Reasons homemade cookies are too thin (2024)

by Janice Lawandi; Leave a Comment

Many home bakers struggle with flat cookies and have trouble baking thick cookies that don't spread too thin. In order to fix this problem, we need first to explore the reasons why cookies spread as they bake. Understanding this will help you fix your cookie recipes so that you bake cookies with perfect texture and thickness.

Reasons homemade cookies are too thin (1)

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

If you are struggling to bake the best chocolate chip cookies, just how you like them, read about why cookies spread flat when they bake. You'll also find out ways to troubleshoot this problem and rectify it.

If you have the opposite problem and your cookies are always too thick, read about the reasons why cookies don't spread.

Jump to:
  • Reasons cookies spread
  • Ways to stop cookies from spreading in the oven
  • Tricks for fixing thin cookies

Reasons cookies spread

  1. too much of certain ingredients relative to others will cause spreading:
    • too much butter, which melts and causes the dough to flatten out thin
    • too much sugar in the dough will cause spreading and thinner cookies
    • too much egg relative to other ingredients can lead to a cakey cookie and cause the edges to spread out more
    • too much baking soda raises the pH of the dough and this can disrupt the gluten network, leading to thinner cookies with less structure.
  2. not enough of certain ingredients relative to others will cause spreading:
    • not enough flour will cause cookies to spread because flour provides structure to hold the ingredients together
    • not enough add-ins (inclusions) in the case of chocolate chip cookies and other drop cookies will cause cookies to spread. For example, if you are following this recipe for spelt flour chocolate chip cookies with chopped walnuts in the dough or these chocolate chip cookies with pecans, if you omit the nuts, your cookies will spread out more. The nuts prevent the dough from spreading out too quickly. You need to replace them with another inclusion to maintain the desired thickness.
  3. white sugar versus brown sugar:
    1. white sugar can lead to flatter cookies
    2. brown sugar can make cookies thicker because it may cause some of the baking soda to react, forming carbon dioxide, a gas that will help cookie dough rise up.
  4. using baking soda instead of baking powder—in cookie dough, baking soda tends to promote spreading, whereas baking powder promotes puffing and rising. If you replace baking powder in a crinkle cookie with baking soda, your cookies may spread thin and might not crack the way you expect them to. Read about baking soda versus baking powder if you aren't sure what the difference is.
  5. the temperature of the ingredients: if the ingredients, especially butter, are too warm, they can cause the dough to spread while baking, especially if you don't chill the dough before baking your cookies. Read about why you should chill cookie dough sometimes.
  6. using a different type of flour: in some cookie recipes, you may swap one type of flour for another. But most of the time, it's not a simple substitution, gram-for-gram. For example, replacing all-purpose flour in a chocolate chip cookie recipe with spelt flour. You will have to do several test batches to find out how much flour you need to achieve the texture you are seeking. For these spelt chocolate chip cookies, I discovered that I needed 60 grams (½ cup) more spelt flour compared to my best chocolate chip cookie recipe made with all-purpose.
  7. over-mixing the dough, especially when combining the butter and sugar(s), and eggs. Too much air incorporated at this stage can cause cookies to spread
  8. baking sheet material: The type of baking sheet and how it is prepared can also affect cookie spread. Lighter cookie sheets or insulated sheets (with air in them) can cause cookies to spread more. Silicone baking mats which reduce the browning of cookies can also cause cookies to spread more as they bake. To understand the role of your bakeware, read about baking pans and also why cookies end up dark on the bottom
  9. oven temperature: If the oven is not hot enough, it can cause cookies to spread too quickly and become thin. The butter melts faster than the edges set, leading to a thinner cookie. Read all about what happens when we bake to better understand the role of the oven temperature.
  10. oven rack position: baking cookies on the top rack when your oven is set to "bake" can mean that the cookies take longer to bake than if you set the pan in the middle of the oven. Read about oven rack positions to find out why the middle rack is best for cookies.
  11. overcrowding the cookie sheet: recall the French baking term "quinconce" which refers to the staggered placement of cookie dough scoops on a sheet pan. If you don't leave enough room between scoops of cookie dough on a cookie sheet, there is a greater risk that the hot airflow around the cookies will be impeded and therefore the cookies may melt further out, spreading into each other before the edges have a chance to set.
  12. baking on a cookie sheet that is warm: if you set your cookie dough on a hot or warm sheet pan, that residual warmth will melt the butter too fast and will cause your cookies to spread out too quickly.
  13. not preheating your oven sufficiently: remember it can take 30 minutes for an oven to preheat to the set temperature and to stabilize. If you put your cookies to bake in an oven before that, the oven temperature may be too low, leading to the dough melting and spreading out faster than the edges set.
  14. opening the oven door too frequently leading to a drop in the oven temperature
Reasons homemade cookies are too thin (2)

Ways to stop cookies from spreading in the oven

If you struggle with flat cookies that bake thinner than you want them or spread out too much in the oven, here are some tricks you can try to fix your recipe and improve your baking techniques.

Like with any tweaks to a recipe and baking techniques, you may have to do a few tests to make cookies with the desired texture and thickness. Some of these are easy fixes and others are a little more complicated. Here are a few tweaks that you can test out to find what works for you and your cookie recipes:

  • Don't overwhip the butter and sugar and eggs when you first begin to make your cookie dough—too much air can cause the cookies to expand in the oven as they heat up, and then they collapse more.
  • Chill your cookie dough—even just 30 minutes in the refrigerator can minimize spreading for some cookie recipes! This is the first step I would take if a cookie is spreading too much.
  • Preheat your oven for at least 20–30 minutes to ensure it's hot and the temperature is more stable.
  • Always bake on a cooled sheet pan and let your sheet pan cool completely between batches before placing scoops of dough on it.
  • Reduce the sugar in your dough recipe—sometimes cutting out as little as 50 grams (¼ cup) of sugar from a cookie dough will reduce the spread and lead to thicker cookies
  • Increase the flour in your recipe—sometimes just 30–60 grams (¼–½ cup) more of flour can improve the texture of your cookies
  • Switch from baking by volume to baking by weight, especially when it comes to flour! Get a kitchen scale if you don't already own one and this baking ingredient conversion chart to help you convert your recipes quickly and easily.
  • Reduce the baking soda—if your cookie dough has a large amount of baking soda and no obvious acid (or not enough acid) to balance it out, consider reducing the baking soda slightly. For example, instead of using 5 mL (1 teaspoon) of baking soda in your dough, try using 2.5 mL (½ teaspoon) instead and see the impact it has on the baked cookies.
  • Bake cookies at a higher oven temperature—I like thick, chewy drop cookies, so I tend to bake most of my drop cookies at 375 °F or even 400 °F. This is a personal preference, but if you like the taste of your cookie recipe, but the cookies are too thin, try baking them at a higher temperature and see if you get thicker cookies.
  • Bake only a few cookies at a time on a half-sheet pan and make sure to leave enough room between them.
  • Bake cookies on a parchment-lined aluminum sheet pan
  • Don't flatten mounds of cookie dough before baking—leave the scoops of cookie dough as is to ensure they don't melt too fast.
Reasons homemade cookies are too thin (3)

Tricks for fixing thin cookies

There's no magical solution to fix your cookies if you've baked an entire batch and they are thin. You can't undo that. But if you catch them at the right time, you can nudge them into being thicker. Here's how:

  • take a spoon, a mini offset spatula, or a large round cookie cutter with a diameter that is larger than your cookies
  • use your chosen tool (whether a spoon, an offset spatula, or a cookie cutter), and nudge the edges toward the centre of the cookie
    • Use the back of the spoon or the flat side of the offset spatula to carefully push the edges toward the centre
    • Place the cookie cutter around the hot cookie and using a swirling motion, the edges will naturally pull inwards

This method will only work if the cookies are still hot and soft. You have to do this when the cookies are still pliable and too delicate to lift off the sheet pan, so before they've had a chance to cool down. Some bakers will use this trick mid-bake, when the cookie edges haven't set at all. Try it out and find the timing that works best for you!

If your cookies are too firm, this trick will not work. You can try popping the sheet pan back in the oven, but even then, you might not be as successful if the edges have set hard. For this trick to work, act fast as soon as you take the cookies out of the oven or when they are slightly underbaked.

This trick works better for drop cookies. Sugar cookies and cutout cookies are too firm. In the case of cutout cookies, you can take the cookie cutter you used and trim the edges that spread out. This is a technique that is used for gingerbread houses to ensure the edges are straight and flat, and also for decorated cutout sugar cookies to ensure the shape is perfect before decorating with royal icing.

More Baking Science

  • Thick cookies and reasons cookies don't spread
  • Oven rack position
  • The jam setting point and how to determine jam set
  • Baking with yeast

Baking resources

  • Baking conversion charts
  • Baking ingredients and pantry staples
  • Baking substitutions
  • Common baking conversions
  • Choosing baking pans
  • How to measure ingredients for baking
  • Mixing methods
  • Reader Interactions

    Leave a Reply

    Reasons homemade cookies are too thin (2024)

    FAQs

    Reasons homemade cookies are too thin? ›

    If your cookies repeatedly turn out flat, no matter the recipe, chances are your oven is too hot. Here's what's happening. The butter melts super quickly in a too-hot oven before the other ingredients have firmed up into a cookie structure. Therefore, as the butter spreads so does the whole liquidy cookie.

    Why are my cookies baking so thin? ›

    If your cookies repeatedly turn out flat, no matter the recipe, chances are your oven is too hot. Here's what's happening. The butter melts super quickly in a too-hot oven before the other ingredients have firmed up into a cookie structure. Therefore, as the butter spreads so does the whole liquidy cookie.

    How to keep cookies from being too thin? ›

    This is a personal preference, but if you like the taste of your cookie recipe, but the cookies are too thin, try baking them at a higher temperature and see if you get thicker cookies. Bake only a few cookies at a time on a half-sheet pan and make sure to leave enough room between them.

    How do you make cookies not thin? ›

    Chilling cookie dough helps prevent spreading. The colder the dough, the less the cookies will over-spread into greasy puddles. You'll have thicker, sturdier, and more solid cookies.

    How do I make my cookies thicker? ›

    Cover the baking tray with clingfilm and freeze the cookie dough balls for at least 90 minutes or up to 48 hours for best results. The longer you leave them, the thicker your cookies will be.

    Why did my cookies spread really thin and hard? ›

    Oven temperature is crucial to perfectly baked cookies. If your oven temperature is too low, it can cause your cookies to spread, yielding thin, tough cookies.

    What to do if your cookie dough is too thin? ›

    Soft – Dough that's “soft” or “runny” can be thickened by adding one or two tablespoons of flour to your mix. This will help keep your batch from “Spreading” and coming out of the oven looking like flat, not-so-cookie-like puddles.

    What makes a cookie thin vs. thick? ›

    Also, the proportion of flour to butter impacts the thickness and ultimate crispiness of the cookie. Recipes like this one that produce thin and crispy cookies tend to have less flour relative to the amount of butter than those that produce plump cookies.

    Why is my cookie not thick enough? ›

    Q: Why are my cookies so thin and flat? The butter or dough was too warm. Butter should be at room temperature (unless otherwise noted). If the dough seems too soft, chill it for 10 to 15 minutes before baking.

    What makes cookies more dense? ›

    Baking Powder. The type of leavening you use in your cookies doesn't just help them rise while baking, it affects their texture and structure too. Baking soda in cookies yields a denser cookie with craggy tops, while baking powder causes cookies to rise higher during baking for a cakier texture.

    What does over-mixed cookie dough look like? ›

    You may notice visible pockets of flour, streaks of butter, or uneven coloration. When overmixed, though, cookie dough will feel dense, greasy, heavy, and warm. It may be tough to roll out or work with, just like overmixed pie dough.

    Why are my cookies always runny? ›

    Overmixing your batter can lead to runny cookies.

    You could overmix the batter at any point, but overcreaming occurs when you're combining the butter, sugar, and vanilla. I mixed the batter more than I should have both during the creaming stage of the recipe and after adding the flour.

    What causes thin cookies? ›

    Ingredients weren't measured correctly

    Incorrectly measured ingredients can be the reason your cookies come out too thin. Too much sugar can cause cookies to come out flat and crispy instead of soft and chewy. This goes for both white sugar and brown sugar. Not enough flour could also be the culprit.

    How to get puffy cookies? ›

    Baking powder or flour in excess will cause cookies to rise more, making them more fluffy and cakey. Increased sugar will make them caramelize more and increased fat will make the dough heavier and richer, all increasing retention of water in the dough- these all add up to chewier cookies.

    How long should you chill cookie dough? ›

    As a general rule of thumb, you should refrigerate cookie dough for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. More than that, and you won't see a noticeable difference in the final product. Once the dough has chilled, let it warm up at room temperature until it's just pliable (about 5 to 10 minutes).

    Does baking powder make cookies thicker? ›

    Baking powder contains sodium bicarbonate and acidic salts. The reaction of these two ingredients results in a cookie that is soft and thick, but slightly harder. The baking powder reaction happens in two stages: The first reaction occurs when you add the powder to the dough.

    What does cornstarch do in cookies? ›

    As Levy Beranbaum writes in The Baking Bible, replacing a little bit of the flour in the dough with cornstarch results in “a more delicate cookie that is also easier to pipe or push through a cookie press.” Adding cornstarch helps tenderize tough gluten, contributing to a softer cookie dough with a finer crumb after ...

    Should I use baking powder or baking soda for cookies? ›

    Baking soda is typically used for chewy cookies, while baking powder is generally used for light and airy cookies. Since baking powder is comprised of a number of ingredients (baking soda, cream of tartar, cornstarch, etc.), using it instead of pure baking soda will affect the taste of your cookies.

    How to fix cookies that are too thin? ›

    Increase the Flour: Adding more flour to the recipe will help create a thicker and denser cookie. Gradually add a little extra flour to the dough, about 1-2 tablespoons at a time, until you reach the desired consistency. Be cautious not to add too much flour, as it can make the cookies dry and crumbly.

    What does cream of tartar do in baking? ›

    Cream of tartar stabilizes the tiny bubbles in the egg whites, by precluding the egg proteins from sticking together. It thus speeds up the egg white whipping process and contributes to a stable, billowy, glossy meringue, perfect for cookies, topping pies, and folding into cake.

    Does baking soda make cookies rise? ›

    When a recipe calls for baking soda and baking powder, it's usually because some ingredients are acidic and others aren't. Using both of these leavening agents ensures your cookies rise properly and have the texture you're looking for.

    Why are my cookies so thin? ›

    OVEN IS TOO HOT

    Oven temperatures are a crucial factor in baking. If your cookies consistently come out flat, you may have selected the wrong baking temperature. If you bake cookies using too much heat, the fats in the dough begin to melt before the other ingredients can cook together and form your cookie's rise.

    What happens if cookie dough is too liquidy? ›

    When cookie dough is too wet, your cookies may come out too thin and crispy, too dense, or just plain bad. However, this problem is easily fixed if you know how. To fix a cookie dough that's too wet, add in some more flour one tablespoon at a time. This should help absorb any extra moisture lingering in your dough.

    What happens if you add too much egg to cookies? ›

    Using too few eggs will make your desserts dense, but using too many will make them rubbery. The explanation for this lies in the fact that eggs are made up of protein. As Fine Cooking explains, when the protein in eggs combines with the protein in flour, they produce the overall structure of the baked good.

    Why are my cookies soupy? ›

    Kind of like how crumbly dough is usually because there's too much of the dry ingredients, runny cookie dough comes from having too much of the liquid ingredients.

    Why are my no bake cookies runny? ›

    If you've glanced at other no-bake cookie recipes then you'll see how important it is to boil the sugar mixture long enough which will help the cookies to set. Boiling too long will cause the cookies to be dry and crumbly. However, if you don't boil long enough the cookies will not set and will be runny.

    Why did my cookies come out puffy? ›

    A spread with less fat, diet "margarines" or spreads in tubs contain have too much water. The water creates steam, causing the cookies to puff. Low protein flours, such as cake flour, absorb less water, leaving excess water to create steam, which causes the cookies to puff.

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Nathanial Hackett

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5722

    Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

    Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Nathanial Hackett

    Birthday: 1997-10-09

    Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

    Phone: +9752624861224

    Job: Forward Technology Assistant

    Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

    Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.