Crumbl Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe
I’m so excited to share this Crumbl Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe! I made a perfect copycat Crumbl cookie recipe of their famous Crumbl Chocolate Chip Cookies! These cookies are the same size as Crumbl cookies (large and in charge), they’re ultra thick, soft(like super soft cookies, even the following day), chewy, and sheer cookie perfection. Now you can make chocolate chip Crumbl cookies right at home!
If your love of Crumbl cookies brought you here, then be sure to check out my Crumbl Cookie Copycat Recipes! I have an entire section dedicated to my copycat Crumbl cookie recipes. If you are looking for more delicious versions of chocolate chip cookies, I recommend my Small Batch Chocolate Chip Cookies, Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies, Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies, and these classic Nestle Toll House Chocolate Chip Cookies!

Why This Recipe Works
- Big, thick cookies. If you want to get the same big cookie size as Crumbl bakery, then you’ll want to use 1/2 cup to portion out the cookie dough (or about 5 oz if using a kitchen scale). This will give you the most amazing giant cookies. However, you can also use a 1/4 cup (this is the size I use for most all my cookie recipes on my site.
- Soft and chewy. It took me several tries to perfect this Crumbl chocolate chip cookie recipe, which I’m attributing as a good thing because I learned a lot of cookie baking science along the way! The result is a copycat Crumbl cookie recipe that yields big, soft, and chewy cookies!
- Perfect copycat recipe. These delicious cookies taste freshly homemade, are perfectly sweet, and are perfectly baked (not too soft and not too hard!). They are the perfect Crumbl cookie recipe!
Ingredient Notes

- All Purpose Flour: I baked these copycat Crumbl chocolate chip cookies at sea level. See my Recipe Tips and Recipe FAQs sections for details on baking at higher elevation (which will require adjusting the flour).
- Cornstarch: The cornstarch will hold onto the moisture in the cookie dough, which will help the cookies stay soft and thick and have a chewy texture!
- Baking Powder and Baking Soda: Since these cookies are so big, we use a tad more baking powder and baking soda to help get the best rise.
- Unsalted Butter: The fat content in cookies is what helps them stay soft and chewy. If using salted butter, reduce the amount of salt in the recipe by 1/2 tsp.
- Brown Sugar: Using a combination of brown sugar and granulated sugar will give us the perfect combination of soft and sweet. The higher ratio of brown sugar than granulated sugar is what helps the cookie stay more moist.
- Guittard Baking Chips: Crumbl uses the big milk chocolate chips in their famous Crumbl chocolate chip cookie recipe. To get the same result, you’ll want to use the big milk chocolate chips too. However, feel free to use whatever chocolate chips you prefer.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Combine dry ingredients. Add the flour, corn starch, baking soda, baking powder and salt to a medium bowl and whisk until combined.
- Cream the wet ingredients together. Add the butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or in a large mixing bowl using a hand mixer. Cream until well combined. Scrape down the sides of the bowl. Add the egg and vanilla extract and beat on medium speed for 1 minute.
- Combine dry and wet ingredients. Add the flour mixture to the wet mixture. Stir until just combined. Do not over mix! Using a spatula, stir in the chocolate chips.



- Portion into dough balls. Using a 1/2 cup (if you want them the same size as Crumbl’s chocolate chip cookies) or you can use a 1/4 cup for a bit smaller size, portion into dough balls. Place the dough balls on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. If using a 1/2 cup (or 5 oz dough balls), I only do 2 cookies per cookie sheet.
- Bake the Crumbl chocolate chip cookies. Bake in an oven preheated to 375°F for 9-12 minutes or until the tops are lightly golden, no longer shiny, and the edges are set. Remove from the oven. Using a very large round biscuit cutter or cookie cutter, place over each cookie and swirl in a hula hoop motion around the cookie to make it perfectly circular.
- Let cool. Let the cookies sit on the cookie sheet for 10-15 minutes (they’ll continue to bake and set up while cooking). Transfer to a wire rack and let cool for 15 minutes before eating. Enjoy!



Recipe Tips
Crumbl serves these as milk chocolate chip cookies. If you don’t like milk chocolate, use semi-sweet instead. Also, you can use more than 1 1/4 cups of chocolate chips. I like to form the cookie dough balls and then place some chocolate chips on the tops of the balls. It makes the cookies look like they came out of a bakery 🙂
Feel free to chill the dough. Chilling the cookie dough for an extended period of time helps the cookies flavors meld together, develop, and deepen. It’s not necessary, but we love to do this when making chocolate chip cookies. To chill, place the cookie dough in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 1-24 hours. Remove and let sit at room temperature for 30 minutes or until just soft enough to scoop into balls.
Make sure your oven is heated to 375°F. I have an oven thermometer in my oven to make sure it’s heated properly.
If your cookies have baked the full 10 minutes and they appear VERY under baked, keep them in until they are lightly golden in color and the tops have set.
After you remove them from the oven, it’s important the cookies stay on the baking sheet for the 10 minutes. The cookies will continue to set up while on the tray.
How to Get the Perfect Crumbl Cookie
- Bake at the right temperature. Many places online will tell you the higher the oven temperature, the thicker the cookie (like 400°F or hotter). The high heat shocks the cookie and helps it bake super fast so the cookie won’t have time to spread as much and you’ll have a really thick cookie. I tried this and didn’t love it. You get a thick cookie, but the centers can be quite doughy and the edges much darker
- Use the right proportions of ingredients. A cookie needs enough butter to stay moist. Too little butter and the cookie will be crumbly and break apart; not to mention day old cookies would be hard and undesirable.
- Portion the dough into large and equal cookie dough balls. Use a kitchen scale to ensure precise proportions. Having the cookie dough balls the same size helps the cookies bake uniformly.

Make Ahead, Storing, and Freezing
This dough will stay good chilled in the fridge in an airtight container for 2-3 days prior to baking it. Remove from the fridge and let come to room temperature so you can scoop it into dough balls and bake following the instructions.
You can store these Crumbl chocolate chip cookies at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 5 days (if they last that long before you eat them all!).
You can also freeze the cookie dough. Portion the cookie dough into balls prior to freezing. Place the dough balls in a freezer safe ziplock bag and store in the freezer for up to 3 months. When ready to bake, remove them from the freezer and let them thaw before baking.
One thing I love about these cookies is that they stay soft for several days after making them! I left one cookie out on the counter (not wrapped or covered) and the following day it was still super soft. I was thrilled!!
My post on Freezing Cookie Dough goes through everything you need to know about storing cookie dough, freezing cookie dough, and baking frozen cookie dough! My Freezing Cookies post has tips and tricks on how to freeze baked cookies.
Recipe FAQs
If you’re going for a perfect Crumbl copycat recipe, then yes, use those chips. If you prefer semi-sweet chocolate chips over milk chocolate then by all means, use the semi-sweet.
Anywhere from 650-750 calories per cookie.
Yes! Although their menu changes each week, they always serve their chocolate chip cookie and their Crumbl Sugar Cookies.
These are big cookies! So one thing that can help them spread so they aren’t baked as tall dough balls is to slightly flatten the dough balls to resemble thick disks. This will help the cookies bake at an even thickness, having a more uniform bake.
This could be due to a change in elevation where you are at. These cookies were baked at sea level. If you are baking at high altitude, you may need to add additional flour (up to 1/4 cup) and reduce the sugar by 1 tablespoon. Use some of your baking instincts. If the dough is super super sticky, you’ll want more flour!
A few commenters and reviews have mentioned their cookies have turned out dry. This is super crazy because whenever I make them they are super soft and moist! So, a few things to note: I bake these at sea level. If you are at a different elevation, you’ll want to adjust the amount of flour. If you are finding your dough is fairly crumbly, you have too much flour. Reduce the flour by a few tablespoons. The dough should be soft, moist, easy to come into a ball, not crumbly, but not overly sticky.

More Cookie Recipes
- Double Chocolate Chip Cookies – if you’re a chocolate person, these are for you!
- Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies – the most perfect oatmeal cookie ever.
- Soft Oatmeal Raisin Cookies – I’m not a raisin person but I LOVE these cookies!
- Brownie Cookies – these cookies take only 15 minutes to make AND bake. You’ll have one in your hand in no time!
- Chocolate Chip Cookies – a classic chocolate chip recipe that everyone loves.
- Tahini Chocolate Chip Cookies – careful, my husband claims the tahini makes these cookies extra addicting.

Crumbl Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons cornstarch
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 3/4 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cups unsalted butter - at room temperature
- 3/4 cup brown sugar - packed
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg - at room temperature
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 1/4 cups Guittard baking chips - See note #1
Equipment
- oxo
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.
- In a medium bowl whisk the flour, cornstarch, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
- Cream the butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar on medium speed (with paddle attachment) for 2-3 minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed.
- Add the egg and vanilla, beat on medium speed for 1 minute.
- Add the dry ingredients and mix until JUST combined. Stir in the chocolate chips.
- Using a ½ cup measuring cup, portion the dough into equal 1/2 cup size balls (I like to use a kitchen scale to get the balls equally portioned. Each dough ball should weigh 5-5.5 oz each). See note #2. Place the dough balls on the prepared baking sheet. Leave enough space between each cookie, I do 2 per tray.
- Bake for 9-12 minutes. The tops will be lightly golden and the tops set. Remove the baking sheet from the oven; some cookies may have uneven edges. To fix this, use a very large round biscuit cutter or cookie cutter and immediately after removing the cookies from the oven, gently use the cutter in a circular motion around the cookies to tuck in the edges (think hula hoop motion). We don’t want to cut the cookie. We just want to make the cookies uniformly circle before they set. Allow the cookies to sit on the tray for 10 minutes (the cookies will continue to bake/set while on the sheet). Transfer to a wire rack to cool for at least 10 minutes before eating. The cookies need time to set. (Refer to the notes section for more tips).
- Store cookies in an airtight container. See note #3
179 Comments on “Crumbl Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe”
I made the cookies using your recipe. I must say they weren’t bad in flavor but were flat when done. I’m going to give it another shot by adding more flour and no baking powder. I will post an update soon. Thanks for sharing your recipe. 😁
Yes add a bit more flour, but I would keep a little bit of baking powder in the recipe. Also make sure your oven is heated properly. If my oven temperature is off my cookies come out flat too.
Thank you! I’m going to give it another try. My fiancé loved the first batch. He said, they were really soft! 😁
If you are here I have ONE important thing to say: DON’T LISTEN TO THE NAYSAYERS. This recipe is AMAZING. It’s everything you want in a big chocolate chip cookie. It’s crazy soft, perfectly sweet, and all around the best cookie I’ve ever had. I live at high altitude, so I added a bit more flour since the dough was a bit too sticky. It worked out perfectly! Don’t you guys know that altitude affects baking? Don’t dis the recipe. It’s freaking amazing.
Not impressed. The cookies lacked depth and just tasted overwhelmingly sweet even with the sugar cut down. At first when I was scanning the reviews I figured the negatives ones were probably due to lack of baking skills and not the recipe itself. well, Let me tell you. That isn’t the case. I hated the acidic taste and aftertaste of the corn starch- but it could be because these cookies use way to much leavening in general most recipes call for half this amount. these cookies are terrible warm and if you’re like the majority of the world that’s when you want to eat them and generally when cookies taste best. My advice: Keep searching because these aren’t it.
This was the first recipe I ever tried from Salt and Baker and will never look to another blog for my baking needs! These made me FAMOUS in my neighborhood during quarantine of 2020. 😂 These are hands down my very favorite chocolate chip cookies- ever. I usually double the recipe so I have 6 dough balls to freeze and pull out when someone needs a little love. ❤️ My husband prefers semi sweet chocolate chips so I always make a couple with those for him and they’re just as delicious in their own way. Thanks for blessing us with this recipe!
It’a good cookie but not close to a Crumble Cookie. I made these twice, first time was mix drop and bake. Second I put the dough in the fridge overnight and tried again. Both batches came out flat and neither had the flavor of Crumble Cookie. I think this recipe needs more flour or less sugar to maintain the thickness.
This is disgusting. Don’t even waste your time baking it. I did everything correct, and it does not even taste similar to a cookie! It looks great though. 😊
Please add grams to your recipes. It would be extremely helpful to people who use scales for added precision.
I know many of you measure your ingredients, and I really need to!
Anything I can use instead of a stand mixer? I’m a college student, I don’t own one and I can’t afford one. Also, is there anything else I can use instead of corn starch?
Yep, you can use a hand mixer! That’ll be just fine.
I don’t have a hand mixer either!! I usually just mix all my cookie recipes with a wooden spoon.
I was very disappointed with the way these cookies turned out. They were too sweet and too thin. I followed the directions and chilled the dough overnight. Baked 13 minutes at 375 degrees.
Interesting. I’ve never heard anyone say they are too thin. In fact, I made these last week and had no issues with them being thin, at all. And I love my cookies sweet! ❤️
Sorry they weren’t for you!
These came out tasting amazing, but they still felt raw on the inside. I baked them for 15 minutes at 375 (I don’t have a second thermometer to check, but it *should* be fine), and the edges and tops look done. Is there anything I can do to try to cook them on the inside?
Yes, you can press down on each cookie dough ball so that it’s a thick disk… then bake them. That’ll do the trick!
Better than Crumbls chocolate chip cookies! This is the only chocolate chip cookie I make now.
Thanks for coming back to leave a comment Jerrilyn! So happy to hear this is your go-to chocolate chip cookie recipe now!
I have made these twice. They were perfect. I love a great recipe! This is a fantastically wonderfully great recipe! I will not hesitate to make them again and cannot wait to try more.
I’ve been searching for the perfect chocolate chip recipe FOREVER. I can’t even express how overjoyed I am to say I’VE FOUND IT!! These are perfect in every way. They’re everything I’ve been searching for in the perfect chocolate chip cookie- taste and aesthetic! Found my new go-to chocolate chip recipe. Yay!!
Thanks for the chocolate chip cookies recipe. The results turned out excellent. I lessened the granulated sugar and they’re perfect. This chocolate chip cookies recipe actually tasted better than the Crumbl cookies, which used powdered milk, based on my taste and smell. I bought Crumbl cookies for comparison purposes. Your recipe is by far the winner.
Wohoo!! You made my day Carmelita!
I’m glad you enjoyed the recipe. Thanks for taking the time to come back and leave a comment.
I’m finally getting around to writing a review of these. I don’t write reviews often, but these cookies are IT. I am generally not a big chocolate chip cookie fan. Not sure why. But I have tried countless recipes, in attempt to find one I liked. This is that recipe, and they deserve recognition. These are the absolute best, and so foolproof. They always come out delicious. One of my favorite things about these cookies is that they never go flat. They stay nice and big and thick. Almost every other recipe I’ve tried has to be babied in order to get that kind of result. These don’t. I even cook them at 350 most of the time, and have no problems. I only have good things to say about these. I have made them the full 5oz size, and I have made them half size. They turn out perfectly both ways. I have made these an embarrassing amount. It’s also worth mentioning that the salted chocolate chip cookies from this site are my second favorite chocolate chip cookie. Salt & Baker will be my permanent go-to for chocolate chip cookie recipes!
Thanks Corinn! I’m glad you found a chocolate chip cookie recipe that you love! My family and I are obsessed, so its good to hear we aren’t the only ones! A handful of readers have had great success baking these cookies at 350°F, thanks for sharing that info.
This recipe didn’t turn out for me. Not enough fat. It was crumbly and too dry. Ell
Fantastic recipe! I had a Crumbl cookie yesterday and was on a mission to make them at home. I found the Guittard milk chocolate chips at Target. I accidentally added a whole teaspoon of salt but they were still amazing (and will keep this happy accident next time, too.) I used 1/4 cup to measure out the dough to decrease the overall size of the cookies and they were still about 1” thick. Great call on the corn starch, it keeps the cookies thick! I also always refrigerate cookie dough before baking.
I had my first Crumbl cookie a few weeks ago and I have been craving them ever since. I saw your recipe and thought I would try it. I thought the favor and texture was spot on. Great recipe, thank you so much for sharing it! I’m going to try your sugar cookie next.
The center underbakes compared to the rest of the cookie unfortunately. 5oz is too big.
They were good cookies but for me they taste nothing like Crumbl, I’m obsessed with their chocolate chip. After I made them I adjusted the recipe by adding 1 more egg, 1/4 cup more flour and 1 tbsp of shortening. Guess what they taste a lot like them, made the dough less sweet with the milk chocolate chips, cakey, and thick. It’s all in preference but turned out extremely similar. Thank you for the recipe.