Peanut Butter Pumpkin Cookies Recipe (5 Ingredients)
The moment fall hits and pumpkin season is officially on, I start looking for every single way to get pumpkin into my baking. And these pumpkin peanut butter cookies have become one of my absolute favorite things to make. You get the rich, salty nuttiness of a classic peanut butter cookie — the kind with those fork-pressed crisscross marks on top — and then pumpkin puree and warm pumpkin spice turn the whole thing into something that tastes completely like autumn. It is a combination that has no right to work as well as it does, and yet here we are. You are going to love this one.
These pumpkin peanut butter cookies are soft, cozy, lightly spiced, and full of rich peanut butter flavor with that warm pumpkin backdrop running through every bite. They’re somewhere between a soft peanut butter cookie and a little bite of pumpkin bread, which makes them dangerously easy to keep grabbing off the cooling rack.
Pumpkin puree is often used in cookies because it naturally adds moisture and softness while helping baked goods stay tender for days. Peanut butter also helps create rich chewy texture while adding protein and nutty depth to desserts.

Recipe Snapshot
- Perfect Fall Flavor Combo: These pumpkin peanut butter cookies combine warm pumpkin spice flavor with rich creamy peanut butter for a soft cozy cookie that tastes like fall baking season in every bite.
- Soft and Chewy Texture: The pumpkin helps keep the cookies incredibly soft while the peanut butter adds richness and just enough structure to create that perfect chewy homemade texture.
- Easy Homemade Cookie Recipe: Using simple pantry ingredients, these cookies come together easily for holiday baking, after-school treats, or casual weekend dessert cravings.
- Best For: Fall baking weekends, holiday cookie trays, peanut butter lovers, cozy dessert spreads, bake sales, and homemade treats to enjoy with coffee or milk.
David’s Tip: Don’t overbake these cookies. Pumpkin continues holding moisture as the cookies cool, so pulling them from the oven when the centers still look slightly soft helps keep that chewy bakery-style texture instead of turning cakey or dry.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe

The Ingredient Breakdown

Top Tip for an Irresistible “Chew”
To keep these cookies from turning into hard discs, watch your bake time like a hawk. Remove them from the oven the exact second the edges just start to turn a light golden brown. They might look slightly under-set in the center, but they will finish firming up on the hot baking sheet as they cool, locking in a soft, bakery-style chew.
How to Make Pumpkin Peanut Butter Cookies (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Preheat and Prep
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat, or spray it lightly with non-stick cooking spray. Parchment is the preference because it gives the cookies a clean, even bottom without any extra browning from the pan. While the oven comes to temperature, make sure your butter is properly softened — press it with your finger and it should give easily but still hold its shape.
Step 2: Cream the Wet Ingredients
In the bowl of a stand mixer or using a hand mixer, beat together the peanut butter, softened butter, granulated sugar, and packed brown sugar on medium speed for two to three minutes. You are looking for the mixture to turn lighter in color, look fluffy and well combined, and feel smooth when you run a spatula through it. Scrape down the sides of the bowl. Add the pumpkin puree and beat again until creamy and uniform in color. The batter will turn a beautiful warm orange-tinged color at this stage.

David's Tip
Beat the butter and sugars for a full two to three minutes — not 30 seconds. This creaming step builds the structure of the cookie by incorporating air into the fat. After years working in restaurant kitchens I always say that proper creaming is the step home bakers rush most and regret most. Take the time and your cookies will be noticeably lighter and more tender.
Step 3: Add the Dry Ingredients
In a separate bowl, sift together the all-purpose flour, baking soda, salt, and pumpkin pie spice. With the mixer on low speed, gradually add the flour mixture to the wet batter in two or three additions, mixing just until each addition is incorporated before adding the next. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl between additions. Stop mixing the moment you can no longer see any dry flour streaks. The dough will be soft and slightly sticky but should hold its shape when rolled into a ball.
Step 4: Roll and Press
Scoop the dough into portions of about one tablespoon each and roll each portion between your palms into a smooth ball. Place the balls about two inches apart on your prepared baking sheet. Take a fork and press down on each ball with the tines to make a crisscross pattern, flattening the cookie to about a half inch thick. This is the signature look of a peanut butter cookie and it also ensures even baking from edge to center. If the fork sticks to the dough, dip it lightly in granulated sugar between presses.
Step 5: Bake and Cool
Bake the cookies for 10 minutes, or until the very edges are just starting to turn a light golden color. The centers will look soft and slightly underdone and that is completely intentional. Do not wait for the tops to look set — by the time the tops look fully done, the bottoms and edges will have overbaked. Pull them at 10 minutes. Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack. They firm up significantly during this resting time and reach their perfect soft, chewy texture as they cool completely.
Storage & Make-Ahead Instructions
Room Temperature: Store completely cooled cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to five days. The pumpkin puree keeps them soft significantly longer than a standard peanut butter cookie.
Refrigerator: Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to one week. Let cookies come to room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before serving.
Freezer (baked cookies): Freeze cooled cookies in a single layer, then transfer to a zip-top freezer bag with parchment between layers. Freeze for up to three months. Thaw at room temperature for about an hour before serving.
Freezer (unbaked dough): Roll the dough into balls and freeze solid on a baking sheet, then transfer to a freezer bag. Store for up to three months. Bake from frozen at 350 degrees F, adding two to three extra minutes to the bake time.
Make-Ahead Tip: The dough can be made up to 48 hours ahead and stored covered in the fridge. Let it come to room temperature for 15 minutes before scooping and rolling. Chilled dough also tends to spread slightly less, giving you thicker, taller cookies.
Go Bake Something That Smells Like Fall
These pumpkin peanut butter cookies are one of those recipes that makes the whole house feel like autumn the moment they hit the oven. The smell of peanut butter and pumpkin spice coming out of a warm oven is genuinely one of my favorite things about this time of year. Thirty minutes from start to first cookie, and everyone who tries them asks for the recipe. That is my favorite kind of recipe.
Make a batch this weekend and let me know how they turned out. Did you add chocolate chips? Did you do the blossom version with a Hershey's Kiss? Did your kids help with the fork pressing and eat half the dough? Tell me everything in the comments below. And if you share them on social media, tag me so I can see your crisscross game. Happy baking, everyone.
More Fall Cookies & Pumpkin Treats to Try
- Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies — soft, spiced, and hearty. Use up the rest of that pumpkin can right here.
- Pumpkin Cheesecake Cookies — creamy, indulgent, and one of the most popular fall cookies on the site.
- Pumpkin Snickerdoodle Cookies — cinnamon-sugary and irresistible. The perfect companion on a fall cookie tray.
- Peanut Butter Blossom Cookies — the classic peanut butter cookie with a Hershey's Kiss. Make both and put them on the same tray this Halloween.
- Pumpkin Cheesecake Bars — when you want that pumpkin spice flavor in dessert bar form, these are the ones.

Ingredients
- 3/4 cup peanut butter
- 1/2 cup butter (unsalted and softened)
- 1/4 cup sugar
- 3/4 cup brown sugar (packed)
- 1/4 cup pumpkin puree
- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 tablespoon pumpkin pie spice
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. Grab a baking sheet and lightly hit it with nonstick spray or parchment paper.
- In a large stand mixer (or with an electric hand mixer if that’s your vibe), cream together peanut butter, butter, sugar, and brown sugar. Once it’s combined and smooth, toss in the pumpkin puree and mix until it’s creamy and all comes together.
- Meanwhile, in a separate bowl, sift together your flour, baking soda, salt, and pumpkin pie spice. Then slowly add that into the wet batter, scraping down the sides as you mix.
- Roll your dough into 1-inch balls. Place them on the baking sheet and use a fork to press a crisscross pattern on top.
- Bake for 10 minutes, or until the cookies just start to turn brown. Don’t overdo it—these guys can get hard fast. Once they’re done, let them cool on the pan or a wire rack for 10 minutes, then serve and enjoy.
Nutrition
Notes
Pro Tips for Perfect Pumpkin Peanut Butter Cookies
- Use room temperature butter, not melted. Softened butter creams with the sugars to create an airy, structured dough. Melted butter skips that process and gives you cookies that spread too thin and bake up flat and greasy.
- Do not overbake. Ten minutes is the window. These cookies go from perfectly soft to dry and hard quickly. The edges should look barely golden while the centers still look soft. They will firm up perfectly on the pan as they cool.
- Use pure pumpkin puree, not pie filling. Pumpkin pie filling has added sugar and spices that will completely throw off the flavor balance and sweetness of these cookies.
- Measure flour correctly. Spoon flour into the measuring cup and level with a knife. Scooping from the bag packs the flour and can add up to 20 percent more than the recipe calls for, resulting in dry, cakey cookies.
- Dip the fork in sugar between presses. If the fork sticks to the dough as you make the crisscross pattern, a quick dip in granulated sugar solves it immediately and adds a tiny sparkle of sweetness to the top of each cookie.
- Bake one sheet at a time in the center of the oven. After years working in restaurant kitchens, I always bake one tray at a time for cookies. The center rack gives even heat distribution on all sides for consistent results.
Fun Variations to Try
- Add mini chocolate chips. Fold half a cup of mini chocolate chips into the dough right before rolling. Chocolate and pumpkin and peanut butter together is absolutely outrageously good. A dark chocolate drizzle over the cooled cookies is also incredible.
- Pumpkin peanut butter blossoms. Roll the dough balls in granulated sugar before baking, skip the fork press, and the moment they come out of the oven press a chocolate Hershey's Kiss into the center of each one. A perfect fall version of my Peanut Butter Blossom Cookies that looks stunning on a Halloween cookie tray.
- Pumpkin spice cookie sandwich. Make the cookies slightly larger and sandwich two together with a dollop of cream cheese frosting or vanilla buttercream in the middle. The cream cheese frosting works especially beautifully with the pumpkin spice flavor profile.
- Add Reese's Pieces. Fold in half a cup of Reese's Pieces candy. The peanut butter chocolate candy against the pumpkin spice cookie is a combination that nobody sees coming and everyone loves.
- Brown butter version. Brown the half cup of butter in a saucepan until nutty and golden, then chill until solid before creaming with the peanut butter and sugars. The brown butter adds a toasty richness that takes these cookies to a completely different level.
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!FAQs: Pumpkin Peanut Butter Cookie Questions, Answered
Can I make pumpkin peanut butter cookies without a mixer?
Yes, though it takes a little more elbow grease. Make sure your butter is genuinely soft — nearly spreadable — so you can cream it thoroughly by hand with a sturdy wooden spoon or spatula. Beat the butter and sugars together vigorously for at least two minutes before adding the peanut butter and pumpkin. The texture will be very slightly denser but the cookies will still taste delicious.
Why did my pumpkin peanut butter cookies come out cakey instead of chewy?
A few possible causes: too much flour (always spoon and level, never scoop), slightly too much pumpkin puree, or baking a minute too long. The pumpkin puree naturally makes these softer than a standard peanut butter cookie, which is part of their charm. For chewier cookies, try reducing the pumpkin puree to three tablespoons instead of a full quarter cup and make sure your brown sugar is packed tightly.
Can I use natural peanut butter in this recipe?
You can, but the results will be slightly different. Natural peanut butter has a higher oil content and no stabilizers, which can cause the cookies to spread more and produce a less structured cookie. If you use natural peanut butter, make sure it is well stirred, and consider chilling the dough for 30 minutes before baking to help control the spread.
Do these pumpkin peanut butter cookies need to be refrigerated?
They do not need refrigeration and are perfectly happy in an airtight container at room temperature for up to five days. The pumpkin puree actually helps them stay moist longer than a standard peanut butter cookie. If your kitchen is particularly warm, refrigerating them extends freshness to up to a week.
Can I freeze pumpkin peanut butter cookie dough?
Yes, and it works beautifully. Roll the dough into balls, freeze solid on a baking sheet, then transfer to a zip-top bag for up to three months. Bake from frozen at 350 degrees F for 12 to 13 minutes, adding about two minutes to the standard bake time.
What can I add to these cookies to make them more festive for Halloween or Thanksgiving?
So many options. Press a chocolate Hershey's Kiss into the center of each warm cookie right out of the oven. Roll the dough balls in orange-tinted sanding sugar before baking for a sparkly Halloween effect. Drizzle cooled cookies with melted dark or white chocolate. Or use a pumpkin-shaped cookie press instead of a fork for the most seasonally appropriate pattern possible.
Can I use pumpkin pie spice or should I mix my own?
Store-bought pumpkin pie spice is perfectly fine and what this recipe is designed around. If you want to mix your own, combine one teaspoon of ground cinnamon with a quarter teaspoon each of ground nutmeg and ground ginger, and a pinch each of ground cloves and ground allspice. The result is essentially identical to most commercial blends. bake in batches.


How yummy!! I need to try these 🙂 So pinning this recipe…
My 3yo and I are about to make these cookies. Have you added Oatmeal? Just curious. Thanks
Hi Liza! I haven’t tried adding oatmeal to it yet, but please let me know how it turns out! I think it will be a great added addition and should bake quite well.
How much peanut butter goes in? I only see sugar, egg, pumpkin purée, and pumpkin spice in the ingredients list. Thanks!
y Apologies. There was a coding mistake, and the peanut butter wasn’t showing up on the front side for everyone to see. I updated the recipe! It takes 1 cup of peanut butter 🙂
Your recipe is missing the amount of peanut butter. Makes a little difficult to make..
My Apologies. There was a coding mistake, and the peanut butter wasn’t showing up on the front side for everyone to see. I updated the recipe! It takes 1 cup of peanut butter 🙂
I made these last night. We ate some more today. Delicious!
What a waste of ingredients! Without flour this biscuit will not work !
Hi Elma! I’m so super sad that there was a mishap with the recipe for you! However, I assure you that the recipe will work and many have made it. Totally no need for flour. Promise <3