This Chicken Enchilada Casserole recipe is everything you love about chicken enchiladas…stacked into delicious layers instead of rolled up. Easy to customize and always so delicious!

Friends, have you tried my favorite chicken enchilada casserole recipe yet?
I first shared it on the blog about four years ago, as a stackable casserole riff on my favorite chicken enchilada recipe. And in the years since, it has continued to be a regular in my rotation, as well as a total fave with family and friends. It’s made with my favorite easy homemade enchilada sauce, which automatically bumps any enchilada recipe up a mega notch. It’s easy to customize with any of your favorite enchilada fillings. It makes a big batch, making this the perfect casserole to make for a party, or taking to a friend in need, or just having extras for leftovers. It’s made with corn tortillas and is naturally gluten-free. And it is downright delicious.
I’ve tweaked and updated the recipe a tad on my own over the years. So today, I thought I would bump this chicken enchilada bake back to the top of the blog and give it a quick refresh with some new photos and recipe tweaks. Because in case you’ve never tried it…it’s time. :)
Chicken Enchilada Casserole Recipe | 1-Minute Video

My Favorite Homemade Enchilada Sauce Recipe:
Alright, before we get to the full ingredient list, a quick word about the homemade enchilada sauce included in the recipe. In my opinion, it’s simply the best. It’s irresistibly delicious, and made in the New Mexican tradition (without tomatoes, which I love). It calls for a simply ingredient list that you likely already have in your pantry. And it’s absolutely worth the extra 5 minutes of prep time (plus 20 or so minutes simmering on the stove, which you can multitask) that it requires to make. Thousands of readers have made it and agree — it’s a total keeper!
That said, if you’re absolutely in a hurry, you can sub in some store-bought green or red enchilada sauce instead. But I’d urge you to go homemade if you can. The sauce is the main seasoning in this recipe, and makes all the difference.
Here’s my full post about how to make enchilada sauce. (*Also, be sure to note that this casserole requires a double batch of this sauce!)

Chicken Enchilada Casserole Ingredients:
As I mentioned above, the ingredient list for this recipe is super-flexible, so feel free to add in any of your favorite fillings for chicken enchiladas. I like to use:
- Cooked chicken: Either from my recipe for baked chicken breasts, or I often just shred a rotisserie chicken.
- Veggies: The recipe below uses a quick blend of onion, red bell pepper, diced green chiles and corn. But feel free to add any other favorite veggies to the sauté.
- Beans: Two cans of your faves. I like to use one can of black beans, one can of pinto.
- Enchilada sauce: Homemade or store-bought.
- Corn tortillas: We’ll cut them in half, in order to help them layer a bit more evenly.
- Shredded cheese: Any kind of Mexican blend, Monterrey Jack or Pepperjack will do.
- Toppings: Chopped fresh cilantro, diced red onion, thinly-sliced green onion, diced avocado, sour cream, extra cheese…whatever sounds good to you.

How To Make Stacked Chicken Enchiladas:
To make this chicken enchilada casserole, simply:
- Cook your filling: Sauté the onion and bell pepper until soft. Then stir in the green chiles, beans, corn, chicken and enchilada sauce until combined. This will be your main filling.
- Stack your layers: In this order: enchilada sauce, tortillas, chicken filling, cheese, tortillas, chicken filling, cheese, tortillas, chicken, enchilada sauce and cheese.
- Bake: Covered for 20 minutes, then uncovered for another 10 until the cheese is melted.
- Garnish: Sprinkle on any of your desired toppings. (I vote the more, the merrier for sure.)
- Serve warm: Or cover and refrigerate for up to 3 days. (The leftovers are fantastic!)

Possible Variations:
Looking to mix things up? Feel free to:
- use a different protein: cooked beef, pork, or shrimp would all be delicious in this recipe (or you could nix the meat entirely)
- add more veggies: as mentioned above, extra veggies/greens would be delicious in this recipe, either sautéed or roasted
- nix the cheese: I’ve made this recipe dairy-free multiple times in the past, and didn’t even miss the cheese with all of the other great flavors/textures happening here

Mexican Side Dish and Drink Ideas:
Let’s make this a meal! Some classic Mexican recipes to go with this chicken enchilada bake could include:
Or as always, feel free to check out our Mexican recipe archives here on the blog for more inspiration.

Love Enchiladas? Check Out These Recipes Too!
- The Best Chicken Enchiladas EVER
- BBQ Chicken Enchiladas
- Ancho Chicken Enchiladas
- Beef Enchiladas
- Turkey Enchiladas
- Crab and Avocado Enchiladas
- Breakfast Enchiladas
- Roasted Vegetable Enchiladas
- Vegan Enchiladas
- Easy Enchilada Cups
- Chicken Enchilada Nachos

Enjoy, everyone!

Chicken Enchilada Casserole

Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 medium white onion, peeled and diced
- 1 large red bell pepper, cored and diced
- 1 (4 ounce) can diced green chiles
- 2 (15 ounce) cans beans, rinsed and drained (I used one can pinto, one can black beans)
- 1 (8 ounce) can whole kernel corn, drained
- 3 cups (about 1.5 pounds) shredded or diced cooked chicken
- 3 cups red enchilada sauce, homemade or store-bought, divided
- 12 corn tortillas, halved
- 3 cups shredded Monterrey Jack or Mexican blend cheese
- toppings: chopped fresh cilantro, diced red onion, thinly-sliced green onion and/or diced avocado
Instructions
- Heat oven to 375°F. Mist a 9×13-inch baking dish with cooking spray; set aside.
- Heat oil in a large sauté pan over medium-high heat. Add onion and bell pepper and sauté for 6-7 minutes, or until softened. Stir in the diced green chiles, beans, corn, chicken and 2 cups enchilada sauce, and stir to combine. Remove from heat and set aside.
- Pour about 1/2 cup of the remaining enchilada sauce in the baking dish, and spread until the bottom of the dish is evenly coated. Top with a layer of about 8 tortilla halves, so that the entire dish is covered. Top evenly with 1/3 of the chicken mixture, followed by 1/3 of the cheese. Repeat with another layer of tortillas, chicken mixture, and cheese. Followed by a final layer of tortillas, chicken mixture, the remaining 1/2 cup of enchilada sauce, and cheese.
- Cover the pan with aluminum foil, then bake for 20 minutes.
- Remove pan and remove aluminum foil. Uncover and bake for 10 more minutes, until the cheese is thoroughly melted.
- Remove from the oven and serve warm, garnished with your desired toppings.
Notes





I ommited beans and used corn tortillas. It was excellent! The entire family loved it! Thank you for sharing the recipe!
Corn tortillas as gluten free!
Do you have a good brand for gluten free corn tortillas?
Very good made your enchilada sauce had to use knorr chicken broth for 1st time the sauce,husband loved it 1 can corn and black beans not quite the amount of sauce but flavorful. Maybe could have used a few more tortillas, but next time. And thought the 7oz chilies 2 much for me but no.
The flavor is wonderful and packed full of protein. Thumbs up!!!
My kids love this dish! It’s great for left overs, super easy to make. The home made enchilada sauce is a game changer! I will never use canned again.
So easy and delicious. I made the homemade red enchilada sauce recipe too –I won’t buy store enchilada sauce ever again. This is a must make recipe! I cut the finished product into portions, and freeze in FoodSaver vacuum bags.
Delicious! I substituted beef for the chicken and made a beef enchilada casserole. Everyone inthe household raves about it.
I want to try this within the next day or two and I was wondering what size tortillas? I have some here that are 5 1/2″ diameter. Do I need the bigger ones? Thanks in advance.
Absolutely delicious! I ended up adding an additional 1/2 cup of enchilada sauce and 1 tsp of salt to the chicken mixture. Great meal to freeze as well!
I’m not leaving this comment to “hate”… just more so to HELP. The recipe is nice to look at… There are a lot of pretty colors associated… however, it’s more of a recipe for nachos. Cilantro shouldn’t ever go on an enchilada casserole. In fact… Most of the stuff shown in the video doesn’t belong. If you want chicken enchiladas… use green chili. The best green chili is from Hatch, New Mexico… but you can use Bueno as well. It’s in the frozen aisle. Mix the cooked chicken with cans of cream of mushroom, chopped white onion and chopped green chili. THATS PRETTY MUCH IT. Layer the baking dish as it shows in the video, with the mixture, including the cheese. You don’t need red peppers, cilantro, RED ENCHILADA SAUCE, or any of that aesthetic garnish. Red enchilada sauce should be on beef, not chicken. If you want authentic red chili enchiladas, brown lean ground beef and chopped white onions. Layer your baking dish with the ground beef, enchilada sauce and cheese. Colby Jack is the best. When your casserole is done, you can garnish either dish with lettuce and tomato. You can go a step further on the authenticity, and use red chili pods in lieu of enchilada sauce. My point is, don’t complicate something so easy with Taco Bell looking ingredients.
That sounds like a tasty alternative. And Hatch Chile green enchiladas is certainly a New Mexican specialty. But there are many “authentic” recipes out there. And as this is a casserole recipe it makes sense to add more ingredients to it. My abuela always made us red chili sauce chicken enchiladas. And this was a neat twist on my authentic.
JP’s post is my favorite recipe comment ever! Like, “I didn’t actually make this, but here’s an entirely different recipe to try instead. Also, I think I’m smarter than you. And also, real Mexicans make their casseroles with lean ground beef and Colby jack cheese.” ?
5-stars for the recipe (because it’s delicious, and if I were looking for “authentic” Mexican food I wouldn’t Google “casseroles with Colby jack and ground beef.”)
2-stars for JP’s comment, because while extremely arrogant, it’s also pretty hilarious. Thanks for the laughs!
Seriously??
Who said anything about “authentic”? It’s a Tex-mex food anyway, it’s not real Mexican no matter what you use or call it. I’m not sure where your idea of authenticity stems from…