Creamy Potato Soup

Published March 2, 2021

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Potato Soup loaded with chunks of tender, hearty potatoes and made with a rich and creamy soup base. This soup is a reader favorite and for good reason – it’s easy to make and absolutely delicious! Top it with cheddar and bacon and no one will be able to resist.

Photo: Serving of potato soup shown in a brown bowl set over a decorated white and red plate. Potato soup is garnished with cheddar, bacon and green onions. Wheat bread is shown as a serving suggestion.

The BEST Potato Soup!

This is my idea of the perfect homemade potato soup! It’s creamy, it’s amazingly filling and it’s packed with goodness.

Growing up we had a lot of potato soup. It might have something to do with the fact that my grandparents were potato farmers so that just got passed down. My mom made it probably twice a month and now it’s the same for me, especially during cold winter months.

You’ll love that it’s something everyone in the family can agree on, and even get’s excited about when announced it’s what will soon await for dinner.

It’s also a very convenient recipe. Most of the ingredients are food staples you can keep on hand that don’t spoil quickly. The potatoes, carrots, celery and onions store well for weeks (and if you opt for bacon that keeps great in the freezer).

This easy potato soup recipe is one I would deem worthy of your recipe book! It’s an ultra comforting and cozy dish you’ll turn to time and time again.

Plus it makes great leftovers for lunch the next day if you happen to have any left.

Watch the Potato Soup Video!

 

Overhead photo of potato soup in a large red and white pot set over a wooden tabletop with serving suggestions to the side.

Photo of ingredients used to make homemade potato soup. Includes russet potatoes, milk, carrots, celery, yellow onion, flour, sour cream, butter, chicken broth, salt, pepper and optional bacon, green onions, and cheddar cheese.

Creamy Potato Soup Recipe Ingredients

  • Russet potatoes
  • Yellow onion
  • Carrots
  • Celery
  • Low-sodium chicken broth
  • Salt and pepper
  • Butter
  • Flour
  • Milk
  • Sour cream
  • Optional toppings (cooked bacon, cheddar cheese, green onions)

Collage of six photos showing steps to making potato soup. Shows simmering potatoes, carrots, celery and onion in chicken broth. Then includes first steps of making roux by melting butter and mixing with flour.

How to Make Potato Soup

  1. Add veggies and broth to pot: Combine diced potatoes, carrots, celery and onions with chicken broth in a large pot and season with salt and pepper to taste.
  2. Bring to boil: Cover pot and bring to a boil over medium-high heat (it will take about 10 minutes to reach a boil).
  3. Let simmer until tender: Once it reaches a boil reduce heat to medium and continue to cook about 15 – 20 minutes longer until potatoes are very soft when pierced with a fork.
  4. Prepare white sauce in separate pan: Meanwhile, in a medium saucepan melt butter over medium heat, add flour and cook for 1 minute while whisking constantly. While whisking, slowly add milk and cook, stirring constantly until mixture begins thicken.
  5. Combine mixtures: Once potatoes are soft add thickened milk mixture to potato soup mixture and stir (potatoes should start breaking down into soup, if not cook a few minutes longer).
  6. Stir in sour cream: Add sour cream and mix well.
  7. Finish with toppings if desired: Ladle soup into serving bowls, top each serving with bacon or ham, cheddar cheese and green onions.

Collage of six images showing continued steps of making potato soup. Includes mixing dairy into roux, then pouring into cooked potato mixture, then finishing with sour cream. Completed potato soup photo.

Helpful Tips

  • Stick with russet potatoes. They aren’t firm and waxy like the red and yellow and they’ll start to break down and make the soup creamy.
  • Measure out the ingredients. If you have too many or too little potatoes it will change the consistency.
  • Don’t add other herbs or spices. I know that can be tempting but the simple flavors are perfect here.
  • Monitor texture of potatoes as they cook. You want potatoes that are tender but not completely mushy or you’ll have mashed potato soup.
  • For extra complimentary flavors add toppings. Cheddar and bacon are the flavor pairing to potatoes.
  • Try substituting heavy cream or half and half for the sour cream. It is also such a delicious option.

Variations

  • Try adding a few large handfuls of sharp cheddar cheese right into the soup (at the end off heat) for a cheddar potato soup.
  • Up the veggies. Include others such as peas or corn.
  • Make it meaty. Add cooked sausage (ground or slices of kielbasa) to the soup. Or go with the ham or bacon option, which you can mix right into the soup as well.
  • Serve with homemade dinner rolls for dipping, making it the ultimately hearty meal!

Close up photo of scoop of potato soup in a laddle.

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4.96 from 315 votes

Potato Soup

One of my go-to soup recipes and a reader favorite! It's such a creamy, hearty, comforting soup. While the toppings (cheddar, bacon, and green onions) are optional I highly recommend them for that loaded baked potato style flavor!
Servings: 5 servings
Prep20 minutes
Cook30 minutes
Ready in: 50 minutes

Ingredients

Optional Toppings:

  • Cooked chopped bacon or chopped cooked ham, shredded cheddar cheese, chopped green onions or chives

Instructions

  • Combine diced potatoes, carrots, celery and onions with chicken broth in a large pot and season with salt and pepper to taste.
  • Cover pot and bring to a boil over medium-high heat (it will take about 10 minutes to reach a boil).
  • Once it reaches a boil reduce heat to medium and continue to cook about 15 - 20 minutes longer until potatoes are very soft when pierced with a fork.
  • Meanwhile, in a medium saucepan melt butter over medium heat, add flour and cook for 1 minute while whisking constantly. While whisking, slowly add milk and cook, stirring constantly until mixture begins thicken.
  • Once potatoes are soft add thickened milk mixture to potato soup mixture and stir (potatoes should start breaking down into soup).
  • Add sour cream and mix well. 
  • Ladle soup into serving bowls, top each serving with bacon or ham, cheddar cheese and green onions.

Notes

  • *Try substituting heavy cream or half and half for the sour cream. It is also such a delicious option.
  • Toppings not included in nutrition estimate as these are optional.
  •  Note that the soup will thicken as it rests so if you happen to have left overs you can thin with a little water or milk).
Nutrition Facts
Potato Soup
Amount Per Serving
Calories 441 Calories from Fat 189
% Daily Value*
Fat 21g32%
Saturated Fat 12g75%
Cholesterol 56mg19%
Sodium 486mg21%
Potassium 1177mg34%
Carbohydrates 54g18%
Fiber 4g17%
Sugar 12g13%
Protein 10g20%
Vitamin A 6155IU123%
Vitamin C 16.5mg20%
Calcium 220mg22%
Iron 2.3mg13%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Nutrition values are estimates only. See full disclaimer here.

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654 Comments

  • Elizabeth

    Hello: I have made this recipe 6 times since I discovered your site in November (2018). It is the best potato soup recipe I found that did not have a lot of “other” additives. I like the simplicity and cleanliness of the ingredients. One night I came home from work and wanted to make it and realized I had no celery; so I made the soup minus the celery. Then just before serving the bowls I put in peas I had on hand in the freezer; that I had sitting in warm water to defrost, while the soup cooked. The added crunch and color were wonderful. I like to add peas to some recipes but only at the last minute so they do not become mushy. Also, each time I have made the recipe I leave the potato skins on as I like the beneficial vitamins I get. Plus as the potato skins begin to separate from the pieces I know the potatoes are soft. Thank you for a GREAT recipe and site.

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      I’m so glad you’ve enjoyed this soup Elizabeth! Love the addition of peas, my mom used to do that sometimes.

    • maurice vaughan

      i’m looking for a potato soup recipe, not a carrot soup or bacon soup or all that other crap but potato soup

      • marlene jones

        How very very rude you are Maurice. Being nasty comes easy to you it sounds like. There is such a thing as omitting things from recipes you know and that way you wont have to let loose with nasty comments to someone kind enough to post a recipe for us to try. Try the recipe without carrots and bacon. I have enjoyed it this way many times. Enjoy your weekend.

      • Chuck Mainman

        Maurice, here ya go, Dude. Start a fire somewhere.Take a can of pork and beans. Open it with your teeth. Dump out the crap inside. Shove in a raw potato.Top off with water from a stream, a well, a puddle, whatever you have, Buddy. (If no water within easy reach, just make some in the can.) Hold the can over the fire until the water bubbles, or you drop the can, whichever happens first. Repeat until the potato is cooked enough to get a hatchet into it. salty sea sand if you happen to be beach combing. Good on ya, Mate!

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      Potatoes and dairy based soups don’t tend to freeze well unfortunately.

  • Linda Childress

    I Made The Soup For Dinner. I Must Admit That It Was The Best Potato Soup I Have Ever Eaten. My 2 Roommates Gave The Soup Top Praise.
    The Only Changes Made I Substituted Half Of The Milk For Half & Half and I Used Heavy Whipping Cream Instead Of The Sour Cream. I Seasoned With Salt And Pepper Aggressively Throughout The Cooking Process. This Recipe Is Definitely A Keeper And I Will Use It Often. Thank You For Sharing.

  • Dana Angle

    Very good, if you follow the instructions. I added one more cup of chicken broth because I was trying to cover all the veggies, while they were cooking. Added plenty of cheeses, bacon, and green onions. Five stars

  • Dom and Marissa

    Warning: hold yourself back from taking too big of a bowl. One ladle MAX. We had 5 each and we are currently potatoes.
    PS David. the sour cream is NOT nasty