Deviled Egg Potato Salad brings two picnic staples together in one bowl, and the result is the kind of side dish people keep going back to before the main course is even touched. The potatoes stay tender but structured, the eggs add that familiar deviled-egg richness, and the dressing lands somewhere between creamy and tangy with enough mustard to keep every bite lively.
What makes this version work is balance. The potatoes are cooked just until tender so they hold their shape after chilling, and the dressing uses both yellow mustard and Dijon for depth without turning sharp. A little sweet pickle relish softens the vinegar, while paprika gives the whole salad that classic deviled egg finish without making it taste dusty or over-seasoned.
Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: when to stop cooking the potatoes, how to fold everything so the salad stays chunky, and the easiest way to adjust the dressing if you like yours a little sweeter or a little more tangy.
The dressing coated every potato without getting soupy, and the paprika on top made it taste just like deviled eggs in salad form. I chilled it overnight and it held up beautifully for lunch the next day.
Love a creamy, tangy potato salad? Save this Deviled Egg Potato Salad for your next picnic or potluck.
The trick to keeping the potatoes from turning into mash
The biggest mistake in potato salad is cooking the potatoes until they’re soft all the way through. By the time you fold in the dressing and chill the bowl, they break down and the salad turns dense instead of chunky. You want the cubes tender enough to slip a fork through, but still firm at the edges so they can soak up dressing without falling apart.
Cooling matters too. Warm potatoes drink in dressing aggressively, which sounds good until the mayo starts loosening and the whole bowl turns greasy. Let the potatoes come down to room temperature before mixing, and if they feel a little steamy, spread them on a sheet pan for a few minutes. That small pause keeps the texture clean.
What each part is doing in this deviled egg potato salad

- Potatoes — Starchy potatoes like Yukon Golds give you a creamier bite, while waxier potatoes stay a little more defined. Either works, but avoid overcooking them. That’s the difference between a salad with shape and one that turns gluey.
- Mayonnaise — This is the base that carries the mustard and paprika. Use a mayo you actually like eating on its own, because there’s nowhere to hide a flat-tasting one here.
- Yellow mustard and Dijon — Yellow mustard gives the familiar deviled-egg flavor, while Dijon adds a little depth and edge. If you only use yellow mustard, the salad tastes one-note; if you only use Dijon, it can overpower the eggs.
- Sweet pickle relish — This softens the tang and adds little bursts of sweetness. Drain it slightly if it looks watery, or the dressing can loosen more than you want.
- White vinegar — A small amount wakes up the potatoes and keeps the dressing from tasting heavy. Don’t skip it unless you’re replacing it with another sharp acid, like a little lemon juice.
- Eggs — Chopped hard-boiled eggs are what make this feel like deviled eggs instead of plain potato salad. Chop them fairly fine so the yolks mingle with the dressing, but leave some white pieces for texture.
- Celery and green onions — These add crunch and a fresh, clean bite. If you leave them out, the salad leans softer and heavier, which is fine for some tables but less lively overall.
Building the salad so it stays creamy, not heavy
Cooking the potatoes just to tender
Start the potatoes in cold water and bring them up gently so the outside doesn’t overcook before the center catches up. Once they’re tender, drain them well and let the steam escape. If they sit wet in the bowl, the dressing will thin out and slide off instead of clinging.
Mixing the dressing before it hits the bowl
Stir the mayonnaise, mustards, relish, vinegar, sugar, paprika, salt, and pepper together until smooth. That keeps the seasoning even, and it prevents little pockets of mustard from showing up in one bite and disappearing in the next. Taste it here, while it’s easy to adjust, because once it’s on the potatoes the flavor softens a bit after chilling.
Folding everything together gently
Add the potatoes, eggs, celery, and green onions to a large bowl, then pour the dressing over the top. Fold with a spatula instead of stirring hard. If you beat it aggressively, the potatoes smear and the eggs disappear into the dressing, which is how you end up with a bowl that tastes fine but looks muddy.
Chilling for the right texture
Refrigerate the salad for at least 2 hours before serving. That resting time lets the potatoes absorb the dressing and gives the mustard a chance to mellow. If the salad looks a little thick after chilling, loosen it with a spoonful of mayo or a splash of milk and stir gently.
Three ways to adjust the bowl without losing the deviled egg feel
Make it a little brighter
Add another teaspoon of vinegar or a small squeeze of lemon if you want more tang. That sharpens the dressing and keeps the mayo from tasting heavy, especially after the salad has chilled. Add it a little at a time so you don’t push the balance too far.
Skip the dairy-free worry
This recipe is naturally dairy-free as written, which makes it an easy choice for mixed crowds. Just check the mayo label if you need a specific brand without dairy additives, because that’s the only ingredient that tends to vary.
Make it more Southern-style
Swap the sweet pickle relish for finely chopped dill pickles if you want a sharper, less sweet version. You’ll lose a little of the classic deviled-egg sweetness, but the salad gets a cleaner, more savory finish.
Add more richness for a crowd
If you’re serving this at a potluck and want a fuller egg flavor, add one extra chopped egg and a tablespoon more mayonnaise. That gives the salad a creamier finish without making it loose, as long as the potatoes were drained well first.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. The potatoes soften a bit as they sit, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. Mayo-based dressings separate after thawing, and the potatoes turn grainy.
- Reheating: Serve it cold. If it’s been sitting in the fridge, let it stand at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes so the dressing loosens and the paprika flavor comes through.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Deviled Egg Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Boil the potatoes in salted water until tender, 12 to 15 minutes, then drain and cool until no longer steaming.
- Chop the hard-boiled eggs and set them aside while the potatoes cool.
- Combine the potatoes, hard-boiled eggs, celery, and green onions in a large mixing bowl and toss to distribute evenly.
- In a separate bowl, mix mayonnaise, yellow mustard, Dijon mustard, sweet pickle relish, white vinegar, sugar, paprika, salt, and pepper until smooth and uniformly colored.
- Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and fold gently with a spatula until the potatoes and eggs look evenly coated.
- Refrigerate the salad for at least 2 hours so it thickens and the flavors blend.
- Right before serving, garnish with extra paprika for a visible deviled-egg finish.


