I’ve been making these caramel crunch chocolate bars for about 8 years now, ever since Max’s preschool teacher mentioned her grandmother’s “secret candy recipe” at a holiday party. After begging for the recipe and testing it 40+ times in my kitchen, I finally nailed the perfect ratio of buttery caramel crunch chocolate bars to chocolate crunch. The trick? It’s all about temperature control and not rushing the caramel layer something I learned the hard way after my first three batches turned into sticky disasters that cemented themselves to the pan.
I’ve been making these caramel crunch chocolate bars for 8 years now every bake sale, potluck, and holiday party. People always ask for the recipe, and honestly, I get it. They’re not hard to make. You don’t need special candy thermometers or professional skills. But they taste expensive. The crispy bottom stays crunchy even after you pour the caramel on top. The caramel crunch chocolate bars has this rich, buttery flavor that reminds me of English toffee. And the chocolate? It sets up smooth and shiny, never gets that chalky white film you see on old candy bars.
Here’s the best part you can mess these up and they’ll still turn out great. My first good batch happened after I burned the caramel. Twice. Lina loves helping out, mostly because he gets to crush things and sneak toffee bits when he thinks I’m not looking. These bars keep for about five days if you store them right, though ours disappear way faster than that. Last Christmas, I made a triple batch and they were gone in two days.
Jump to:
Ingredients for Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars
The Crispy Base:
- Rice cereal
- Toffee bits
- Butter
- Mini marshmallows
- Crushed pretzels

The Caramel Layer:
- Wrapped caramels
- Heavy cream
- Butter
- Sea salt
- Vanilla extract
The Chocolate Top:
- Milk chocolate chips
- Dark chocolate chips
- Coconut oil
See recipe card for quantities.

How To Make Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars Step By Step
Making the Crispy Base:
- Melt butter and marshmallows on low heat stir the whole time or they burn
- Mix in rice cereal and toffee bits while it’s warm
- Press into your lined pan with buttered hands
- Set aside for about 15 minutes while you make the caramel
The Caramel Layer:
- Put unwrapped caramels, cream, and butter in a pot
- Melt on medium-low, stirring constantly seriously, don’t walk away
- Cook to 240°F, or test it in cold water should make a soft ball
- Take off heat, add vanilla and salt
- Pour over the base right away sets up fast
- Cool completely, 2-3 hours
Chocolate Top:
- Cut into squares, wipe knife between cuts
- Melt both chocolates with coconut oil microwave works, 30 seconds at a time
- Pour over caramel
- Spread with offset spatula
- Let set at room temp fridge makes it get that weird white stuff
Smart Swaps That Actually Work
Crunch Options:
- Rice cereal → Crushed cornflakes (crunchier)
- Toffee bits → Crushed Heath bars (even better, honestly)
- Regular pretzels → Gluten-free pretzels (made these for my cousin with celiac, worked fine)
Caramel Changes:
- Store-bought caramels → Homemade caramel (more work but tastes incredible)
- Heavy cream → Full-fat coconut milk (for dairy-free, surprisingly good)
- Regular salt → Smoked sea salt (changes everything)
Chocolate Swaps:
- Regular → Sugar-free chips (made these for my diabetic aunt, turned out decent)
- Milk chocolate → All dark chocolate (less sweet, more grown-up)
- Chocolate chips → Chopped chocolate bars (melts smoother)
Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars Variations
Pretzel Power:
- Throw crushed pretzels in the base
- Press whole mini pretzels on top while chocolate’s wet
- Hit it with extra sea salt
- Sweet and salty in every bite
Peanut Butter Heaven:
- Swirl half cup melted peanut butter into caramel
- Toss chopped peanuts in the base
- Drizzle more peanut butter on chocolate
- Lina eats three of these in one sitting
S’mores Version:
- Swap rice cereal for crushed graham crackers
- Drop mini marshmallows on the chocolate
- Drizzle extra chocolate over everything
- Tastes like summer camp
Coffee Boost:
- Stir tablespoon instant espresso into melted chocolate
- Scatter chocolate-covered espresso beans on top
- Use more dark chocolate than milk
- My husband begs for this one
Equipment For Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars
- 9×13 baking pan (metal works better than glass)
- Parchment paper (seriously, don’t skip this)
- Heavy saucepan (thin ones burn the caramel)
- Candy thermometer (or good instincts)
- Offset spatula (regular spatula works but makes spreading harder)
Keeping Your Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars
Room Temperature (5 days):
- Airtight container with wax paper between layers
- Stay chewy the whole time
- Mine lasted exactly 5 days before Lina’s friends destroyed them
Fridge (2 weeks):
- Same deal with the wax paper
- Let them warm up 15 minutes before eating
- Cold chocolate tastes weird
Freezer (2 months):
- Grab one for lunch boxes thaws by noon
- Wrap each bar in plastic wrap
- Toss in a freezer bag

Top Tip
- When making these caramel crunch chocolate bars, temperature is everything with the caramel layer. You want it to hit exactly 240°F any hotter and it turns into hard toffee that’ll crack your teeth, any cooler and it stays too soft and never sets right. I learned this after my first batch stayed gooey for three days straight because I pulled it off heat too early.
- Now I keep a glass of ice water next to the stove and do the old-fashioned cold water test my grandma taught me. Drop a bit of caramel crunch chocolate bars into the cold water every minute or so once it starts bubbling. When it forms a soft ball that you can pick up and squish between your fingers without it dissolving, it’s ready.This method is way more reliable than trusting a candy thermometer that might be off by a few degrees, especially if you’ve had it for years like I have.
- Also, watch the color you want deep amber, almost the color of an old penny. That’s when the sugar has caramelized enough to give you that rich, buttery flavor instead of just tasting sweet. The smell changes too. It goes from sugary to nutty right at that perfect moment.Pull it off the heat immediately when you smell that shift, or you’ll cross into burnt territory real fast.
These bars are so rich and sweet that you need something to balance them out. Strong black coffee is my go-to the bitterness cuts right through all that caramel and chocolate. Espresso is even better. If you’re a tea person, try Earl Grey. The bergamot thing it has going on actually works really well with chocolate. Want to go full dessert? Vanilla ice cream is the obvious choice, but salted caramel ice cream or coffee ice cream take it up a notch. My husband always grabs the coffee ice cream.
Plain frozen yogurt works if you don’t want to feel like you’re about to pass out from sugar.Fresh fruit helps too. Strawberries or raspberries (Lina always picks raspberries) add some tartness so it’s not just sweet on sweet. Orange segments are weirdly good with the chocolate cuts through the richness. At parties, I cut these into tiny one-inch squares and stick toothpicks in them. People like having small bites they can just pop in their mouth. Plus it makes one batch last way longer, which matters when you just spent an hour unwrapping all those caramels.
FAQ
Does Crunch chocolate still exist?
Yeah, Nestlé Crunch bars are still around, though Ferrara Candy Company took over making them in 2018. The original recipe from 1938 hasn’t changed much still just chocolate and crisped rice. But these homemade caramel crunch chocolate bars are in a completely different league. You control the caramel quality, the chocolate ratio, and you get that thick, gooey caramel center that the store version doesn’t have.
Do crunch bars have caramel?
Original Nestlé Crunch bars don’t have any caramel they’re just milk chocolate with crisped rice mixed in. That’s actually why I started making this recipe in the first place. I wanted that satisfying crunch but with layers of flavor. The caramel in these bars is thick and chewy, almost like soft toffee, and it soaks into the crispy layer just enough to create these pockets of sweetness.
Who makes Crispy Crunch chocolate bars?
Cadbury makes Crispy Crunch bars, and they’re mainly a Canadian thing. They’re totally different from Nestlé Crunch Crispy Crunch has this peanut butter-flavored crispy center that’s almost like flaky peanut brittle covered in chocolate. My recipe is more similar to a Nestlé Crunch with the added caramel layer, though if you want to go the peanut butter route, the peanut butter swirl variation I mentioned earlier gets you pretty close to that Crispy Crunch vibe.
When did Crunch chocolate bar come out?
The original Nestlé Crunch bar came out in 1938, so it’s been around for over 85 years with basically the same simple recipe milk chocolate and crisped rice cereal. It became huge during World War II because it was an affordable treat when sugar was rationed.

Now you’ve got everything you need to make these caramel crunch chocolate bars from the temperature tricks to avoiding my burnt caramel mistakes. They’re honestly easier than they look, and the results blow any store-bought candy bar out of the water. Lina still asks me to make a batch every few weeks, and his friends have started requesting them for their birthdays instead of cake.
Craving more sweet treats? Try our Easy Lemon Meltaway Cookies Recipe that literally melt on your tongue perfect for spring and summer gatherings. Need something a bit healthier? Our Healthy Maple Cookies Recipe uses real maple syrup and whole wheat flour but still tastes like dessert. Or go all in with chocolate with our 5 Ways to Make Perfect Chocolate Cherry Brownies that combine rich cocoa with tart cherries in the best way possible.
Share your candy-making wins! I love seeing your chocolate-caramel creations!
Rate this Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars and join our baking community!
Looking for other recipes like this? Try these:
Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars

Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars
These Caramel Crunch Chocolate Bars combine a crispy cereal base, buttery soft caramel, and a smooth chocolate top. They’re easy to make, totally customizable, and perfect for bake sales, holidays, or just because. You don’t need fancy equipment just a good saucepan, a sense of smell, and a sweet tooth.
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
-
Melt butter and marshmallows over low heat, then mix in rice cereal, toffee bits, and pretzels. Press into a lined 9×13 pan and let rest.
-
Combine caramels, cream, and butter. Cook on medium-low, stirring constantly, until smooth and reaches 240°F.
-
Remove caramel from heat, stir in vanilla and salt, then pour over the base and spread evenly. Let cool completely.
-
Melt chocolate chips with coconut oil in microwave. Pour over set caramel and spread with spatula.
-
Let bars set at room temperature, then cut into squares. Serve or store in an airtight container.
Nutrition
Notes
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
