Preparative protein crystallization is regarded as an economically sustainable protein purification alternative to chromatography in biotechnological downstream processing. However, protein crystallization is a not-well-understood process that is usually slow and poorly reproducible. A promising strategy for enhancing protein crystallization is exploiting the metastable liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) of protein solutions. Here, we report an enhancement of lysozyme-crystallization yield by using a combination of two additives under LLPS conditions. The first additive, NaCl (0.15 M), is necessary to introduce protein-protein attractive interactions and induce LLPS by lowering temperature. The second additive, 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonate (HEPES, 0.10 M, pH 7.4), accumulates in the metastable protein-rich liquid phase and thermodynamically stabilizes lysozyme crystals. We found that this combination of additives leads to crystallization yields of higher than 90% under LLPS conditions at a lysozyme concentration of 5% by weight and a fairly low ionic strength (0.2 M) within an operational time of the order of one hour. This crystallization yield is more than three-fold larger than that obtained from samples containing NaCl without HEPES at the same pH and ionic strength. Moreover, we determined crystallization yield as a function of incubation time, and temperature below and above the LLPS boundary. As crystallization temperature intersects with LLPS temperature, a significant increase in crystallization yield is observed. This is consistent with LLPS boosting protein crystallization. Our work suggests a possible strategy for increasing the crystallization success of other proteins, with applications in protein purification.