Instant Pot vs Slow Cooker: Which Should You Buy?

If you’ve stood in the grocery store wondering whether instant pot and slow cooker (crock-pot) are basically the same thing, you’re not alone. Here’s what I have learned cooking with both.

Quick Answer

If you can only buy one: Instant Pot wins for versatility. Slow cooker if you genuinely want set-and-forget Sunday meals while you’re out. Most modern Instant Pots include slow cook mode anyway.

What Is Instant Pot?

Composition: Electric pressure cooker, cooks under high pressure (10-15 psi), 30-60 min meals

Best uses: Beans (15 min instead of overnight soak), pot roasts in 1 hour, rice, soups, hard-boiled eggs

Pros:

  • Saves 50-80% time
  • Multi-function (saute, slow cook, pressure)
  • Tenderizes tough meats fast

Cons:

  • Loud pressure release
  • Learning curve for timing
  • Cannot brown evenly
  • $80-200

What Is Slow Cooker (Crock-Pot)?

Composition: Low heat electric pot, 4-12 hours of cooking

Best uses: Pulled pork, chili, soup that simmers all day, gone-all-day Sundays

Pros:

  • Set and forget
  • Cheap ($30-80)
  • No noise
  • Easier to learn

Cons:

  • Long cook time required
  • Can’t brown or sauté
  • Single function

Can You Substitute One for the Other?

Using Slow Cooker (Crock-Pot) instead of Instant Pot

Instant Pot can do 90% of what slow cooker does. Use ‘slow cook’ function.

Using Instant Pot instead of Slow Cooker (Crock-Pot)

Slow cooker cannot pressure cook. Different appliances.

My Honest Take

If you can only buy one: Instant Pot wins for versatility. Slow cooker if you genuinely want set-and-forget Sunday meals while you’re out. Most modern Instant Pots include slow cook mode anyway. Both have their place.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are instant pot and slow cooker (crock-pot) interchangeable?

Sometimes yes, sometimes no. For casual recipes you can swap with adjustments. For dishes where it matters, use what the recipe calls for.

Which one is healthier?

Depends on the metric. Both fit in a balanced diet.

Which one tastes better?

Personal preference. They serve different dishes.

Which is cheaper?

Generally the specialty version is more expensive.

Can I store them the same way?

Check labels – refrigerate perishables, dry goods to pantry.

J
About Julia

I'm Julia. I cook restaurant copycat recipes at home and share what works. Every recipe on this site is tested at least three times in my own kitchen before I publish it.

Read more about me →

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *