How to Make Homemade Cinnamon Rolls from Scratch
If you crave a warm, gooey cinnamon roll that makes your kitchen smell like a hug, you can absolutely make it at home. No bakery line. No sad tube dough.
Just buttery spirals that melt in your mouth and make you close your eyes for a second. Ready to roll? Let’s do this.
Why Homemade Wins (By a Mile)

Homemade cinnamon rolls don’t just taste better—you control everything.
The dough? Soft and pillowy. The filling?
Generous and cinnamon-forward. The glaze? Sweet, tangy, and exactly how you like it.
Plus, you can bake them fresh when you want them. FYI: nothing beats the smell of cinnamon rolls at 8 a.m. on a lazy weekend. You’ll feel like a breakfast wizard.
The Dough: Your Fluffy Foundation
Good dough equals good rolls.
You want a soft, enriched dough with enough structure to hold that swirl, but enough tenderness to pull apart with your fingers. What you’ll need:
- Warm milk (not hot) to wake up the yeast
- Active dry or instant yeast
- Sugar and eggs for richness
- Softened butter for flavor and tenderness
- All-purpose flour (or bread flour for a chewier bite)
- Salt, because flavor matters
Mixing and Kneading Tips
Aim for a dough that feels slightly tacky but not sticky. If it clings to your fingers, add a tablespoon of flour at a time. If it feels stiff, drizzle in a teaspoon of milk.
Knead until you see a smooth surface and it bounces back when poked. You don’t need bodybuilder arms—just patience.
Proof Like You Mean It
Let the dough rise until it doubles. Warm, draft-free spot.
You can use an oven with the light on, or a sunny corner. The dough should look puffy and feel airy. If it’s slow, don’t panic.
Yeast is a living diva; it takes its time.

The Filling: Go Big or Go Home
Cinnamon rolls live and die by the filling. You want a generous, buttery spread that saturates the swirls. Classic filling:
- Softened butter (spreadable, not melted)
- Brown sugar (light or dark—dark gives deeper caramel vibes)
- Ground cinnamon (don’t skimp)
- Pinch of salt to balance sweetness
Mix the sugar and cinnamon, then slather the dough with butter and shower it with the mixture. IMO, a little extra cinnamon never hurt anyone.
Spread it edge to edge for maximum swirl coverage.
Fun Upgrades
- Toasted pecans for crunch
- Cardamom for a cozy, slightly floral twist
- Orange zest for brightness
- Mini chocolate chips if you like chaos (in a good way)
Rolling, Cutting, and Pan Science
Roll the dough into a rectangle roughly 12×18 inches. Keep thickness even. Roll it up from the long side for more swirls per bite.
Use gentle pressure so you don’t squeeze the filling out. Cutting clean slices:
- Use dental floss (unflavored) to loop under and pull through
- Or a sharp knife with a quick, confident slice
- Aim for about 1.5-inch thick rolls
Place rolls in a buttered pan with a little space between each. They’ll grow into each other and bake into that classic pull-apart situation. Tight fit, but not overcrowded.
Like a cozy subway at 9 a.m., not 5 p.m.
Second Rise Matters
Let them puff again until they look fluffy and touch each other. Under-proofed rolls bake dense. Over-proofed rolls slump.
If you’re unsure, err on slightly under and add a couple extra minutes in the oven.
Baking: Golden Tops, Soft Centers
Bake at 350°F (175°C) until the tops turn golden and the centers read about 190°F if you’re using a thermometer. No thermometer? Nudge the center roll—if it looks doughy, give it a few more minutes. Pro moves:
- Tent with foil if tops brown too fast
- Rotate the pan halfway for even baking
- Don’t overbake—dry rolls are heartbreakers
Glaze vs.
Frosting: Choose Your Fighter
You’ve got two main camps here: quick glaze or cream cheese frosting. Both rule, but they deliver different vibes.
Vanilla Glaze (Light and Shiny)
Powdered sugar + milk + vanilla + pinch of salt. Whisk smooth.
Drizzle while the rolls are warm so it melts into the swirls. It tastes like a donut and a cinnamon bun had a very delicious baby.
Cream Cheese Frosting (Thick and Tangy)
Cream cheese + butter + powdered sugar + vanilla + tiny pinch of salt. Beat until fluffy.
Spread over slightly cooled rolls so it doesn’t melt away. If you want less sweetness, cut the sugar and keep the tang. IMO, this wins on cozy mornings.
Make-Ahead Magic
You can absolutely prep these without signing your morning away to the kitchen.
Overnight Rolls
Assemble, cut, and pan the rolls.
Cover and chill overnight. In the morning, let them come to room temp and puff (30–60 minutes), then bake. Coffee, meet cinnamon rolls.
Freeze for Later
Freeze unbaked, cut rolls on a tray until solid, then stash in a bag.
Thaw in the fridge overnight, proof at room temp, and bake. Or bake them fully, cool, and freeze. Rewarm in the oven and glaze fresh.
Troubleshooting: If Things Go Sideways
Stuff happens.
Don’t toss the batch. Fix it.
- Dense rolls? Dough was too stiff or under-proofed. Next time, use slightly warmer milk and give it more rise time.
- Filling leaks out? You rolled too tight or used melted butter.Use softened butter and a firm, not aggressive, roll-up.
- Dry edges? Overbaked. Check earlier or tent with foil.
- Not sweet enough? Add a thicker glaze or finish with a sugar sprinkle before baking.
FAQ
Can I make cinnamon rolls without a stand mixer?
Totally. Mix with a spatula until shaggy, then knead by hand on a lightly floured surface for 8–10 minutes.
The dough should get smooth and elastic. It’s a mini workout, and yes, you can count it as “arm day.”
What’s the best cinnamon to use?
Use a fresh ground cinnamon. Saigon (a.k.a.
Vietnamese) cinnamon brings a bold, sweet punch; Ceylon tastes softer and more delicate. If you love big cinnamon flavor, go Saigon. If you want subtle and complex, Ceylon is your friend.
How do I keep the bottoms from getting too dark?
Line the pan with parchment or use a light-colored metal pan.
Dark pans brown faster. You can also place the pan on a second empty baking sheet to buffer the heat from below.
Why did my rolls unravel in the oven?
The seam probably sat on top. Always place the log seam-side down before cutting, and tuck each roll’s tail underneath in the pan.
Also, don’t skip the second rise—it helps the rolls hold shape.
Can I swap dairy or eggs?
Yes. Use your favorite non-dairy milk and vegan butter. For eggs, use a flax egg (1 tbsp ground flax + 3 tbsp water per egg, rested until gelled).
The texture changes slightly, but they still taste amazing.
How do I get that bakery-style super soft texture?
Add a tablespoon of cornstarch to the flour or use a little tangzhong (cook 2 tbsp flour with 1/2 cup milk until thick, cool, then add to the dough). It locks in moisture and gives you that melt-in-your-mouth bite. FYI: it’s worth the tiny extra step.
Conclusion
Homemade cinnamon rolls deliver ridiculous payoff for simple ingredients.
You mix a soft dough, roll in a generous filling, bake until golden, and crown with glaze or frosting. That first warm, gooey bite? Instant serotonin.
Make a batch this weekend, and don’t forget to snag the center roll—chef’s privilege, IMO.
