Easy Sheet Pan Chocolate Chip Cookies
I make these giant sheet-pan chocolate chip cookies when I want all the cozy, gooey goodness of cookies without babysitting a dozen little rounds. It’s basically one big, slightly crisp-edged, soft-centre cookie that you cut into squares — ridiculously forgiving and perfect for feeding a crowd, bracing for a hangry family, or pretending you only made a “single serving” but actually ate half the pan.
My husband calls this “the patchwork cookie” because he likes to grab different corners and declare them his favorite texture. The kids pile pillows on the couch and insist on cookie-and-milk movie nights. Once, I ruined a regular batch by overbaking them into hockey pucks and switched to the sheet pan method as a last-ditch rescue — now it’s our go-to. It feels casual, slightly rebellious, and always ends with someone licking the spatula.
Why You’ll Love This Easy Sheet Pan Chocolate Chip Cookies
– It’s fast and low-effort: one bowl, one pan, minimal drama.
– Serves a crowd without fiddling with dozens of scoops.
– Those edges are delightfully crisp while the middle stays soft and almost brownie-like.
– Great for bringing to parties because you can cut neat squares and stack them in a tin.

Kitchen Talk
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This is the kind of recipe where the kitchen looks mildly chaotic and everything still turns out fine. I usually mash the dough into one big rectangle and press extra chips on top like I’m decorating a very lazy cookie cake. Parchment paper is your friend — cleanup becomes instant and the bottom stays pretty. Sometimes I swap half the chips for chopped chocolate because the melty chunks = superior chaos.
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I once tried using room-temperature butter and then cold butter because I thought “why not both?” It was oddly excellent: more chew, more spread. Also, resist the urge to slice the cookie immediately; letting it rest cools the crumb and makes cleaner squares. If you want chewy over crispy, keep the middle a little under the usual bake time.
Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour and prefer light brown sugar for chewiness; check your baking soda/powder dates — stale leavener is a silent cookie killer.
– Fats & Oils: Real butter gives the best flavor; if you use salted butter, skip adding extra salt elsewhere until you taste.
– Chocolate: Mix chips and chopped bar chocolate for texture contrast — semisweet is a safe, crowd-pleasing choice.
– Eggs: Large eggs are the norm and help bind everything; room-temp eggs mix more evenly but cold ones won’t ruin the dough.
– Nuts & Seeds: Toast and chop walnuts or pecans if using; they add crunch and hold up well in a big sheet cookie.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Make the dough a day ahead and keep it chilled; flavors deepen and it’s easier to press into the pan later.
– If you’re prepping for a party, portion the dough into an oiled pan, cover tightly, and refrigerate until baking day.
– Dough balls freeze well on a tray, then transfer to a bag — you can bake straight from frozen with a slightly longer bake time.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a large sheet pan and parchment so you’re not scrubbing melted chocolate later.
– Scoop or press the dough all at once and pop it in the oven while you tidy up — one-and-done.
– For a quick shortcut, use high-quality store-bought dough and press into a pan; people will still swoon.
Common Mistakes
– Overcrowding the pan — the dough needs room to spread into a nice even layer.
– Slicing too soon — warm squares turn out ragged; give them a short rest for neat edges.
– Using low-quality chocolate — it turns a gem of a cookie into a sad, waxy echo. Fix on the fly by sprinkling chopped high-quality chocolate over warm squares so it melts into pockets.
What to Serve It With
– Classic cold milk or a big mug of coffee — both are excellent mood setters.
– A scoop of vanilla ice cream makes it dessert-level showy.
– Serve with fresh berries if you want something that feels a little less indulgent.
Tips & Mistakes
– Press chips into the top of the dough before baking for photogenic pockets.
– If your edges bake faster, check your oven’s hot spots and rotate the pan halfway through.
– Forgot to chill the dough? It’s fine — just expect a thinner spread and eat more of the crispy bits.
Storage Tips
Keep leftovers in an airtight container at room temperature for a few days, or freeze squares in a zip bag between layers of parchment for a couple of months. Cold cookie is no crime — it makes a surprisingly good midnight breakfast. To revive a stale-ish square, pop it in a warm oven for a few minutes or nuke briefly for that fresh-from-the-pan chew.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap some chips for chopped browned butter chocolate or toffee bits for grown-up complexity.
– For nut-free households, substitute sunflower seed butter in small amounts or skip nuts entirely.
– Vegan-ish swap: use a plant butter and flax egg, but expect a slightly different texture.
– Add-ins that work: sea salt flakes on top, a handful of oats for chew, or citrus zest for a surprising brightness.
Frequently Asked Questions

Easy Sheet Pan Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 1 cup unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
- 1 cup light brown sugar, packed
- 0.67 cup granulated sugar
- 3.5 oz beaten eggs about 2 large
- 1 tbsp pure vanilla extract
- 2.75 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 tbsp cornstarch
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 0.75 tsp kosher salt
- 2 cup semisweet chocolate chips
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Heat oven to 350°F. Line a 13×18-inch rimmed sheet pan with parchment; lightly grease the corners.
- Whisk melted butter with both sugars in a large bowl until glossy and combined.
- Beat in the eggs and vanilla until the mixture looks smooth and slightly thickened.
- In a separate bowl, whisk flour, cornstarch, baking soda, and salt to evenly distribute.
- Fold dry ingredients into the wet mixture just until no dry streaks remain.
- Stir in the chocolate chips, reserving a small handful if you want to sprinkle on top.
- Spread dough evenly in the prepared pan. Press gently to reach the corners; add reserved chips on top.
- Bake 16–19 minutes, until golden at the edges and just set in the center.
- Cool in the pan on a rack. Slice into bars once set and serve.
Notes
Featured Comments
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