Last October, my friend showed up at my door carrying a white bakery box that smelled so strongly of cinnamon and pumpkin I could smell it from inside the house. "You need to try these before I eat all of them," she said, practically shoving the box at me. Inside were these thick, pillowy pumpkin pie cookie topped with swirls of cream cheese frosting. They looked like someone had taken the best part of pumpkin pie cookie -the filling-and turned it into a cookie. One bite and I literally closed my eyes. The texture was perfect. Soft and cake-like in the middle but with these slightly crispy edges that gave way when you bit in.

Why You'll Love These Pumpkin Pie Cookies
Back making these probably 60 times over the past few years (yeah, we're obsessed), here's why they won't go away. They taste like actual pumpkin pie, not like pumpkin pie cookie spice seasonal garbage. The texture is perfect-soft and almost cake-like but still definitely a cookie. Daniel can grab one for breakfast and I don't feel terrible about it because there's actual pumpkin in there. They're way less messy than pie, no crust to deal with, and they don't need refrigeration like pie does.
The cream cheese frosting situation is genius. Just enough sweetness to balance the spices, tangy enough to cut through the pumpkin pie cookie , and it doesn't melt into nothing like regular frosting would. Sarah's market lady was smart about that part. And unlike actual pumpkin pie, these cookies stay good for days. Pie gets weird after day two. These? Still soft and perfect on day four if they last that long, which they usually don't.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love These Pumpkin Pie Cookies
- Ingredients for Pumpkin Pie Cookies
- How To Make Pumpkin Pie Cookies Step By Step
- Smart Swaps for Your Pumpkin Pie Cookies
- pumpkin pie cookie for Variations
- Equipment for pumpkin pie cookie
- Storing Your Pumpkin Pie Cookies
- Top Tip
- The Recipe My Grandma Wouldn't Let Me Forget
- FAQ
- Time to Bake These Cookies!
- Related
- Pairing
- pumpkin pie cookie
Ingredients for Pumpkin Pie Cookies
Cookie Base:
- All-purpose flour
- Baking powder
- Baking soda
- Salt
- Cinnamon
- Ginger
- Nutmeg
- Cloves
- Pumpkin puree
- Brown sugar
- White sugar
- Butter
- Eggs
- Vanilla extract
Cream Cheese Frosting:
- Pinch of salt
- Cream cheese
- Butter
- Powdered sugar
- Vanilla extract
See recipe card for quantities.

How To Make Pumpkin Pie Cookies Step By Step
Mix the Dry Ingredients
- Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a bowl
- Add cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves to the flour mixture
- Stir until spices are evenly distributed throughout
- Set aside while you work on the wet ingredients
Create the Cookie Base
- Beat softened butter with brown sugar and white sugar until fluffy, about 3-4 minutes
- Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each one
- Mix in vanilla extract and pumpkin puree until smooth and completely combined
- Scrape down bowl sides to ensure everything's incorporated evenly

Combine and Chill
- Add dry ingredients to wet ingredients in three parts, mixing gently after each addition
- Don't overmix or cookies will be tough-stop when flour just disappears
- Cover bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate dough for 30 minutes minimum
- Chilled dough is easier to scoop and makes thicker cookies

Make Cream Cheese Frosting
- Beat softened cream cheese and butter together until smooth and creamy
- Add powdered sugar gradually, beating until fluffy and spreadable
- Mix in vanilla extract and tiny pinch of salt for flavor balance
- Frost cookies only after they're completely cool or frosting melts

Finish Your Cookies
- Serve at room temperature for best flavor and texture
- Spread or pipe frosting onto each cooled cookie generously
- Sprinkle with extra cinnamon or tiny pinch of nutmeg if desired
- Store in airtight container with parchment between layers to prevent sticking

Smart Swaps for Your Pumpkin Pie Cookies
Flour Options:
- All-purpose → Whole wheat (denser, nuttier)
- Regular → Gluten-free 1:1 blend (same amount)
- White → Half whole wheat, half all-purpose (healthier)
Sugar Switches:
- Brown sugar → All white sugar (less chewy)
- White sugar → Coconut sugar (darker color, caramel taste)
- Regular → Sugar substitute (follow package for conversion)
Pumpkin Alternatives:
- Canned puree → Fresh roasted pumpkin (more work, same result)
- Pumpkin → Sweet potato puree (different but good)
- Regular → Butternut squash puree (sweeter, lighter color)
Butter Swaps:
- Regular butter → Coconut oil (different texture, slight coconut taste)
- Dairy butter → Vegan butter (works fine, no one notices)
- Softened → Melted and cooled (flatter cookies, crispier edges)
Frosting Changes:
- Frosting → Maple glaze (thinner, less rich)
- Cream cheese → Greek yogurt frosting (tangier, less sweet)
- Regular → Vegan cream cheese (works perfectly)
pumpkin pie cookie for Variations
Maple Pecan Version:
- Replace half the white sugar with maple syrup in the cookie dough
- Fold in 1 cup chopped toasted pecans before baking
- Make maple frosting by adding 2 tablespoons pure maple syrup to the cream cheese mixture
- Creates a fall flavor explosion that tastes like pecan pie met pumpkin pie
Chocolate Chip Pumpkin:
- Fold 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips into the dough after mixing
- Add 2 tablespoons cocoa powder to the cream cheese frosting for chocolate frosting
- The chocolate melts slightly while baking and gets all gooey inside
- Daniel's absolute favorite version-he asks for these specifically now
Gingerbread Spice Boost:
- Double the ginger in the recipe and add 1 tablespoon molasses to the dough
- Top frosting with crushed gingersnap cookies for extra crunch
- Creates a spicier, more gingerbread-forward flavor that's perfect for Christmas
- Works great for holiday cookie exchanges when you're tired of sugar cookies
Brown Butter Caramel:
- Brown the butter before adding it to the dough (cool it first or eggs scramble)
- Drizzle cooled cookies with salted caramel sauce before adding frosting
- The nutty brown butter flavor adds serious depth
- More work but worth it when you want to impress people
Equipment for pumpkin pie cookie
- Cookie sheets (2 minimum)
- Parchment paper or silicone mats
- Large mixing bowls
- Electric mixer (hand or stand)
- Cookie scoop (3-tablespoon size)
- Cooling rack
- Spatula for frosting
Storing Your Pumpkin Pie Cookies
From making way too many batches and figuring out what works:
Counter Storage (3 days):
- Store unfrosted cookies in airtight container at room temperature
- Layer with parchment paper between if stacking
- They stay soft and perfect, no refrigerator needed
- Frost right before serving for best results
Fridge Storage (1 week):
- Frosted cookies need to go in the fridge because of the cream cheese
- Put in airtight container with parchment between layers
- Let come to room temperature before eating (20 minutes out)
- Cold cookies taste weird and the texture gets hard
Freezer Magic (3 months):
- Freeze unfrosted cookies in freezer bags with air squeezed out
- Thaw at room temperature for an hour before frosting
- Don't freeze frosted cookies-frosting gets watery and gross when thawed
- Make the frosting fresh when you're ready to serve
Make-Ahead Strategy:
- Way easier than baking fresh every time
- Bake cookies, let cool completely, freeze unfrosted
- Pull out what you need the night before
- Frost in the morning, serve same day
Top Tip
- When Safa went back to the farmers market for more cookies and asked for the recipe, the vendor told her something nobody thinks about. She always adds a tablespoon of sour cream to her cookie dough. Not enough to taste it, just enough to keep the cookies soft for days instead of drying out overnight. The acid in the sour cream also does something to the pumpkin pie cookie -makes it taste stronger, fresher. Sarah tried making them without it once just to see. Yeah, you need it.
- The other thing? She uses dark brown sugar instead of light. More molasses, which means deeper flavor and chewier cookies. Light brown sugar works, but dark brown sugar makes them taste more like actual pie filling instead of just pumpkin cake. Small change that makes people wonder why your cookies taste different from everyone else's pumpkin cookies.
- Her last trick was the frosting-she adds a tiny splash of maple syrup to the cream cheese mixture. Maybe a teaspoon, not enough to taste maple, just enough to make the sweetness more interesting. I do it every time now. Daniel can't figure out why these taste better than the ones his friend's mom makes, and I'm not telling him it's one teaspoon of syrup doing the work.
The Recipe My Grandma Wouldn't Let Me Forget
My grandma made pumpkin cookies every October, but hers were flat, crispy, honestly kind of boring. When I showed her Sarah's market cookies that first time, she took one bite and went quiet. Not mad quiet, thinking quiet. Asked for the recipe. I didn't have it yet, but when I figured it out and made my first batch, I brought her six in a plastic container. She called two days later. "You forgot the nutmeg," she said. I hadn't-the recipe had nutmeg. But she meant I didn't use enough. Her mother always doubled the nutmeg in anything pumpkin because "nutmeg makes pumpkin taste like fall instead of baby food." She was right
Grandma's other thing was frosting temperature. Never put cream cheese frosting on warm cookies, everyone knows that. But also not on cold cookies straight from the fridge. Room temperature cookies, room temperature frosting. Everything the same. "Spreads right and tastes right," she'd say. She was picky about stuff like that. Now I pull cookies out an hour before frosting, pull the frosting out same time. Makes a difference in how it spreads and how that first bite tastes. She was right about that too. Usually was about baking, even if her own pumpkin cookies sucked.
FAQ
Can I use pumpkin pie filling for cookies?
You can, but don't. Pumpkin pie filling already has sugar and spices mixed in, which throws off the recipe. You'll end up with cookies that are too sweet and the spice balance gets weird. Use plain pumpkin puree so you control everything yourself. Way better results.
Is pumpkin pie healthy or unhealthy?
These pumpkin pie cookies aren't health food, but they're not terrible either. Real pumpkin pie cookie has fiber and vitamins. There's sugar and butter, yeah, but you're eating a cookie, not a salad. If you're worried, skip the frosting or use less sugar. They're fine as an occasional treat.
What is the pumpkin pie cookie power?
This sounds like a video game question. If you're asking about Cookie Run Kingdom, I have no idea-that's Daniel's thing, not mine. If you're asking what makes these cookies good, it's the texture and real pumpkin pie cookie flavor without the pie mess.
What are the two ingredient pumpkin pie cookies?
Those are the cake mix and pumpkin ones. Just cake mix and pumpkin puree, no eggs or oil. They're okay if you're desperate, but they taste like cake mix, not pumpkin pie. This recipe has more ingredients but actually tastes like what it's supposed to be.
Time to Bake These Cookies!
Now you've got everything for these pumpkin pie cookies-from Sarah's market lady's sour cream trick to why dark brown sugar and that teaspoon of maple syrup matter. This recipe proves you don't need an entire pie with all its crust drama and soggy bottom problems to get that pumpkin pie cookie flavor everyone wants in fall.
What I really love is how these became our thing every autumn. Daniel asks for them the second September hits, sometimes even late August if he's feeling pushy. Sarah still buys them from the market lady on Saturdays, but now she admits ours taste just as good, maybe better because we use the dark brown sugar. The market lady would probably be annoyed we cracked her recipe, but also she told Sarah most of it, so that's on her.
The sour cream thing was genius. One tablespoon seems like nothing, like why bother, but the difference is huge. Without it, they're dry by day two and completely stale by day three. With it? Still soft on day four if they somehow last that long, which they never do. It's also what makes the pumpkin pie cookie taste fresh instead of canned, even though we're using canned pumpkin pie cookie. No idea how it works, but it does.
Need more desserts that don't require professional skills or all day? Our Easy Cranberry Orange Cake Recipe takes maybe 30 minutes of real work but looks way harder. Nobody needs to know how simple it is. Into coffee desserts? Try our Easy Tiramisu Recipe-no raw eggs, no stress, just ladyfingers and decent espresso. And if you've got stale bread, our Easy Bread Pudding Recipe turns it into something people want seconds of. Waste not.
Share your pumpkin pie cookie! . Love seeing your versions, especially the chocolate chip or gingerbread spice ones!
Rate this and tell us how they went!
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pumpkin pie cookie
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and spices together until evenly combined, then set aside.
- Beat butter and sugars until fluffy, then add eggs, vanilla, pumpkin puree, and sour cream until smooth and creamy.
- Gently mix dry ingredients into wet mixture in three parts until just combined; avoid overmixing.
- Cover dough and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes to firm up and create thicker, chewier cookies.
- Scoop dough onto lined sheets and bake at 350°F for 12-14 minutes until edges are set but centers remain soft.













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