If you love my recipe for the BEST Chewy Pumpkin Cookies, and you're wondering how to make the best pumpkin cookie even better... I've got you! These Thick & Chewy Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies are UNREAL. I didn't just add chocolate to my pumpkin cookie recipe... it's more technical than that. This recipe is designed to give you the best chocolate chip cookie vibes combined with a perfect Fall flavor experience. I wanted to create a pumpkin cookie that has the texture of my BEST EVER Bakery-Style Chocolate Chip Cookies. These are so chewy, gooey with crisp edges and NOT cakey by any means. They have the most amazing texture and rich flavor from brown butter, the perfect amount of spice and plenty of dark chocolate. If you love pumpkin, you're in for it! Make sure you read through the article for my tips on how to prepare the pumpkin before using it in this recipe. I've had readers tell me that this is their favorite chocolate chip cookie recipe regardless of the pumpkin. They are perfect.

WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS
- Brown butter cookies - the addition of brown butter really makes these pumpkin cookies stand out with that rich and nutty flavor. If you've never made brown butter before, it's easy! Check out the instructions below.
- Chewy and gooey chocolate chip cookies - these cookies have the same texture as my Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies. They are not cakey like a lot of pumpkin cookies can be, so if you're looking for a chewy pumpkin cookie recipe, this is it!
- Pumpkin spice cookies - a fragrant blend of cinnamon, ginger, clove, allspice and nutmeg adds warm cozy flavor to these cookies.
- Dark chocolate chips - I use 70% bittersweet chocolate chips for this recipe and it complements the spice and the pumpkin so nicely. It also ensures the cookies aren't too sweet.
- Chewy pumpkin cookies - a lot of pumpkin cookie recipes are cakey because pumpkin carries a lot of moisture. Well, not this recipe! Read my tips below to see how you can make sure you get a nice chewy texture.

BLOTTING PUMPKIN PUREE
I recommend canned pumpkin vs. homemade pumpkin puree for baking because it is more consistent in texture and moisture content since commercial products must meet defined specifications. When you make it at home, it will have a different moisture content every time. It is important that you dry out the canned pumpkin in this recipe. To do this, take a paper towel and blot the pumpkin to absorb moisture (details are in the recipe card at the bottom of the post). Why do we do this? In order to get the right pumpkin flavor and texture, you need to remove water and concentrate the puree. In this recipe you need ⅓ cup canned pumpkin, but this amount will make the cookies cakey. So, before using it, spread the pumpkin out on a plate, place a paper towel that's folded in half on top of it, then apply slight pressure to absorb as much moisture as you can. Repeat 2 more times. This will reduce the volume to just ¼ cup pumpkin.


INGREDIENTS FOR CHEWY PUMPKIN COOKIES
Here are some notes about the ingredients. For a full list of ingredients, check out the recipe card at the bottom of the page.
- Brown butter - for this recipe you can use unsalted or salted butter. If you use salted butter, then reduce the added salt by half. You will also need to brown the butter which makes these cookies taste incredibly rich! It has a rich, nutty, butterscotch flavor that really adds so much depth and complements the pumpkin and spices. The most important reason for browning the butter is to create the chewy texture. When you cook the butter, you remove water (butter is 15% water) to make up for the moisture that is in the pumpkin puree. Do not skip this step.
- Brown sugar - the molasses in brown sugar gives these cookies a toffee-like flavor to complement the nuttiness and also gives them a chewy texture!
- Granulated sugar - this recipe uses both brown sugar and white granulated sugar. The white sugar will help create crisp caramelized edges.
- Egg yolk - you only need one egg yolk (no egg white) for these cookies. It's the secret to ensuring they are chewy as it accounts for the extra moisture coming from the pumpkin.


- Pure vanilla extract - vanilla is important to carry the pungent spice flavors. I like this Madagascar Bourbon Vanilla extract.
- Canned pumpkin - canned pumpkin is easily accessible and inexpensive. You can also make it yourself, but it is important to reduce it down so it is very thick otherwise the moisture balance will be off in the recipe. I use ED Smith or Libby's brand.
- Pumpkin pie spice - use your favorite brand, or make your own from a blend of 1 part nutmeg, clove, ginger and allspice with 2 parts cinnamon.
- Dark chocolate chips - I highly recommend dark chocolate to balance the sweet cookie dough. You can use semi-sweet chocolate chips if that is all you have on hand. They will still taste great!

HOW TO MAKE PUMPKIN PIE SPICE
To make pumpkin pie spice at home, blend equal portions of ground nutmeg, allspice and clove with twice as much ginger and 3 times as much cinnamon. This recipe below will give you about 3 tablespoons of pumpkin pie spice:
3 teaspoons ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground allspice
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground clove

STEP BY STEP INSTRUCTIONS
- STEP 1). Brown the butter. Place butter in a saucepan over medium heat until melted and then continue to cook while stirring occasionally until butter begins to bubble and crackle as the moisture boils off. Keep cooking with frequent stirring until it turns a deep golden color. A dense foam will form at the surface when it is nearly ready. Pour it into a large mixing bowl, then let it cool at room temperature for 15-20 minutes until it is not longer hot.
- STEP 2). Combine butter and sugar. Add brown sugar and granulated sugar to the cooled browned butter and whisk until combined. It will look a bit clumpy but it will come together with the egg yolk.
- STEP 3). Mix in egg and pumpkin. Add egg yolk and vanilla and mix until incorporated and creamy smooth. Mix in pumpkin puree.

- STEP 4). Add dry ingredients. Add the baking soda and salt and mix them in thoroughly. Add the flour and spice and fold it in until evenly incorporated.
- STEP 5). Add chocolate chips. Add the chocolate chips and fold them in evenly.
- STEP 6). Chill the dough. Cover the dough in the bowl and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
- STEP 7). Bake. Use a 1 ½-oz cookie scoop to portion mounds of dough and roll into smooth balls. Place the balls onto the prepared baking sheets spacing them 2 inches apart and flatten slightly. Bake for 9-12 minutes until golden and still soft in the middle.

EXPERT BAKING TIPS
- Let the brown butter cool. If the brown butter is too hot when you add the rest of the ingredients, it will make the cookie dough greasy and the ingredients will not incorporate as evenly.
- Blot the pumpkin puree dry 3 times over with paper towel to remove excess moisture. To do this, spread ⅓ cup of pumpkin puree onto a plate, then fold a paper towel in half and press it gently over the surface. The paper will absorb moisture. Repeat this step 2 more times with dry paper towel.
- Measure the flour accurately to ensure you get the right texture. Too much flour will make the cookies dry and the dough will not spread the right amount.
- Let the dough chill in the fridge for 30 minutes to 1 hour to improve the texture. It will help make thick, chewy cookies.
- Make medium-large cookies. Divide the dough into 14 equal portions. This is the perfect amount of dough to ensure that you get crispy brown edges and soft chewy centers. If the dough balls are too small, then the cookies will not spread enough to give the nice golden edges.
- Use a kitchen scale to weigh the ingredients for best results.

RECIPE FAQ
No, this recipe requires brown butter to ensure you get the bakery-style texture (not cakey texture!) of my chocolate chip cookies. If you do not brown the butter, then the liquid-to-flour ratio will be off in the recipe and the cookies will be cakey instead of chewy. Browning the butter drives off the water content to account for the added moisture coming from the pumpkin puree.
Yes! Salted butter will be fine. In this case I would suggest to use a level ¼ teaspoon of salt instead of a heaped ¼ teaspoon.
Often times adding pumpkin to cookie recipes will make them soft and cakey due to the added moisture that it carries. This recipe is designed to make CHEWY cookies by eliminating the moisture in the butter and using a single egg yolk instead of the whole egg. Omitting the egg white removes about 30 of water from the recipe so it helps to keep the cookies dense even when the pumpkin is added. Blotting the pumpkin with paper also helps to remove excess moisture.
I use canned pumpkin puree for baking for two main reasons: 1). Consistency - if I buy the same brand all the time then I am guaranteed to have the same results. Homemade pumpkin puree will vary in moisture content depending on how long you cook it; and 2). Ease! - it's so much easier to use canned pumpkin and the quality is just as good.
I highly recommend chilling this cookie dough since it will help with the texture and it will improve the flavor even more. Just 30 minutes is enough, although you can chill it up to 1 hour. If you chill this dough for too long, however, it will become too dry and the cookies may not spread enough.
If your cookies didn't spread much during baking, it could be that you used too much flour. To be accurate, weigh the flour to 190g. If using measuring cups, do not pack it in - just spoon it in and level it off with a knife. It could also be due to the size of the cookie dough balls. This recipe makes about 14 cookies. If the dough balls are too small, then they will bake too quickly and won't have time to spread. If you want to make smaller cookies, I recommend reducing the flour by 2 tablespoons (18g).
These cookies are best stored at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 1 week. They stay nice and soft and chewy!

If you love cookies, check out these recipes!
The BEST Chewy Pumpkin Cookies Chewy Brown Butter Snickerdoodles Cookies Brown Butter M&M Cookies Recipe Lemon Blueberry Cookies with White Chocolate Chunks Coffee Pecan Chocolate Chip Cookies Double Peanut Butter Chocolate Chunk Cookies Hazelnut Double Chocolate Chunk Cookies THE BEST Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies – Bakery Style!Video
Chewy Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- ½ cup (113g) unsalted butter
- ½ cup (110g) packed light brown sugar
- ½ cup (100g) packed granulated sugar
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 teaspoon (5ml) pure vanilla extract
- ⅓ cup (80ml) pumpkin puree blotted with paper towel to remove excess moisture (see Expert Baking Tips in article above)
- 1 ⅓ cups (190g) all purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice (or make your own homemade pumpkin pie spice)
- ¾ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 1 ¼ cups (180g) dark chocolate chips
NOTE: for best results, use a kitchen scale to weigh the ingredients.
Instructions
- First brown the butter. Follow the instructions in this post here to learn how to brown butter. It's easy! A dense foam will form at the surface when it is nearly ready. Pour it out into a clean bowl and let it cool for 20 minutes. It needs to be close to room temperature (not hot - just slightly warm) and still liquid. If it is too warm, then the cookies may spread a lot and feel greasy. If it is too cool, then it will solidify and stiffen up once you whisk in the other ingredients.
- Prepare the pumpkin puree. Spread ⅓ cup of canned pumpkin on a plate. Fold a paper towel in half and lightly press or blot the pumpkin puree with the folded paper towel to absorb the excess moisture. Repeat this step 2 more times so that you've used 3 paper towels. The pumpkin should be dry enough that it goes from being ⅓ cup down to ¼ cup. Measure the puree after you've blotted 3 times and if it is still too much, use one more paper towel to remove more water.
- Add brown sugar and granulated sugar to the cooled brown butter and whisk gently to blend. It will look like clumpy wet sand. Add egg yolk and vanilla and whisk until it is smooth and glossy. Add the blotted pumpkin puree and mix it in to incorporate.
- Combing flour, spices, baking soda and salt in a medium bowl and whisk to blend evenly. Add it to the wet ingredients and use a rubber spatula fold it in until just combined. Fold in chocolate chips.
- Cover the bowl and refrigerate for just 30 minutes while you preheat the oven.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and line two large cookie sheets with parchment paper.
- Use a 1.35-oz cookie scoop to portion mounds of dough and roll into smooth balls about 1 ½ inch diameter. If you don't have a scoop, divide the dough into 14 equal balls. If the cookies are too small, they won't spread enough. Place them onto the baking sheet, spaced about 2 inches apart from each other and flatten slightly. Bake for 9-11 minutes or until the edges are browned and the center looks puffed and slightly cracked.
- Allow them to rest on the baking sheet for a 2 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to finish cooling.







Catie
I was in the mood for an easy fall bake and these hit the mark 👏 They are chewy, pumpkin-y, and have just the right amount of spice. I added some flaked sea salt on top of my second tray and that made them even better. I can’t wait to bring some to the office tomorrow and share
christina.marsigliese
Thank you Catie! I'm so glad you enjoyed the recipe!
Christine
The cookies are the perfect blend of pumpkin spice and classic chocolate chip. Using brown butter is such an easy way to add some delicious dimension.
I took too much moisture out of the pumpkin puree so ended up using the whole egg to ensure the dough was not too dry.
Recipe is easy to follow and full of great tips to ensure your cookies turn out perfectly!
christina.marsigliese
Thank you Christine! I'm glad it all worked out in the end! Happy baking! 🙂
Rebecca
I made these last night as written. Oh lala.. with a lovely Valrhona Dark chocolate. Today, I mixed it up and made them Pumpkin Spiced Latte Cookies! Changed out the dark chocolate for white chocolate and I'm going to stripe with more espresso spiked white chocolate. So yummy.
christina.marsigliese
Thank you Rebecca! Your spin on the recipe sounds delicious!
Rebecca
Making these beauties now. I didn't have canned but I had a couple pie pumpkins that needed to be cooked off. After baking them, I took the puree and put it in my dehydrator for a couple hours.....and forgot about it. I do have some drier pumpkin now and some "Pumpkin Leather". It's actually sweet and delicious. I'll use the over-dry pumpkin as treats for the dogs. They LOVE it.
christina.marsigliese
Thanks Rebecca! Sounds interesting!
claire
They should have put this recipe on the Arecibo message they shot into space in 1974 because this is one of humanity's greatest feats. I'm going to to go get knocked up just so I have kids to pass this recipe down to. Incredible.
christina.marsigliese
Lol! Thanks for the amazing feedback Claire!
Heather
These cookies are crazy good!!! I had a can of pumpkin puree on hand but was a little leery of these cookies being some fall-flavored-but-also chocolate-chip-cookie-combo, kind of like when you eat sea-salted caramel and think “that’s interesting”… but you couldn’t eat a ton of it.
All my fears were obliterated! These cookies are like magical chocolate chip cookies that you can only get if you get some closely guarded family recipe!! They are SO good! Thank you!
christina.marsigliese
Thank you so much Heather! I'm so glad you enjoyed them even out of season!
Jena
Could you make this dough a couple days ahead of time? If so, what would be best method? Thanks!
Mikalah
These are DANGEROUSLY GOOD!!! I made these tonight on a whim because I just happened to have all the ingredients for it and they are a hit with all of my family! Just the perfect amount of pumpkin without being overwhelming and the dark chocolate chips just add the the flavor! Amazing recipe!
christina.marsigliese
That's fantastic! Thanks so much Mikalah!
Angela
I really liked the texture and taste of these cookies! I had made your chewy pumpkin cookie recipe before and used the weight instead of the volume measure and thought they were perfect. However for this recipe, I did the volume measure and then weighed it when I thought it looked like more than 1 1/3 cup. I measured it twice and also looked up that the conversion would be 160 grams. Which measure should I be using? I think both measures will result in a good cookie but want to know which one you intended. Thanks!
christina.marsigliese
Hi Angela, I intended for the weight measure of 190g. 1 cup of unbleached all purpose flour weighs 142g in North America by my tests. Thanks!
Alba
Hello,
I would like to know if I can chill the dough overnight.
Thank you
Alba
ellis
These are some of the best ccc's I've ever had. Great recipe.
christina.marsigliese
Thanks so much Ellis.