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These tender, lightly sweet gluten free sugar cookies are soft but not fragile, so they'll hold any shape you can imagineโ€”with a thick layer of sweet buttercream frosting.

This soft cut-out sugar cookie has become a staple at the holiday celebrations, baby showers, and birthdays of hundreds of readers for years. And they taste just like Lofthouse!

Gluten free sugar cookies decorated with frosting and sprinkles, sitting on rack

my take

Nicole's Recipe Notes

  • Classic taste and texture: soft, tender cookies that are lightly sweet with lots of vanilla flavor.
  • Perfect for all occasions: they'll hold any shape, from rounds and basic Christmas stars to Valentine Hearts, spring flowers, Easter bunnies, etc.
  • Quick and easy: the dough is made in one bowl, with no chilling needed, and they're ready to eat in just 30 minutes, start to finish.
  • Soft but not fragile: they melt-in-your-mouth, but they're thick enough that they won't break. I've even shipped these cookies across the U.S. (with icing, not frosting), and they arrived looking perfect!
ingredients for gluten free sugar cookies in small bowls on marble surface with black block letters with name of each ingredient
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  • Gluten free flour: Try your favorite gluten free flour blend, even if it's not one of my favorite blends, as long as the rice flour isn't gritty. If it's a little too starchy, you may have to add a few drops of water to bring the dough together. Bob's Red Mill 1-to-1 works well, though!
  • Baking powder – helps the cookies puff out and spread a bit so they're not dense
  • Sugars – 1/2 cup granulated sugar sweetens and tenderizes the cookies and and 3 tablespoons of powdered or confectioners' sugar help them hold their shape
  • Butter – adds tenderness, flavor, and moisture
  • Egg – binds the cookie dough together, and adds richness
  • Vanilla extract – adds depth of flavor
  • Salt – also a flavor enhancer, and helps balance the sweetness
Close up of gluten free sugar cookies with royal icing and star sprinkles on a dark surface.

How to make gluten free sugar cookies

Whisk the dry ingredients together (gluten free flour blend with xanthan gum, baking powder, salt, granulated sugar, and confectioners' or powdered sugar). Add the softened butter and press it into the dry ingredients with the back of a spoon until it looks like coarse sand.

Add a beaten egg and vanilla extract, and moisten all of the dry ingredients. Keep working until everything looks uniform, then knead together with clean, dry hands until smooth.

Sprinkle the cookie dough very lightly with more gluten free flour, and roll out about 1/3-inch thick. Use cookie cutters to cut out shapes. Pull away the rest of the dough, gather it into another disk, reroll and cut out more shapes.

Place the raw cut out shapes on a lined baking sheet, and bake at 350ยฐF for less than 10 minutes, just until set, with little to no browning. Let them cool on the baking sheet for a few minutes, then place on a wire rack to cool completely.

Frost with the meringue buttercream frosting or royal icing, or leave plain. Store in a sealed glass container at room temperature, and they will keep their texture for about 1 week.

A large glass jar full of frosted gluten free sugar cookies.

My Pro Tip

Expert Tips

Measure your ingredients by weight

Since the cookie recipe has so few ingredients, it's really important that they're all in perfect balance. Youโ€™ll find that the dough resembles moist crumbs and clumps, and you might be tempted to add more moisture.

Make sure youโ€™re measuring your ingredients (especially the gluten free flour) by weight, not volume, for precise results.

Use soft room temperature butter

The term “room temperature” for butter, eggs, and other baking ingredients usually means about 68ยฐF. Here, if the butter is below about 70ยฐF, it may be difficult to work into the dry ingredients evenly.

To speed its softening, chop cold butter into small pieces and let it sit on the counter for about 20 minutes. Float cold eggs in very warm water during that time, too, or they'll make the butter clump.

Knead the dough until smooth

Once you reach a uniform mixture that resembles moist crumbs and clusters, knead the dough with clean hands to bring it together before rolling it out. You can also use a stand mixer with a paddle attachment to make smooth dough easily, but avoid a handheld mixer with beater attachments or your cookies will have too much air.

Decoration tips

  • Spoon a generous amount of frosting on the top of a cookie in a mound. Moisten a small spoon, insert it into the center of the frosting at an angle and swirl lightly in a circle.
  • For classic Lofthouse-style frosting, use a small moistened offset spatula or a simple wide butter knife to flatten a mound of frosting into a disk.
  • Always let the frosting to set at room temperature until it becomes semi-hard so it's not so fragile.
  • For a truly hard surface, use royal icing in place of frosting. To decorate sugar cookies, I use a #4 piping tip to outline and then โ€œfloodโ€ the center, sprinkling decorations immediately before the icing has dried.
Eight gluten free sugar cookies in a vertical stack.

Ingredient substitutions

Dairy free

I have successfully replaced the butter in the cookie dough with Melt brand vegan butter. The edges of the gf sugar cookies arenโ€™t quite as clean as they are when you use butter, but the recipe tastes and looks great overall.

Try replacing the butter in the frosting recipe with Spectrum brand butter-flavored nonhydrogenated vegetable shortening. For the milk in the frosting, use any unsweetened unflavored nondairy milk (I like almond milk).

Egg free

There is only one egg in the cookie recipe, so you should be able to replace it with a โ€œchia eggโ€ or a “flax egg” egg substitute (1 tablespoon ground white chia seeds + 1 tablespoon lukewarm water, mixed and allowed to gel). Some readers have reported success with Bob's Red Mill egg replacer, too. I also think that “Just Egg” liquid refrigerated plant egg should work.

Meringue powder

Meringue powder is made of egg white powder, sugar, a starch, and some stabilizers. If you canโ€™t have eggs, Iโ€™d just eliminate meringue powder as an ingredient altogether. The frosting will just be a bit softer.

Gluten Free Sugar Cookies Recipe

4.99 from 569 votes
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 8 minutes
Resting time if using royal icing instead of frosting: 12 hours
Yield: 24 cookies
These soft cutout gluten free sugar cookies are made with gluten free flour, sugar, baking powder, butter, egg & vanilla. No dough chilling!

Equipment

  • Stand mixer or handheld mixer
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Ingredients 

For the cookies

  • 2 cups (280 g) all purpose gluten free flour blend, (See Recipe Notes), plus more for sprinkling
  • ยพ teaspoon xanthan gum, omit if your blend already contains it
  • ยพ teaspoon baking powder
  • ยผ teaspoon kosher salt
  • ยฝ cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 3 tablespoons (22 g) confectionersโ€™ sugar, or powdered sugar
  • 8 tablespoons (112 g) unsalted butter, at soft room temperature (about 70ยฐF)
  • 1 (50 g (weighed out of shell)) egg, at room temperature, beaten
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

For the frosting

  • 10 tablespoons (140 g) unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • ยผ cup (2 fluid ounces) milk, at room temperature
  • 1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
  • โ…› teaspoon kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoons meringue powder, LorAnn and AmeriColor brands are gluten free
  • 4 cups (460 g) confectionersโ€™ sugar
  • Seeds from one vanilla bean, optional
  • Sprinkles, optional

Instructions 

Make the cookies

  • Preheat your oven to 350ยฐF. Line rimmed baking sheets with unbleached parchment paper and set them aside.
  • In a large bowl, place the flour, xanthan gum, baking powder, salt, granulated sugar and confectionersโ€™ sugar and whisk to combine well.
  • Add the butter, and mix to moisten the dry ingredients with the butter, until the mixture looks sandy, pressing down on the butter with the back of the mixing spoon.
  • Add the egg and vanilla, and mix to combine, until the dry ingredients are all moistened with the wet.
  • With clean, dry hands, knead the mixture together to form a cohesive dough. It will be thick and relatively stiff, but not dry.
  • Place the dough on a clean, flat surface, and roll it into a round a bit less than 1/3-inch thick, sprinkling very lightly with flour to prevent the rolling pin from sticking.
  • Using a 2 1/2-inch round cookie cutter (or whatever shape you like), cut out shapes from the dough and place them about 1-inch apart on the prepared baking sheets.
  • It can be helpful to remove the surrounding dough from the cutouts, and then peel the shapes off. Gather and reroll the scraps and repeat the process until youโ€™ve used all the dough.
  • Place the baking sheet in the center of the preheated oven and bake until the cookies are just set on top, about 8 minutes, depending upon size and shape. The edges of some cookies may brown slightly.
  • Remove them from the oven before there is any significant browning, and allow them to cool on the baking sheet until set before transferring them to a wire rack to cool completely.

Make the frosting

  • In the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or a large bowl with a handheld mixer, place the butter, milk and vanilla, and mix on medium speed until combined. Increase the mixer speed to high and mix until creamy (about 5 minutes).
  • Add the salt, meringue powder and about 3 1/2 cups of confectionersโ€™ sugar. Mix slowly until the sugar is incorporated. Turn the mixer up to high and beat until it becomes uniformly thick.
  • Add the optional vanilla seeds and as much of the rest of the confectionersโ€™ sugar as necessary to thicken the frosting, and beat to combine well.

Frost the cookies

  • Once the cookies are completely cool, pipe or spoon a generous amount of frosting onto the top of each, and spread into an even layer with a wide knife or offset spatula. Scatter sprinkles, if desired.
  • Allow the cookies to set at room temperature until the frosting hardens a bit before stacking them. Store any leftovers in an airtight glass container at room temperature. Freeze any plain cookies for longer storage.

Video

Notes

Flour blends.
My favorite gluten free flour blends are Better Batter's original blend gluten free flour and Nicole's Best multipurpose blend (with added xanthan gum). Bob's Red Mill 1-to-1 Gluten Free Baking Flour should also work, but add an additional 1/4 teaspoon xanthan gum to the dry ingredients or the cookies will be crumbly.
Cup4Cup changed its formula and doesn't seem to work as well as it has in the past, so I don't recommend it. To make your own blend using one of my โ€œmockโ€ recipes, please see the all purpose gluten free flour blends page.
Substitution suggestions.
Dairy-free: In place of butter, try vegan butter in the block. My favorite brands are Melt and Miyoko's Creamery. Avoid Earth Balance buttery sticks or anything else that is very soft at room temperature, as it contains a lot more moisture and the cookies won't really hold their shape.
Egg-free: I recommend trying a “chia egg,” Bob's Red Mill egg replacer, or “Just Egg” liquid refrigerated plant egg.
Alternative to frosting: royal icing or this easy glaze. This will take 12 to 24 hours to set completely.ย 
Note about nutrition information
Nutritional information is approximate, per cookie, and is for the cookies only and does not include frosting or icing of any kind at all.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 92kcal | Carbohydrates: 14g | Protein: 0.5g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 10mg | Sodium: 48mg | Potassium: 2mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 117IU | Calcium: 9mg | Iron: 0.02mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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make ahead/leftovers

Storage instructions

Once these cookies are cooled, you can store them plain in a sealed glass container at room temperature. They'll stay fresh that way for at least 1 week. If you've used royal icing and allowed it to set fully, they'll last up to 2 weeks that way.

With the buttercream meringue frosting, once it's set, you can stack them and store them in a sealed glass container for up to 2 days.

For longer storage, freeze them. If they've been frosting, freeze in a single layer on a rimmed baking sheet for 2 hours, then pile them into a freezer-safe zip top bag and freeze for up to 3 months. Defrost at room temperature. Don't heat cookies with icing or frosting or the topping will melt.

You can also freeze the raw cookie dough. Roll out the dough, cut out shapes, and freeze the rounds in stacks with a light dusting of gluten free flour between them. Wrap them tightly and freeze. When you're ready to bake, place the rounds on prepared baking sheets and let them defrost before baking as usual.

FAQs

Why is my cookie dough crumbly?

If youโ€™ve got the right ratio of ingredients, youโ€™ll find that your dough resembles moist crumbs and clumps. Try pressing it into a disk. If it doesn't hold together well, you can try adding water by the drop and kneading it in to the dough until you reach the right consistency. Go slowly, though, since you don't want a drop more water than absolutely essential, or your cookies won't keep their shape in the oven.

Why are some of my gluten free sugar cookies hard and others soft?

You probably rolled out your sugar cookie dough a bit unevenly. That means some cookies came out thinner, baking faster and becoming crispier, while others stayed soft.

Can I make these cookies without rolling out the dough?

For best results, try my gluten free drop sugar cookies recipe instead. But if you change your mind mid-recipe, you can use this recipe. Just portion the cookie dough into equal-sized pieces, roll each in your palms into a ball, place it on the baking sheet, and flatten it using the palm of your hand. Bake at 350ยฐF until the cookies appear set all the way to the center. Depending on how thick your cookies are, you may have to increase the baking time.

Mosaic graphic featuring several images from the rest of the recipe including the dough cutouts, close up of cookies, and frosted cookies on a baking tray.

About Nicole Hunn

Hi, Iโ€™m Nicole. I create gluten free recipes that really work and taste as good as you remember. No more making separate meals when someone is GF, or buying packaged foods that arenโ€™t good enough to justify the price. At Gluten Free on a Shoestring, โ€œgood, for gluten freeโ€ just isnโ€™t good enough!

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217 Comments

  1. Amy says:

    5 stars
    I made these today and they were very yummy! I have lots of leftover frosting/icing that I donโ€™t intend to use right away. Can I freeze it for later use?

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      I wouldn’t freeze the icing, Amy, since the texture will likely be grainy when you defrost it. You can try refrigerating it in a tightly-sealed container, and then letting it warm to closer to room temperature, then beat it again since it will have compressed and lost its fluffy texture.

  2. Lyn says:

    Going to try these tomorrow with my GF grandson But I am at high altitude (6000 ft). I typically adjust regular cookie recipes with +1T per cup of flour and +1T of liquid per cup of flour. Cut baking powder in half. Put cut cookies on sheet in oven for ten minutes then bake at a higher temp for less time.
    Do you have any high alt suggestions for GF? If I use my usual high alt changes do you think it will be ok?

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      High altitude is the only condition I can’t possibly recreate, so I can’t offer you specific advice, Lyn, but in the past other readers have reported making their typical high altitude adjustments with success. I’m afraid I simply don’t know, though, and you’ll have to experiment.

  3. Andrea says:

    5 stars
    Super easy and super soft! I made dinosaur cookies with my 3-year old grandson๐Ÿฅฐ

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      How adorable, Andrea!

  4. Vanessa says:

    When I make traditional sugar cookies I use powdered sugar on the rolling pin/mat when I roll out. Would that work or would it change the dough too much?

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      These cookies are already balanced for moisture really perfectly, which is why you use as little additional flour as possible for rolling. You can try using powdered sugar instead of the flour, just be sure not to use too much. Then you can sprinkle the raw cutouts on both sides with powdered sugar if you like, after rolling.

  5. Rebecca says:

    5 stars
    These look delicious! So excited! Do you think I could use King Arthur 1 to 1 gluten free flour blend? Thanks!

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      I’m afraid not, Rebecca. I’ve tried over and over to use that flour blend, but I have to recommend against it. It would perform especially poorly in a simple recipe like this. Please see the all purpose gluten free flour blends page for more information.

    2. Julie J says:

      We used the King Arthur GF blend 1:1, we just added a little milk and drips of water and it was perfect! Good luck!

  6. Walt C says:

    5 stars
    Used 1c almond flour and 1c all purpose flour, then substituted granulated and confectioner’s sugar with 1/2 c Monk Fruit+erythritol plus 4 drops stevia to lower glycemic index for a diabetic friend. It worked! Also lightened with 1 tsp baking soda and 1 tbs greek yogurt. Baked 10 mins 1/4-inch cookies. Thank you for a wonderful and robust recipe.

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      Those are a ton of changes, Walt! I’m glad you enjoyed your recipe. :)

  7. Kiersten Wenthold says:

    These are the best Gf cutouts!! So impressed with this recipe. I have never been able to cutout cookies and transfer to pan with such ease. The cookies held together perfectly. I swapped out the butter for dairy free butter sticks (Earth Balance), and it worked great.

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      I’m so glad the buttery sticks worked well for you, Kiersten. I imagine they probably spread a bit more than intended since Earth Balance has quite a bit of extra moisture, but it sounds like you didn’t mind. :)

  8. Rachel says:

    Can this recipe work if I added a subtle flavor like almond flavor to the dough?

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      Sure, Rachel, you can replace the vanilla extract with almond extract, but keep in mind that almond extract is much more potent so you probably want to use less.

  9. Stephanie says:

    5 stars
    Nicole,
    These cookies are the real deal! The dough is so easy to work with and my young children love helping me make these. Thank you so much!

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      I’m so happy to hear that, Stephanie! This is a really special recipe and like you said, it makes a very easy to handle dough when made exactly as written.

  10. Nikki Gilman says:

    4 stars
    Very tasty. But not sure what I did wrong here but I too had trouble getting the dough to come together. I used Red Mills 1 to 1 with xantham and I did have to add moisture to be able to roll it out. But otherwise it baked well and had a nice bite

    1. Nicole Hunn says:

      As I explain on the all purpose gluten free flour blends page linked in the recipe, you cannot use Bob’s Red Mill flour blends in my recipes. They’re poorly balanced and have gritty rice flour, so they don’t perform and don’t even blend properly.