Tessa’s Recipe Rundown
Taste: The perfect amount of sweetness.
Texture: My favorite part, each bite is the ideal balance between soft and chewy.
Ease: Super easy 30-minute sugar cookie recipe with no chilling required.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe: Fun, simple, and perfect for holidays from Christmas to Valentine’s Day, even 4th of July. Everyone LOVES these cookies.
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Not to boast, but everyone who has tasted or made this sugar cookie recipe has said it became their instant favorite!! It took weeks of testing to get it just right.
These Soft & Chewy Sugar Cookies require NO CHILLING and are incredibly easy to bake up.
Reader Love
Delicious! Just made these with my 3 year old daughter. Easy to follow recipe and will be my go-to for sugar cookies! Only difference was adding rainbow sprinkles (the round ones) to the sugar to roll the balls in before baking.
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This recipe is perfect for your Christmas cookie boxes or just enjoying with a glass of milk. If it’s a warmer time of year, it also makes a great base for ice cream sandwiches!

Originally, I had created a recipe with cream cheese that was ultra-soft. However, I found that it would become claggy, and each bite would get stuck to the roof of your mouth.
After many rounds of recipe testing, I finally nailed an easy sugar cookie recipe that’s soft and chewy (and STAYS soft) and has that perfect sparkly crackled top.



Sprinkle of Science
Ingredients Notes
- All-purpose flour – Make sure to weigh your flour accurately. If you add too much flour, your cookies won’t spread at all and won’t be soft or chewy.
- Baking powder – This gives the sugar cookies lift, without adding too much spread or browning.
- Fine sea salt – So important to balance the sweetness!
- Unsalted butter – It’s important that your butter is at a cool room temperature (around 67°F), otherwise your cookies may spread.
- Granulated sugar – The star ingredient! Don’t reduce the sugar – find out why here and peek the image below.
- Eggs – One whole egg with an extra egg yolk lends richness and chewiness to the texture. Make sure they’re at room temperature.
- Vanilla extract – No sugar cookie recipe is complete without the flavor of vanilla extract.

Keys to SOFT Cookies
- The extra egg yolk helps to add more moisture and richness, for a soft and chewy texture.
- The other trick is found in the size of the dough ball…. a whole 3 tablespoons in each! This creates larger cookies that spread out perfectly with ultra-soft centers.
- Whatever you do, don’t overbake this sugar cookie recipe. They should still look ever so slightly ‘wet’ in the center when you pull them from the oven.
How to Prevent Cookie Spreading
To prevent flat sugar cookies that spread into little puddles, it’s important to make sure your butter is at a COOL room temperature.
Your sticks of butter should give slightly when pressed with your finger but still hold their shape. To be precise, your butter should be 67°F.
Crinkly Tops in Sugar Cookies
Besides rolling in sugar, baking powder is one ingredient that gives these cookies their characteristic cracks, so make sure your baking powder is fresh.
TIP: When the cookies are piping hot out of the oven, use a round cookie cutter to swirl around the edges of each cookie to re-shape into a perfect circle and enhance those crinkly tops.

The Best Baking Sheet for Cookies
The below photo features cookies from the same exact batch of dough, baked for the same amount of time at the same temperature.

2. Wilton Non-Stick: browned heavily with less spread
3. Walmart Mainstays: pale cookies, pan warped and rusted
4. Viking Ceramic Lined: cookies burnt on the bottom
5. Nordicware Unlined Aluminum: my favorite Goldilocks pan*
6. OXO Gold Nonstick: browned heavily with less spread
A light-colored aluminum half sheet pan is my favorite for baking cookies. Avoid dark nonstick pans altogether, they brown too much and may burn the bottoms of your cookies. Check out my Baking Pans 101 post for all the surprising details.
Do You Need to Chill the Dough?
It’s not required, baking immediately after mixing will result in absolutely delicious cookies.
However, if time permits, chilling the scooped dough in an airtight container for 24-72 hours does result in cookies that are thicker, chewier, and more flavorful. Roll in sugar after chilling otherwise the sugar will absorb into the dough. Learn more about chilling cookie dough here.
What Temperature and How Long to Bake

Bake at 350°F for 10 to 12 minute, or until the sugar cookies are set and are just beginning to brown around the edges, for classic thick & chewy sugar cookies.
The higher the temperature and/or the longer you bake, the crispier your cookies will be.
If you like really soft, almost dough-y cookies, bake at 325°F, adding a few minutes to the bake time.
How to Store Cookies to Keep Soft
Store sugar cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days. Store cookies with a tortilla, apple wedge, or piece of bread to keep them soft for longer.
Freezing
This sugar cookie recipe freezes beautifully. Freeze the uncoated, pre-portioned balls of cookie dough in a freezer-safe container, tightly wrapped in plastic wrap, or in a Ziploc bag. Allow them to thaw overnight in the fridge or for 30-60 minutes at room temperature, then bake as directed below.

FAQs
Can I Make This Recipe With a Hand Mixer?
Yes! A hand mixer will work just as well as a stand mixer.
Can This Recipe be Used For Cut-out Cookies?
No, this sugar cookie recipe was designed for simple drop-style cookies. If you want cookie cutter sugar cookies instead, check out my Cut Out Sugar Cookie recipe here.
Why use a cookie scoop?
It makes quick and easy work of portioning the dough uniformly so no one fights over the biggest cookie. I love using a 3-Tablespoon size cookie scoop for this sugar cookie recipe. Learn more about Cookie Scoops and how to use them here!
Can I add almond extract?
Yes! Feel free to add 1/2 – 1 teaspoon almond extract for a fun twist.
Can I use salted butter?
Yes, either omit the salt entirely, or reduce the amount to 1/2 teaspoon.
How to Decorate Drop-Style Sugar Cookies?
This is totally optional, as these cookies are so pretty by themselves – but if you want to make them a more colorful treat, here some ideas:
-Roll the balls of dough in colored sugar before baking.
-Fold in 1/4-1/2 cup of multi-colored jimmies or holiday jimmies or sprinkles as a last addition to the dough.
-Use my Best Buttercream Frosting recipe for decorating.
-Another favorite is my Best Cream Cheese Frosting recipe!
Parchment Paper or Silicone Baking Mats for Cookies?
I prefer parchment paper for cookies over silicone mats, it’s easier and quicker to clean up. Learn about parchment vs. Silicone mats here.
Whatever you do, never use nonstick cooking spray when baking cookies. This will lead to too much browning and spread (hello, burnt cookie puddles).

Soft and Chewy Sugar Cookies
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Ingredients
- 2½ cups (318 grams) all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 3/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 2 sticks (226 grams) unsalted butter, at cool room temperature
- 1¼ cups (250 grams) granulated sugar, plus ¼ cup (50 grams) for rolling
- 1 large egg plus 1 egg yolk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt to combine.
- In a large bowl, use an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment on medium-high speed to beat the butter and 1¼ cups sugar until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Scrape down the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl. Add the egg, egg yolk, and vanilla, and beat until combined, scraping the bowl down as needed. Slowly beat in the flour mixture.
- Place the remaining 1/4 cup sugar in a shallow dish. Using a large (3-tablespoon) spring-loaded scoop, divide the dough into balls, then roll in sugar to coat evenly. Place the dough balls on the prepared baking sheets, spacing 2 inches apart, and flatten slightly with the bottom of a measuring cup.
- Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until the cookies set and begin to brown. Cool for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely. Cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days.




































The only problem I noticed really in the instructions is the smushing with a measuring cup, I ended up putting the cookies to close cause I thought they wouldn’t expand that much since they weren’t that big…I was dead wrong. I have cookies bigger than my hand now which is surprising. Everything about this was delicious I love how they taste and turned out, thank you so much!
Hi Hope! I’m glad to hear that you enjoyed these cookies! These cookies should spread a little, but not to the size of your hand. It sounds like your butter might have been a little too warm when you creamed it. This can have a big impact – learn more about that here, and check out the pink tip box (above the recipe) for more tips for perfect sugar cookies. I hope that helps! Happy baking 🙂
Just baked theses cookie’s! They are the best I have ever tasted. Easy recipe, big flavor!
How many cookies does this recipe make?
This recipe makes about 16 large cookies. Let us know what you think of these cookies once you’ve given them a try!
can I make the dough ahead of time and bake them days later?
Hi Colette! Yes, you sure can! Cover the dough well and chill for up to 72 hours before baking. If you need to prep these further in advance, you can freeze the dough! Check out instructions and tips for this in the pink tip box (just above the recipe). Enjoy!
thank you! I just made 6 to try out and they are amazing! my new favorite sugar cookie recipe!
I’ve made these cookies two times now and honestly they are the BEST sugar cookies I’ve ever had! Your recipe is easy to follow and your tips are super helpful. This is now my go to sugar cookie recipe!
I’m so grateful for this recipe! I had a LOT of Christmas cookies to make, and I didn’t want to make cut-outs. This recipe saved my sanity and was absolutely delicious!! I rolled some in a mixture of red, green, and white sugar. And I made another batch and pressed them in to holiday sprinkles. They were festive and pretty. And everyone loved them! Another 5 star recipe!!
Can’t wait to try!! Is there any alternative I can use for the cookie scoop? They seem awfully expensive and I’m a bit tight on money right now…
Hi Kelly! Sure! Cookie scoops are the fastest and easiest way to portion out dough (I also use mine for portioning out cupcake batter, truffles, and even meatballs!) but you can absolutely measure out using measuring spoons or weighing out portions of dough, so they’re all pretty much the same and will therefore bake evenly. Let us know what you think of this recipe once you’ve given it a try! 🙂
Amazing!! So 3tbsp would work fine? Or how much weight per ball should I go for?
Hi Kelly! I haven’t tried weighing these out so I’m honestly not sure how much each dough ball would weigh – but I’d recommend measuring out 3 Tablespoons, and weigh that ball. Then portion the rest of the dough out on the scale to match the first ball’s weight! Hope that helps! Happy baking 🙂
Came out soooo good! I did have to bake for 20 min though.
Is it possible to sub an all purpose gluten free flour for these?
We haven’t tried that, so I can’t say for sure! Please let us know how it goes if you give it a try.
I used GF 1:1 bobs red mill & it turned out great. Couldn’t tell a difference 🙂
I’m making 10 dozen of these cookies for a cookies exchange that’s next week. I already have a bunch in the freezer!!
Quick question though – because I’m making so many, I’m only using a 2 tbsp scoop, instead of 3. How much should I reduce the baking time? Or should I just keep an eye on it?
Thanks so much!!
Hi Mallory! I’d begin checking the cookies a couple of minutes earlier to ensure they turn out perfectly 🙂 Have fun!
Can we add sprinkles/jimmies to it?
Absolutely! These look ultra festive with holiday jimmies 🙂 Just fold in 1/4-1/2 cup as the last step of the recipe. You can also roll them in colored granulated sugar for another festive look!
Would the cookies turn out ok if I used brown sugar instead of white sugar?
Hi Olivia! Sure – brown sugar will lend more moisture (as it contains more molasses than granulated sugar) but it also makes these cookies thicker with butterscotchy flavor. I recommend using half light brown sugar, half granulated, for best results – but all light brown sugar will work, too. Let us know how it goes! 🙂
I love this sweet cookie. It’s always a great pick me up from a hard day.