal.
- Freeze the veggies, ham and seasonings for up to a month.
- When ready to cook, add the contents of the freezer bag, beans, and pour in 8 cups of chicken broth into the slow cooker. Wait to add the ham packet.
- Cook as the normal recipe states, add ham flavor packet at end of cooking time.
More crockpot dried bean recipes
- Creamy and buttery with just the right amount of seasoning, these Slow Cooker Lima Beans make the perfect cozy side or main dish.
- Tender pinto beans and flavorful ham come together for a comforting Southern-style dinner in this Slow Cooker Pinto Beans and Ham recipe.
- Bold buffalo flavor, hearty beans, and tender chicken make this 15 Bean Buffalo Chicken Soup a fun and spicy twist on traditional slow cooker soups.
- Bean soups are one of the best things to make in the crockpot, when we have leftover ham we make these ham and beans 15 bean soup or black-eyed peas.
This recipe is sponsored by Hurst’s HamBeens though all opinions are mine alone.

















Can you a can of sliced carrots in stead of raw carrots in this recipe?
So good!
I have made this several times and it is delicious. I can not find the brand of beans that comes with a flavor packet, so I just add a chicken bullion cube for added flavor. The recipe makes way more food than I can eat up before it would go bad, so I was wondering if this can be stored in the freezer in serving size portions, or other suggestions on storing leftovers?
Unless you want your belly to bloat, soak those beans! Then, pour off the water they soaked in and start the recipe with clean water. Followed this recipe as written and I (and everyone around me) was in misery from the gas.
This was absolutely fabulous. Used a ham shank. Added a couple of extra cups of broth at the end. Sublime
Can I use canned Northern Beans instead? If so, how many?
Hard to say without testing the recipe again, sorry I don’t have that information.
1/2 c dried beans = 1 15oz canned beans. So for 20o z of dried beans you would need 5 cans
You can definitely use canned beans. I use 3 16 oz cans drained. I have used ham, pork shank and smoked bacon all of which works. For the broth, I used 1 tsp of chicken Better Than Boullion.
Sometimes I use a combination of Great Northern and Pinto Beans and it turns out good.
Service with hot cornbread.
Very good bean soup I highly recommend it
I cut the ham and use the ham juice and everything for my stock
Although the store locator said they had this brand, they only had the 15-bean variety. The only other store listed was Wal-mart and I refuse to shop there. I used the 15-bean and it was fine. I added a bay leaf and a little dried basil as I didn’t have thyme and others said they didn’t like the flavor.
That said, I felt the amount of carrots, celery, and onion was too much. I would cut back to two carrots, two celery ribs, and 1/2 to 3/4 of a yellow onion (or a small onion). It was so thick with vegetables that there wasn’t much broth. I had to add chicken broth to thin it out a little. It was also almost too much for my 6-quart crock pot (biggest I have), so at the end I transferred to a soup pot to finish the cooking. This was before adding additional chicken broth. I will try it again in the crockpot with the smaller amount of veggies and maybe a little more broth.
It really did turn out quite good and my husband loved it too!
AMAZON , BUY “20 oz. pkg. Hurst’s Hambeens Great Northern Beans with Ham flavoring “
I always use about three different recipes to make my own version. Hopefully won’t mess anything up ha ha. Different ideas are great I think. I like lots of stuff in mine so this will be my base recipe and I will add other ideas to it. Thank you so much.
My Great Northern beans did not come with “ham seasoning“! What to do⁉️
If you have chicken bouillon that adds great flavor. Or more salt at the end.
How about using better than bouillon ham base. A different recipe used that if necessary for flavor.
That is a great idea. I need to pick some of that up myself.