Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookie Recipe — Soft Spiced Fall Cookies

These pumpkin oatmeal cookies deliver bold pumpkin flavor with a chewy, rich texture—not cakey like many pumpkin treats. They’re made without any wheat flour, relying on oat flour and rolled oats for structure and heartiness.

Five round oatmeal cookies resting on a metal cooling rack placed over an orange fabric surface.

Why this recipe works

Many pumpkin cookies bake up like small cakes, but these are intentionally chewy because they’re built as oatmeal cookies. Using pumpkin butter instead of plain pumpkin puree concentrates the pumpkin flavor while keeping moisture under control, so the cookies stay dense and chewy rather than fluffy. You can buy pumpkin butter or make your own at home.

Oat flour provides the bulk of the cookie’s structure in place of regular wheat flour, and rolled oats remain whole during baking to add texture and that classic craggy top. The reverse-creaming method—pressing softened butter into the dry ingredients before adding the wet—coats the dry particles with fat and minimizes aeration. That yields cookies that stay tender, rich, and perfectly chewy, without excessive rise.

Recipe ingredients

Below are the ingredients for these pumpkin oatmeal cookies with a short note on each ingredient’s role in the final cookie.

Labeled ingredients arranged on a light gray surface, including oat flour, rolled oats, white sugar, brown sugar, butter, pumpkin butter, salt, baking soda, and pumpkin spice.
  • Oat flour: Builds structure without wheat flour and gives a mildly sweet, nutty note. You can grind old-fashioned oats into flour or buy packaged oat flour—choose a labeled gluten-free product if needed.
  • Old‑fashioned rolled oats: Keep their shape while baking and add chew and texture, producing a hearty oatmeal-cookie feel and a craggy surface.
  • Granulated and light brown sugar: White sugar helps cookies spread and crisp; brown sugar adds moisture and depth of flavor.
  • Baking soda: Encourages light spread and browning.
  • Salt: Balances sweetness and brightens flavors.
  • Pumpkin pie spice: A blend of warm spices (cinnamon, ginger, allspice, cloves, nutmeg) that gives the cookies their classic pumpkin aroma and warmth.
  • Butter: Adds richness, tenderness, and contributes to spread and texture.
  • Pumpkin butter: A concentrated, spreadable mix made from cooked pumpkin and sweetener with spices. It provides deep pumpkin flavor while keeping moisture lower than plain puree. If you don’t have pumpkin butter, see the substitutions below for how to use canned pumpkin instead.
  • Egg: Binds the dough and provides structure so cookies hold their shape as they cool.
  • Chocolate chips (optional): Classic with pumpkin, chocolate chips add texture and help reduce overall moisture. If omitted, cookies may spread a bit more. You can substitute dried fruit or chopped nuts if you prefer.

How to make pumpkin oatmeal cookies (step-by-step)

See the recipe card below for exact measurements. The steps here explain why each instruction matters so you can reproduce the results at home.

1. Combine the dry ingredients

In a large bowl stir together oat flour, baking soda, salt, pumpkin pie spice, granulated sugar, brown sugar, and rolled oats. Break up any brown sugar clumps as you mix. You don’t need to over-whisk since everything is combined again after adding butter.

2. Add the butter

Use the reverse‑creaming method: press room‑temperature butter into the dry mixture with the back of a spoon so the butter coats the dry ingredients without incorporating air. Work until the mixture resembles coarse, slightly moist sand and no dry pockets remain. This keeps the dough dense and chewy rather than airy.

A metal mixing bowl containing unmixed rolled oats, brown sugar, white sugar, and baking soda and light brown powder on a light gray surface, with an egg and a small bowl partially visible nearby.
A metal mixing bowl filled with a mixture of pale brown dry ingredients and a piece of butter on top, with a metal mixing spoon resting inside the bowl; two small bowls, one containing orange puree and one with yellow beaten egg, are nearby.
A person’s hands holding a metal spoon while mixing dry ingredients with oats in a metal bowl; small bowls of orange puree and a yellow beaten egg are nearby.

3. Add the wet ingredients

Make a well in the center of the buttered dry mix and add the beaten egg and pumpkin butter. Stir until the dough comes together into a thick, soft, slightly sticky mass.

4. Add the chocolate chips (optional)

Fold in chocolate chips or your choice of mix-ins—raisins, chopped nuts, or a different chip flavor work well. If you omit mix-ins the cookies may spread more in the oven.

A metal mixing bowl containing a mixture of oats and dry ingredients with a beaten egg and orange pumpkin butter puree added on top, unmixed.
A metal mixing bowl containing combined rusty brown colored raw oatmeal cookie dough with a spoon resting inside.
The same metal mixing bowl with the same cookie dough and dark chocolate chips added on top, with a spoon resting in the bowl.
The metal mixing bowl filled with rust colored raw oatmeal cookie dough now mixed with chocolate chips, with a spoon in the bowl.

5. Portion the dough

Divide the dough into 10 even portions. A medium spring‑loaded ice cream scoop (#40, about 1.5 tablespoons) works well. For the most consistent results weigh each portion at roughly 50 grams. If you portion by spoon, dampen your palms and gently round each piece so the cookies spread evenly during baking. Leave at least 1.5 inches between mounds.

6. Bake

Bake at 350°F (175°C) for about 12 minutes. Oven temperatures vary, so check for doneness: cookies should have roughly doubled in diameter, be golden overall with darker edges, and not look wet in the center. Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for at least 10 minutes; they firm up as they cool.

A hand holding a black-handled cookie scoop with raw cookie dough above a parchment-lined baking sheet with four other portions of raw rust-colored oatmeal cookie dough spaced apart.
A parchment-lined metal baking sheet with five portions of oatmeal cookie dough spaced evenly apart.
The same parchment-lined metal baking sheet, now with five rust-colored baked pumpkin oatmeal cookies arranged evenly across the surface.

Expert tips

Use wet hands

The dough is thick and sticky. Use a spring‑loaded scoop when possible. If you roll portions by hand, moisten your palms slightly to form smooth rounds that will bake into even cookies. If the dough is too sticky to shape, chill it for 10–15 minutes first.

Use sifted oat flour

If you grind your own oat flour, sift it before measuring to remove any larger bits and ensure the oat flour measured is uniform. Packaged oat flour tends to be more consistent if you want perfectly even cookies.

Nine oatmeal cookies on a parchment-lined metal baking sheet, with one cookie broken in half near the center.

Ingredient substitutions

If you need to avoid dairy, eggs, oats, or pumpkin butter, here are alternatives that still produce tasty cookies.

Dairy free

Substitute a firm block-style vegan butter (for example, plant-based buttery spreads that bake well) or solid virgin coconut oil. Choose a product that behaves like butter at room temperature for best results.

Egg free

Use a chia egg made from 1 tablespoon ground chia mixed with 1–2 tablespoons warm water, or try a commercial egg replacer according to package directions.

Oat-free

If you must avoid oats entirely, substitute very finely ground quinoa flakes for oat flour (sift out larger pieces) and use flattened or beaten buckwheat or rice flakes in place of rolled oats.

Pumpkin butter substitute

If you don’t have pumpkin butter, you can use canned pumpkin puree after reducing its moisture and adding maple syrup. The cookies will be thicker and a bit more cake-like and will need about 17 minutes to bake. To substitute:

  • Start with 100 grams canned pumpkin puree and blot with paper towels to remove excess liquid until it weighs about 66 grams;
  • Add 2 tablespoons (42 grams) pure maple syrup; and
  • Add 1 extra teaspoon pumpkin pie spice (so you have a total of 2 teaspoons in the dough).

Make your own pumpkin pie spice

If you don’t have a pre-mixed pumpkin pie spice, combine these warm spices:

  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
Five oatmeal cookies on a metal cooling rack, only 3 completely visible in the frame, with stacked gray plates in the background, all on an orange fabric surface.

Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies Recipe

5 from 4 votes
By Nicole Hunn
Prep Time: 15
Cook Time: 12
Yield: 10 cookies
closeup of 4 round brown cookies on a wire rack on a red cloth
Pin
Print
These pumpkin oatmeal cookies are packed with pumpkin flavor and keep a chewy, rich texture instead of becoming cakey. Follow the method for best results.

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup (90 g) oat flour
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
  • ¼ cup (50 g) granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup (55 g) packed light brown sugar
  • 1 cup (100 g) old fashioned rolled oats
  • 4 tablespoons (56 g) unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • 4 ½ tablespoons (80 g) pumpkin butter, at room temperature
  • 1 (50 g out of shell) egg, at room temperature, beaten
  • ½ cup (4 ounces) semi‑sweet chocolate chips (optional)

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
  • In a large bowl combine oat flour, baking soda, salt, pumpkin pie spice, granulated sugar, brown sugar, and rolled oats. Mix well and break up any brown sugar lumps.
  • Add the butter and work it into the dry ingredients with the back of a spoon until the mixture looks like coarse, slightly wet sand.
  • Make a well in the center and add the pumpkin butter and beaten egg. Stir until the dough comes together; it will be thick and slightly sticky.
  • Fold in optional chocolate chips or other mix-ins until evenly distributed.
  • Divide the dough into 10 equal portions (about 50 grams each). Use a medium cookie scoop or weigh portions for consistency.
  • Place dough portions on the prepared sheet about 1½ inches apart. If needed, round each mound between slightly moistened palms. If dough is too sticky, chill 10–15 minutes, then shape.
  • Bake in the center of the preheated oven until lightly golden all over, darker at the edges, and not wet in the center—about 12 minutes.
  • Remove from the oven and let cookies cool on the baking sheet for about 10 minutes so they set before transferring to a rack.

Notes

About pumpkin butter

If you don’t have pumpkin butter, substitute 100 grams canned pumpkin puree that has been blotted to reduce moisture to about 66 grams, plus 2 tablespoons (42 grams) maple syrup and 1 extra teaspoon pumpkin pie spice. Expect a slightly thicker, cake‑like cookie and a longer bake time—about 17 minutes.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 209kcal

Nutrition information is automatically calculated and should be used as an approximation.

Like this? Leave a comment below!
These pumpkin oatmeal breakfast cookies are a healthy way to get your family started in the morning with all the best tastes and smells of the fall season.

Storage instructions

Allow the cookies to cool completely, then store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days.

For longer storage, freeze cookies in a single layer on a baking sheet until firm, then transfer to a freezer‑safe bag, squeeze out excess air, and seal. Freeze up to 3 months and thaw at room temperature when ready to eat.