Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies

Published September 29, 2017. Updated October 26, 2018

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Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies are the perfect thing to bake any day of the year but I especially love them during fall. They are soft and cake-like in the middle with chewy, slightly crisp edges, and that delicious apple flavor and abundance of cinnamon will leave everyone craving more!

Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies Recipe

The Perfect Autumn Apple Recipe

I’ve always loved oatmeal cookies and when you add apples and autumn spices they become the absolute perfect autumn cookie! Those tiny little bits of apples in these cookies just make them sing!

I love how every season has fruits that pair with it, like bright oranges and tempting pomegranate in winter, sweet strawberries and mangos in the spring, juicy watermelon and plump blueberries in the summer, and those crisp apples and mellow pears in the fall.

And right now I’m really loving adding apples to everything! From my oatmeal in the morning, to salads at lunch, to my sheet pan meals at dinner, and now here we finish off with apples in our cookies for dessert!

Stack of multi-colored apples in wooden bucket.

Ingredients You’ll Need for This Recipe

  • All-purpose flour
  • Rolled Oats
  • Cinnamon
  • Baking soda
  • Salt
  • Unsalted butter
  • Brown sugar
  • Egg
  • Vanilla extract
  • Granny Smith apples
  • Lemon

Scroll below for full printable recipe.

Image of diced bits of apples over cookie dough in a mixing bowl.

How to Make Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies

  • Preheat oven and line baking sheets.
  • Whisk together flour, oats, cinnamon, baking soda and salt.
  • In an electric mixer cream butter and brown sugar.
  • Mix in egg and vanilla extract.
  • Toss apples with lemon juice.
  • Add flour mixture to dough mix until combined, then mix in apples.
  • Scoop dough out using a medium cookie scoop and drop onto prepared baking sheets. Flatten slightly.
  • Bake in oven until cookies are set. Cool on wire rack.

Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies Recipe

Tips for These Apple Cookies

  • Another tart crisp apple can be substituted for Granny Smith. Don’t use sweet apples though, there’s already enough sugar in the dough.
  • Cut the apples up very very small so not only will they bake through and become tender but that way you’ll also get apples flavor in each and every bite.
  • Don’t omit the lemon, it brightens up the apple flavor a bit more.
  • Don’t use quick oats. Rolled old fashioned oats will offer the best texture and flavor.
  • Use the scoop and sweep method to measure flour (not spoon and level), or better yet use a kitchen scale for the most consistent results.
  • Use a cookie scoop for the fastest method for scooping out dough, it will also give you even size cookies.
  • For the perfect pairing serve with warm apple cider.

Tall stack of Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies

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Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies
4.78 from 71 votes

Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies

A delicious, soft cake-like cookie filled with oats, loaded with tiny chunks of apples and swirled with plenty of cinnamon. The perfect cookie to make on fall weekends!
Servings: 19 cookies
Prep15 minutes
Cook30 minutes
Ready in: 45 minutes

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line two 18 by 13-inch baking sheets with silicone baking mats or parchment paper. 
  • In a mixing bowl whisk together flour, oats, cinnamon, baking soda and salt for 20 seconds, set aside.
  • In the bowl of an electric stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment cream together butter and brown sugar until combined. Mix in egg and vanilla extract.
  • Toss apples with lemon juice in a small bowl. Add flour mixture to egg and vanilla mixture and mix until combined, then mix in apples. 
  • Scoop dough out using a medium cookie scoop, or 2 Tbsp at a time, and drop onto prepared baking sheets spacing cookies 2-inches apart. Flatten them just slightly.
  • Bake one sheet at a time in preheated oven until cookies are set, about 14 - 15 minutes. 
  • Let cool on baking sheet several minutes then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. Store cookies in an airtight container.
  • Recipe source: Cooking Classy

Notes

Use rolled old fashioned oats for best results. Don't substitute quick oats.
Dice apples into tiny bites so they cook through and soften by the time cookies are done.
Nutrition Facts
Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal Cookies
Amount Per Serving
Calories 134 Calories from Fat 45
% Daily Value*
Fat 5g8%
Saturated Fat 3g19%
Cholesterol 22mg7%
Sodium 71mg3%
Potassium 50mg1%
Carbohydrates 19g6%
Sugar 9g10%
Protein 1g2%
Vitamin A 165IU3%
Vitamin C 0.5mg1%
Calcium 15mg2%
Iron 0.7mg4%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Nutrition values are estimates only. See full disclaimer here.

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207 Comments

  • David

    There was not enough moisture in this recipe. I am going to try the oatmeal raisin cookie recipe on the Quaker Oatmeal box and substitute the apples for the raisins.

    That recipe called for a 2nd egg and more oats as well as more sugar.

  • Effie

    Made these for Christmas and I love them and so did everyone else! So soft ,Thanks for the recipes

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      I don’t recommend dried apples because the fresh apples add necessary moisture to the cookies. If you were up for some experimenting you could try them out but you’d likely need to add extra butter.

  • Jane

    Will these apple cinnamon cookies stay well in a cookie jar? Will they go moldy because do the fresh apples?

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      With all the moisture they won’t keep very long at room temp, just a few days. I’d store in the fridge or freezer for longer shelf life.

    • Therese Mundo

      I made them a week ago & have not refrigerated them yet & they’re still delicious. This is a good question though & perhaps will refrigerate them tomorrow

      • Jaclyn

        Jaclyn Bell

        Thanks for your input on it :), I just get overly cautious when things have added moisture from fruit and such.

  • Therese Clare

    These were absolutely delicious!
    I added some ground nuts, finely ground 1/4 c. fresh cranberries & 3/4 c. butterscotch chips. (I’d put less or none at all of b. chips since it made them a bit too sweet for me. My family didn’t think so though.)
    Wonderful!

  • Ellen Schoenfeld-Beeks

    Caution! When I doubled the recipe, the amounts given in cup measurements changed appropriately in the recipe, but the gram measurements did not change! Good thing I noticed this with the butter so I am remeasuring dry ingredients! Whew!

  • Sarah

    Great cookies! I read the reviews saying it was pretty dry, so I just used a heaping cup of flour instead of the 1 1/4 cup, and was generous with the butter and vanilla. My only comment is that it’s a little bland for me, you can go liberal with the cinnamon and nutmeg/ginger would be good in this too.

  • Zona Forsyth

    The best recipe…..I added rum soaked raisins and apples from my one of my apple trees. Living in Sweden.
    Yummy
    Thanks for sharing
    Zona🇸🇪