Soft Cinnamon Sugar Cream Cheese Cookies (Snickerdoodle Style, Tangy Cream Cheese, 35 Min)

Soft cinnamon sugar cream cheese cookies — tangy cream cheese makes them pillowy and tender, classic snickerdoodle cinnamon-sugar crackle on top. 35 min.

These are the pillowy, tender, almost cake-like cookies with the classic snickerdoodle cinnamon-sugar crackle on top. Cream cheese is the secret — it gives them tang AND the soft, tender texture that makes people ask for the recipe. No chilling required, ready in thirty-five minutes, and they stay soft for five days.

Fun fact: cream cheese cookies are a Southern bakery trick that emerged in the 1960s as the dairy industry pushed cream cheese as a versatile ingredient. The cream cheese replaces some of the butter, lowering the fat-to-flour ratio just enough to keep the cookies soft for days rather than going crisp overnight. Snickerdoodles do this naturally with cream of tartar, but cream cheese is even more forgiving for home bakers.

Why this recipe works

  • CREAM CHEESE = SOFTNESS. Cream cheese has more water than butter and is naturally acidic. Both contribute to a softer, more tender cookie that doesn’t dry out.
  • NO CHILLING NEEDED. Cream cheese dough holds its shape at room temp better than all-butter dough. You can mix and bake straight away.
  • ROLL IN SUGAR BEFORE BAKING. Cinnamon sugar on the OUTSIDE caramelizes into a crackled crust during baking. Mixing it into the dough doesn’t give the same effect.

Ingredients

Serves 24 cookies.

  • Cookie dough:
  • 1/2 cup (115 g) unsalted butter, softened
  • 4 oz (115 g) cream cheese, softened (NOT whipped)
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 large egg, room temperature
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • Cinnamon sugar coating:
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 1/2 tbsp ground cinnamon

Instructions
Close-up of a single cookie split in half showing soft, tender, almost cake-like interior, glittering cinnamon sugar coating on top

Step 1: Prep oven + pans

Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C). Line two sheet pans with parchment paper.

Step 2: Cream butter + cream cheese

In a large bowl with an electric mixer, beat softened butter and cream cheese together 2-3 minutes until smooth and fluffy. Add sugar; beat 2 more minutes until pale.

Step 3: Add wet ingredients

Beat in egg and vanilla until combined.

Step 4: Whisk dries + combine

In a separate bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt. Add to wet in 2 additions, mixing on low just until no dry streaks remain. DO NOT overmix.

Step 5: Roll in cinnamon sugar

Combine the coating sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl. Scoop dough into 1.5-tbsp balls (about ping-pong size). Roll each ball in cinnamon sugar to coat fully. Place 2 inches apart on prepared sheets.

Step 6: Bake

Bake 9-11 minutes, ONE sheet at a time, until edges are set but centers look slightly underdone and puffed. They’ll crackle as they cool. Don’t bake to golden — they’ll be crispy.

Step 7: Cool

Cool on sheet 5 minutes (centers finish setting) then transfer to a rack. Eat warm for max softness.

Nutrition information

  • Calories: 145 kcal per cookie
  • Protein: 2 g
  • Carbohydrates: 22 g
  • Sugar: 13 g
  • Fat: 6 g
  • Saturated Fat: 3.5 g

Pro tips for the best soft cinnamon sugar cream cheese cookies

  • FULL FAT cream cheese only. Reduced-fat (Neufchâtel) has too much water and the cookies spread flat. Use the brick, not whipped or spreadable.
  • PULL EARLY. Cookies should look slightly raw in the center when you take them out. They finish setting on the hot pan. Bake-to-golden = hard cookies.
  • Add MIX-INS. 1 cup white chocolate chips or chopped pecans folded in at the end works beautifully. Just don’t overload past 1 cup.
  • Store with bread. Drop a slice of bread in the cookie container — keeps them soft for a week. Sounds weird, works.

Frequently asked questions

Why are my cookies flat?

Butter or cream cheese was too soft (almost melted). They should be soft to the touch but still cool. Or you mixed too long after adding flour — develops gluten and the dough sags.

Can I freeze the dough?

Yes — scoop, roll in cinnamon sugar, freeze on a tray, transfer to bag. Bake from frozen, add 2 min. Keeps 3 months.

Can I make them gluten-free?

Sub 1:1 GF flour blend (King Arthur Measure for Measure works). Reduce baking soda by 1/4 tsp.

How do they compare to snickerdoodles?

Softer. Snickerdoodles use cream of tartar for tang and a chewier bite. These use cream cheese for tang and a more tender bite.

How long do they keep?

5 days at room temp in a sealed container (use the bread trick). 3 months frozen baked. Re-warm 10 sec in microwave to bring back softness.

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