This crockpot ravioli casserole is what I make when I need dinner handled without standing at the stove. Four ingredients. Layer it, walk away, come back to something that actually feels like a full meal.
I’ve made this on busy weeknights, before sports practices, and on days when I just don’t want to think about dinner at all. It works every time because it’s simple. No extra steps. No guesswork.
This is also one of those meals you can throw together when people are coming over and you forgot to plan. It fills everyone up. You’ll see people go back for seconds, especially the cheesy top layer.
If you’ve got picky eaters, this usually gets a pass. It’s basically lasagna without the work. That’s the whole point.

What Is Crockpot Ravioli Casserole?
Crockpot ravioli casserole is frozen ravioli, pasta sauce, cooked sausage, and shredded mozzarella layered right into the slow cooker and left to do its thing. That’s it. The ravioli handles the pasta and the filling in one step, which cuts out half the work before you even start.
It’s lazy lasagna, basically. Same layers, same comfort, same cheesy pull when you scoop it. But instead of boiling noodles, mixing ricotta, and babysitting the stove, you open a bag, open a jar, and stack everything in a pot. The slow cooker does the rest.
This is weeknight food built for real life. The kind of dinner that’s on the table with almost no effort and zero guilt about taking the shortcut. If you’ve ever wished lasagna was easier, this is your answer.

Why This Recipe Works
The ravioli does double duty. You’re not just adding pasta — you’re adding pasta that already has filling inside it. That’s one less ingredient, one less step, and a more satisfying bite in every scoop.
The sauce cooks right into the ravioli as it sits. The pasta softens, the filling warms through, and the whole thing settles into layers that scoop out like lazy lasagna. It feels like more work than it is. That’s one reason this goes over so well.
The sausage carries the flavor. Even with a short ingredient list, this doesn’t taste plain. You get richness from the meat, creaminess from the cheese, and enough sauce to hold it all together without turning it soupy.
The top layer is what people go for first. The cheese melts down into the corners and along the edges. Those bites disappear fast. If you’re serving this to a group, don’t expect the crispy edge pieces to last long. They always get claimed first.
Ingredient Breakdown
Frozen ravioli (20 oz.)
Use frozen, not fresh. Fresh ravioli gets too soft in the crockpot and can fall apart before the cook time is up. Cheese ravioli is my go-to because it keeps things simple, but beef ravioli works if you want a heartier dinner. Keep it frozen right up until you’re ready to layer it in.
Pasta sauce (24 oz. jar)
Use a jarred sauce you already know you like. With only four ingredients, every one of them matters. If the sauce is too sweet or too bland, you’ll notice it. A thicker sauce is better here — it helps the casserole hold together when you scoop rather than pooling at the bottom.
Ground Italian sausage (1 lb.)
Mild Italian sausage is the safest pick if you’re feeding kids or picky eaters. Hot sausage brings more flavor without adding extra ingredients. If you only have ground beef, use it — just add Italian seasoning and garlic powder so it doesn’t taste flat. Whatever you use, brown and drain it first. Don’t skip that step.
Shredded mozzarella (4 cups)
Pre-shredded is fine and what I use most of the time. If you want a smoother, stretchier melt, shred your own from a block. Either works. Don’t hold back on the cheese — it’s what makes the top layer look and taste the way it should.

How to Make Crockpot Ravioli Casserole
Brown the sausage in a skillet first. Break it up as it cooks so you don’t end up with big chunks in the layers. Drain the grease well — if you skip that, the whole casserole ends up greasy.
Spray the crockpot insert before you start layering. This matters. Melted cheese sticks hard, especially around the edges. Greasing it first makes cleanup so much easier.
Add a thin layer of sauce to the bottom — just enough to lightly cover it. This keeps the ravioli from sticking and gives the bottom layer moisture right away.
Add half the frozen ravioli in an even layer. It doesn’t have to be perfect, but try not to pile it all in one spot or the center won’t cook as evenly. Then top with half the sausage and a layer of mozzarella.
Repeat the layers one more time: sauce, ravioli, sausage, cheese. Put the lid on and cook on low for 3.5 hours or high for 1 hour 45 minutes. Start checking toward the lower end of that range if your crockpot tends to run hot.
You’re looking for ravioli that’s tender, cheese that’s fully melted, and layers that look set when you scoop into it. Let it sit about 10 minutes before serving — it firms up and scoops much more cleanly after a few minutes of rest.
Serving Suggestions
This is a solid standalone meal, but it goes really well with garlic bread or crusty rolls to scoop up the sauce. A simple green salad on the side balances the richness without adding much work. That’s usually all I do, and dinner feels complete.
If you want to stretch it for a bigger crowd, add a Caesar salad and a second side like steamed broccoli or roasted green beans. It looks like you planned more than you did, and that’s kind of the whole appeal of this recipe.
This is also a great recipe to take to someone. After a new baby, a surgery, or a rough week — this travels well, feeds a family, and doesn’t need explaining. Just include a loaf of bread and you’re good.

Storage and Make-Ahead Tips
Store leftovers covered in the fridge for up to 3 days. It makes a great lunch the next day — the flavor actually gets a little better after sitting overnight.
To reheat individual portions, the microwave works well. Add a small spoonful of sauce or a splash of water before heating if it looks dry — it loosens back up quickly. For a larger portion, cover with foil and warm in the oven at 350°F until heated through.
You can assemble this ahead of time, but keep the ravioli frozen as long as possible. If it sits fully assembled in the fridge for hours before cooking, the pasta softens early and the texture isn’t as good when it finishes. Layer it right before it goes in the crockpot for best results.
You can freeze leftovers, though the texture will be softer after thawing. I think it’s best fresh or straight from the fridge the next day. It still disappears, which tells me everything.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Only 4 ingredients — pantry and freezer basics
- 10 minutes of prep, then hands-off until dinner
- All the comfort of lasagna without the effort
- The kind of dinner people ask for again — even though it’s four ingredients and almost no effort
- Picky-eater approved every single time
- Great for potlucks, sick days, and last-minute guests
- Easy to customize with what you have on hand
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use fresh ravioli instead of frozen?
I’d skip it. Fresh ravioli gets too soft in the crockpot and tends to fall apart before the casserole is done. Frozen holds up much better through the cooking time.
Do I have to brown the sausage first?
Yes. It needs to be fully cooked before it goes into the crockpot. Otherwise you end up with uneven texture and extra grease sitting in the casserole.
Can I make this ahead?
Sort of. You can prep the sausage ahead and refrigerate it. But assemble the layers right before cooking — if the frozen ravioli sits in the sauce too long before it cooks, it softens before it should.
Can I cook this on high instead of low?
Yes. Cook on high for 1 hour 45 minutes or low for 3.5 hours. I prefer low when I have the time — better texture. But high works when you need dinner faster.
Why is my casserole watery?
Usually one of two things: the sauce was too thin, or the ravioli thawed before it went in. Use a thicker jarred sauce and keep the ravioli frozen right up until layering.
Can I double this recipe?
Only if your crockpot is large enough. A 6-quart fits this recipe perfectly. Don’t overfill it or the center won’t cook evenly.
Variations and Substitutions
Add spinach. Frozen chopped spinach is the easiest way to work in a vegetable without changing the recipe. Thaw it first and squeeze out the water completely. If you skip that step, it’ll water down the whole casserole.
Swap the protein. Ground beef, ground turkey, or shredded rotisserie chicken all work. Rotisserie chicken is a great shortcut — it just won’t add as much flavor as sausage, so lean on a good sauce. Ground beef or turkey should get Italian seasoning and garlic powder to make up the difference.
Make it meatless. Leave the meat out and add extra cheese, or use a spinach-and-cheese ravioli. It’s still filling and still works as a full dinner.
Mix up the cheese. Part mozzarella, part provolone melts really well and gives the top an incredible cheese pull. It’s especially good if you’re serving this for a casual family dinner with bread on the side.
Make it creamier. Stir a couple tablespoons of cream cheese into the sauce before you layer it. It makes the whole thing richer and more like baked pasta. Good for cold nights when you want something extra comforting.
Leftover Ideas
If you’ve got leftovers, the next-day lunch is my favorite use. Reheat a portion with a splash of water or extra sauce and it’s almost as good as fresh. I’ve served it straight from the fridge to skeptical kids and gotten zero complaints.
Turn it into a baked pasta situation. Scoop leftovers into an oven-safe dish, add a little extra sauce and mozzarella on top, and bake at 375°F for about 20 minutes. It gets crispy around the edges and feels like a whole new dinner.
Stuff it into a bell pepper. Cut a pepper in half, fill each side with leftover ravioli casserole, top with cheese, and bake until the pepper is tender. It’s a surprisingly good way to use up the last bit of the batch.
Add broth and make it a soup. Scoop leftovers into a pot, pour in some chicken or beef broth, and warm it on the stove. Toss in a handful of spinach or some extra diced tomatoes. What was a casserole becomes a thick, hearty pasta soup. My kids actually request it this way sometimes.
The Gear That Makes This Even Easier
A 6-quart slow cooker is the sweet spot for this recipe — big enough to fit two full layers without squishing everything, and the right size to cook it evenly. Crock-Pot’s 6-quart programmable model is what I use — you set it and it automatically switches to warm when the cook time is done, which is helpful if you’re not always home exactly on time.
For the sauce, the brand matters more than it might seem in a four-ingredient recipe. Rao’s Homemade marinara is thicker and more flavorful than most jarred options, and that thickness is exactly what keeps this casserole from going watery. It’s the one upgrade that makes a real difference in the final result.
Lighter Version
If you want to lighten this up without losing what makes it good, a few small swaps go a long way.
Swap the Italian sausage for lean ground turkey and season it yourself with Italian seasoning, garlic powder, and a pinch of fennel seed. You won’t miss the sausage as much as you’d think, and it cuts the fat significantly.
Use part-skim mozzarella instead of whole milk. It still melts and still gives you that cheesy top — just with a little less fat per serving.
Look for a lower-sodium pasta sauce. Some jarred sauces are high in sodium, and with four ingredients, the sauce is carrying a lot of the flavor profile. A good lower-sodium option keeps the taste while bringing the numbers down.
Adding a layer of frozen spinach (thawed and squeezed dry) between the layers gets more vegetables in without changing the flavor much. It’s an easy add for anyone trying to work in more greens on a busy weeknight.
Nutrition Information
Nutrition will vary based on the specific ravioli, sauce, and sausage brands you use. As a general estimate, one serving (roughly 1/6 of the recipe) comes in around 450–550 calories, with approximately 28–32g of protein, 30–38g of carbs, and 20–26g of fat. Check the recipe card below for more detailed nutrition info based on the standard ingredient amounts.
A Little Story About This One
The first time I made this, I honestly didn’t expect it to be that good. I was putting together something fast because I had almost nothing prepped and too much going on. A bag of frozen ravioli, a jar of sauce I had in the pantry, leftover sausage from the weekend, and the rest of a bag of mozzarella. I layered it in and figured it would be fine.
It was better than fine. My family went back for seconds and asked what I did differently. I told them I just threw stuff in the crockpot. That was the whole thing. That’s when I knew this was staying in the rotation.
Now it’s one of those recipes I genuinely keep ingredients for on purpose. The frozen ravioli lives in my freezer. The jarred sauce is always in the pantry. It’s one of those meals I keep ingredients for on purpose, because knowing it’s there means dinner is always covered.
Final Thoughts
This is the kind of dinner I keep coming back to because it solves the problem. It fills people up. It takes almost no effort. And it doesn’t leave me with a sink full of pans after dinner. That’s why it stays in the rotation.
If you try it, I hope it becomes one of your go-to weeknight meals too. It’s the kind of recipe you’ll want to tell a friend about — not because it’s fancy, but because it actually works when you need it most.
More Recipes You’ll Love
If this crockpot ravioli casserole hit the spot, here are a few more recipes to add to the list:
Lazy Crock Pot Lasagna — another slow cooker pasta dinner that’s every bit as easy and just as comforting.
Crock Pot Goulash — a hearty, cheesy ground beef pasta that’s ready in a few hours with almost no hands-on time.
Funeral Potatoes — the ultimate cheesy potato side dish for when you need something that makes people happy without a lot of work.
Crock Pot Beef and Noodles — tender beef slow-cooked until it falls apart, tossed with egg noodles for a dinner the whole table will love.

Crockpot Ravioli Casserole
Ingredients
- 20 oz. Frozen Four Cheese Ravioli {1 pkg.}
- 24 oz. Pasta Sauce {1 jar}
- 4 cups Shredded Mozzarella Cheese
- 1 pound cooked and drained Italian sausage
Instructions
- Spray the inside of a 6 quart crock pot with non stick cooking spray
- Pour ½ jar of pasta sauce in the crockpot
- Spread ½ of the ravioli in an even layer on top of the sauce
- Spread ½of the cooked Italian sausage over the cheese
- Spread out 2 cups of mozzarella over the ravioli
- Repeat that one more time making two layers
- Cook on HIGH for 1 hour 45 minutes, or LOW for 3 hours 30 minutes, or until done. ENJOY
