These oatmeal cookies are soft, chewy, buttery and so easy to make. They come together in one bowl and bake into perfect, golden cookies every time.

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The Best Oatmeal Cookie Recipe
If you’re craving classic oatmeal cookies, this soft and chewy version is the best one to make. They bake up with crisp edges, tender centers and perfect buttery brown sugar flavor in every bite.
These easy oatmeal cookies come together in one bowl and turn out perfectly every time. Whether you turn this into oatmeal raisin cookies, oatmeal chocolate chip cookies or bake them plain, they’re a fast, reliable recipe to keep in your rotation.
Ingredient Notes

Find the full printable recipe instructions with measurements below.
- Butter: Unsalted works best so you can control the salt in the recipe. Make sure it’s softened for smooth creaming.
- Brown sugar: Packed light brown sugar gives that classic brown sugar oatmeal cookies flavor while adding chewy texture and warm caramel flavor.
- Granulated sugar: Balances the sweetness and helps the edges bake up lightly crisp.
- Eggs: An egg binds the dough and keep the cookies soft.
- Vanilla extract: Adds flavor and rounds out the sweetness.
- All-purpose flour: Provides structure while keeping the cookies tender.
- Salt: Enhances all the flavors. Reduce slightly if using salted butter.
- Baking soda and baking powder: Give the cookies lift and help them spread just the right amount.
- Old-fashioned oats: Rolled oats give the best chewy texture.
- Add-ins (optional): Add up to 1 cup raisins, chocolate chips or 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon.
How to Make Oatmeal Cookies
In a large mixing bowl, use an electric mixer to cream together butter and sugars. Add eggs and vanilla. Stir until combined.
To the creamed mixture, stir in the flour, salt, baking soda and baking powder. Stir just until combined, then mix in the oats. This one bowl cookie recipe comes together quickly, so avoid overmixing to keep the cookies soft and chewy.


Using a medium cookie scoop, scoop cookie dough balls onto a prepared baking sheet lined with parchment paper or silpat mat.
Bake cookies at 350°F until edges are just light golden brown, about 8 minutes. Allow to rest for about 2 minutes on a baking sheet, then let them cool on the rack and enjoy warm homemade oatmeal cookies.


Tips for Soft & Chewy Oatmeal Cookies
- Use room temperature butter and eggs: They mix more smoothly into the dough and help the cookies bake evenly. To quickly warm eggs, place them in a bowl of warm water for a few minutes. Soften butter in short microwave bursts if needed.
- For softer or crispier cookies: Pull them from the oven when the centers look slightly underdone for a soft, chewy texture. Bake a minute or two longer if you prefer crispier edges.
- Prevent spreading: If you like fluffier bakery-style cookies, chill the dough so it isn’t too warm before baking.
- Scoop for even baking: A cookie scoop keeps the cookies the same size, and lining the pan with parchment paper prevents sticking.
- Skip scooping. Make these oatmeal cookie bars instead!
- Salt adjustments: If using salted butter, reduce added salt to 3/4 teaspoon. For less salt, reduce by 1/4 teaspoon. For a sweet-salty finish, sprinkle flaky sea salt on top.

More cookie recipes to try include no-bake peanut butter oatmeal cookies, oatmeal M&M cookies or oatmeal coconut chocolate chip cookies.
More Oatmeal Cookie Recipes

Easy Oatmeal Cookies
Video
Ingredients
- 1 cup unsalted butter
- 1 cup (215 grams) light brown sugar , packed
- ¾ cup (150 grams) granulated sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 2 ⅓ cups (315 grams) all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- ½ teaspoon baking powder
- 2 cups (200 grams) old-fashioned oats
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone mat.
- Cream the butter and sugars in a large mixing bowl. Add eggs and vanilla and mix until combined.
- Add flour, salt, baking soda, baking powder (and cinnamon if desired). Stir just until combined. Then mix in the oats.
- Use a medium cookie scoop and scoop onto the prepared baking sheets. Bake for 8 minutes, or until the edges are just light golden brown (the centers should look a little underdone). Take them out a little early for softer cookies and bake them a little longer for crispier cookies.
- Let cookies rest on the pan for 2 minutes and then transfer to a cooling rack.
Last step: Please leave a comment and rating after you make the recipe.
Notes
- Mix in 1/2 teaspoon of ground cinnamon for a boost of flavor.
- If I have molasses on hand I love adding 1-2 teaspoons.
- Mix in 1 cup of raisins, chocolate chips or butterscotch chips.
Nutrition
Nutrition provided is an estimate. It will vary based on specific ingredients used.
Variations
- Iced oatmeal cookies: Drizzle the cooled cookies with a simple powdered sugar icing for a sweet iced finish.
- Oatmeal butterscotch cookies: Fold in butterscotch chips for a warm, caramel-like flavor.
- Seasonal twists: Try gingerbread oatmeal cookies, oatmeal cranberry cookies or pumpkin oatmeal cookies for festive holiday variations.
- Frosting: Turn these into oatmeal cream pies by sandwiching two with marshmallow frosting!
FAQs
I always use old-fashioned oats because it gives them that classic chewy texture. You can use quick oats but the texture will be different and cookies might turn out dry. If you like, you can also use a mixture of both old fashioned rolled oats and quick oats.
Cookies usually spread if the butter was too soft or the dough was too warm. If your kitchen is warm or the dough feels sticky, chill it for 20–30 minutes before baking. This helps the cookies hold their shape and bake thicker.
These cookies are best enjoyed within a day, but they’ll stay soft longer if stored in an airtight container with a slice of white bread. The bread helps absorb extra air and keeps the cookies tender.
Yes. While the baked cookies freeze well, freezing the dough balls lets you bake them fresh. Scoop the dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet, flash freeze until firm, then transfer to a freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months. Bake from frozen, adding a few extra minutes to the bake time.
Mikki
About how big is a medium scoop? Sorry – not a baker so I don’t have a scoop so I have to measure. But these look too good to not try!
Jamielyn Nye
It’s about 1.25 ounces of dough or 1 1/2 Tablespoons :)
Linda
Just wondering I followed the recipe exactly and the dough was a little runny what do I need to do please
Jamielyn Nye
If the dough is ever too runny, try adding a little more flour until it seems like the right consistency. Everyone measure flour differently (some cups sizes are even manufactured differently). You could also try refrigerating the dough.
Geri Geerdes
Absolutely delicious! I have to hide them from my husband and dole them out to him. I have made several different oatmeal cookie Recipies and this one is definitely a keeper.
Jeanine
Can I use quick oats instead of old fashion oats? I have a huge container of quick oats.
Jamielyn Nye
Yes you can. The consistency will change a little bit, but it will still work.
Judy Ponkey
Just made them and they are the bomb !!
Rachel Silvey
Ah, ours turned out delicious, but big and flat, what did we do wrong? We loved the dough!
Jamielyn Nye
Hi Rachel! I’m sorry yours turned out flat! This usually happens when the butter gets too soft. You could try refrigerating the dough for a bit next time!
Kim
Could you substitute the flour for oat flour? I have allergies and the only flour I am not allergic to is oat flour. Thanks
Jamielyn Nye
Hi Kim! I’m not too familiar with baking with oat flour so I’m not sure. If you have had success in other baking recipes it should be fine. Please let us know how it goes if you give it a try!
Kim
Can you add raisins to this recipe to make oatmeal raisin? That may seem like a silly question but I’m making sure it won’t dry the cookies out or change the end result by adding them in. Thanks!
Jamielyn Nye
Yes, you definitely can!
judy flesner
my favorite!
Matt Taylor
I LOVE oatmeal cookies. These are so yummy and super easy to make.
Beth
Oatmeal cookies are a must here! My daughter loves them! I can’t wait to make these soon!
Katie
Looks so good! Can’t wait to try this one!
Amaya Ortiz
I love this recipe the cookies always taste so good. I am gluten free so I just use a cup for cup gf flour and I leave 1/8-1/4 of flour out and added more oats and they come out amazing (with gf flour I feel like they come out more doughy so that’s why I leave out some flour). Best oatmeal cookie recipe I have tried!!!
Jamielyn Nye
I’m so glad to hear you love this recipe! Thank you for sharing your experience making it gluten free!
Sophia Poon
Super good!
Jasi Lee
Came out great
Roc
Good. Just half the salt next time
B
I was able to whip these up before a meeting. Honestly, my butter was cold so I half-way melted and stirred up with sugar so I could speed up the process. Tasty! Thank you
Jamielyn Nye
I’m so glad you enjoyed them! :)
Nancy
These are chewy and soft! I added fresh blueberries which were super yummy and some cinnamon. I will be making these again! Thank you for this great recipe!
Jamielyn Nye
Sounds delicious! I’m so glad you enjoyed them!