These extra soft and chewy chocolate chip cookie bars are incredibly easy to make. No dough chilling or rolling into balls required! Sprinkle with sea salt for a little something extra.
Taste testers gave these chocolate chip cookie bars a stamp of approval—and I’m so glad because this dough makes my favorite chewy chocolate chip cookies, too. We’re talking the softest, chewiest, thickest chocolate chip cookies to ever come out of my oven.
And if you can believe it, baking chocolate chip cookies as cookie bars transforms them into something even better. Plus, we don’t have to chill the cookie dough and we don’t need to roll the dough into individual cookies. So they’re homemade soft and chewy chocolate chip cookies, only easier to prepare. A lazy gal’s cookie if you will.
Why You’ll Love These Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
- Dense and buttery
- Extra chewy and extra soft
- Just like chocolate chip cookies, but they don’t spread
- 100x easier than making cookies—no individual cookie dough rolling
- No electric mixer needed
- A quick no chill cookie recipe
- Can be easily doubled for a larger pan
- Topped with sea salt for a little something extra
- Still soft and chewy on days 2 and 3 (if they last that long!)
Ingredients For Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
If you’ve tried my beloved chewy chocolate chip cookies, you’re already familiar with the ease of this recipe. We’re using the same cookie recipe, just baking them as bars. Here’s what you need:
- Flour: All-purpose flour is the base of this recipe.
- Baking Soda: Baking soda helps these bars rise as they bake.
- Cornstarch: Cornstarch gives the cookie bars that ultra soft consistency we all know and love. Plus, it helps keep them wonderfully thick.
- Salt: Salt adds flavor.
- Butter: Use melted butter in this recipe for the chewiest cookie bars. Because we use melted butter, there’s no need to get out your mixer.
- Sugar: I like to use a mix of brown sugar and white granulated sugar this recipe. More brown sugar than white granulated sugar promises an extra soft and chewy cookie bar because there’s more moisture in brown sugar.
- Egg & Egg Yolk: 1 egg binds everything together and 1 extra egg yolk adds richness and chewiness.
- Vanilla Extract: Pure vanilla extract adds flavor. If you have any homemade vanilla extract, use that!
- Chocolate Chips: 1 cup of chocolate chips ensures tons of melty chocolate in each bite. Instead of semi-sweet chocolate chips, try using dark, milk, or even white chocolate chips. Or swap half of the chocolate chips for M&Ms like we do in these soft M&M cookie bars.
9-Inch Pan of Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
After you prepare the cookie dough, press it into a baking pan. There’s no risk of cookie spreading with this recipe because the edges of the pan completely contain the cookies from overspreading. I love that.
- By the way, if you’re ever having spreading issues with your regular cookies, here are my top 10 tips for how to prevent cookies from spreading.
One batch of these chocolate chip cookie bars fits perfectly into a 9-inch square pan. I love using this size of pan because it yields a nice, manageable batch—about 16 super thick bars. If you want a larger batch, double the recipe and bake the bars in a 9×13-inch pan. (See recipe note.)
Baker’s Tip: I like to line my baking pans with aluminum foil or parchment paper. This way, you can lift the entire cookie bar mass out then easily cut into squares. Also makes for quick clean up! I do the same when making rice krispie treats, too.
How to Freeze Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
Homemade chocolate chip cookie bars freeze beautifully so they’re a great make-ahead dessert option. Follow these instructions and no one will know they aren’t freshly baked the day you serve them:
- Bake and cool the cookie bars.
- Slice the bars into squares. If you lined your baking pan with aluminum foil or parchment paper, simply pull the slab of bars out of the pan, place onto a cutting board, and cut into squares.
- Layer the bars between sheets of parchment paper in a freezer-friendly container. The parchment paper ensures that the bars don’t stick to each other and that the tops of the cookie bars stay intact.
- Thaw bars overnight in the refrigerator and bring to room temperature before serving.
More Cookie Bar Flavors
- Frosted Sugar Cookie Bars
- S’mores Cookie Bars
- Gingerbread Cookie Bars
- Magic Cookie Bars
- M&M Cookie Bars
- Chocolate Chip Cookie and Brownie Bars
Classic Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 35 minutes
- Total Time: 2 hours
- Yield: 16 bars
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: American
Description
No mixer required and there’s no waiting for cookie dough to chill with these soft & chewy chocolate chip cookie bars!
Ingredients
- 2 and 1/4 cups (281g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled)
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 and 1/2 teaspoons cornstarch
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cup (12 Tbsp; 170g) unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
- 1 cup (200g) packed light brown sugar
- 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
- 1 large egg plus 1 large egg yolk, at room temperature
- 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
- 1 cup (180g) semi-sweet chocolate chips
- optional: sprinkle of sea salt
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C). Line the bottom and sides of a 9-inch square baking pan with aluminum foil or parchment, leaving an overhang on all sides to easily lift the bars out of the pan when cool. Set aside.
- Whisk the flour, baking soda, cornstarch, and salt together in a large bowl. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, whisk the melted butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar together until no brown sugar lumps remain. Whisk in the egg, then the egg yolk. Finally, whisk in the vanilla extract. The mixture will be thick. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and mix together until combined. The dough will be very soft, yet thick. Fold in the chocolate chips. The chips may not stick to the dough because of the melted butter, but do your best to combine them.
- Transfer dough to the prepared baking pan and press/smooth into an even layer. Sprinkle the top with sea salt if desired. Also, I like to press a few more chocolate chips on top of the dough before baking (I do this just for looks!). Bake for 32-35 minutes or until lightly browned on the sides. Use a toothpick to test for doneness; if it comes out clean from the center of the pan, the bars are done.
- Allow the bars to cool in the pan set on a wire rack for at least an hour. Once relatively cool, lift the foil out of the pan using the overhang on the sides and cut into squares. Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to a week.
Notes
- Make Ahead & Freezing Instructions: You can make the cookie dough and chill it in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or freeze for up to 3 months. Allow to come to room temperature and continue with step 4. Baked cookie bars freeze well for up to 3 months. Thaw bars overnight in the refrigerator and bring to room temperature before serving.
- Special Tools (affiliate links): 9-inch Square Baking Pan | Glass Mixing Bowl | Whisk | Silicone Spatula | Cooling Rack
- 9×13-inch Pan: You can double this recipe to fit into a 9×13-inch baking pan. The bars will take longer to cook through, about 40 minutes at 350°F (177°C). Use a toothpick to test for doneness.
Hi! Can you make this be spread into a sheet pan to be a cookie cake (thinner than the cookie bar)? Thanks!
Hi Ashley, you could do that for a quarter sheet pan, but you may want to 1.5x the recipe for a half sheet pan. This cake pan sizes and conversions guide may be helpful!
Can I use brown butter and how to modify the other ingredients?
Hi Karen, you can use browned butter if desired. Here’s everything you need to know about browned butter and how to account for moisture loss. Hope you enjoy the bars!
I doubled the recipe and did the toothpick test to the center and it came out clean. But when cutting into squares, the center color didn’t look as well done as the square edges. Still is tasty but wondering if next time it’d be better to leave longer
I’ve made these as the recipe is written many times before, but this time I subbed peanut butter chips for half the chocolate chips and added probably about a cup of peanut butter to the batter. Made the batter thicker but DEFINITELY RECOMMEND if you’re a PB fan like me. They’re also delightful as-is. I used Skippy because I keep it on hand for baking (I don’t eat Skippy) and I probably needed only half a cup, but they’re still peanut butter-licious and if you’re like me and use only natural peanut butter I’m sure they would work just as well. Another amazing recipe from Sally and her fantastic crew!!
these were tasty enough but i think there was too much butter; they baked up horribly greasy.
Do you ever attempt to remove your bars/brownies/blondies with the parchment paper sling after 5-10 minutes in the pain to continue cooling outside the pan on a cooling rack as you would with regular cookies? I just wonder if leaving them to cooly completely in the pan causes them to be overdone! because I wouldn’t do that with regular cookies.
Hi Mary! We’ve never had an issue with the bars over-baking while they cool.
This is probably a dumb question, but would it be possible to bake in tart liners versus pan to make individual tarts?
Hi Robin, that should work just fine! Bake time will vary depending on the size of your tart pans.
This was absolutely the talk of the Christmas dinner party
I wanted to make your chocolate chip cookies recipe for my daughter who was having a friend over, because that recipe is a favorite of my wife and daughter and couldn’t be beat; but I just didn’t have the time. While the cookies will last more than a day, these bars didn’t even make it to the end of the afternoon. They are so soft and chew. This will definitely be entering my baking rotation.
These bars came out so great. I doubled the recipe, I used mini morsels and I baked it in a 9×13 pan, for less than the 50 minutes. They came out perfect!! My new favorite way to make chocolate chip cookies!!
This recipe is wonderful but if you use a square glass 8×8 pan plan on it taking longer. I put foil on the sides to keep them over baking too much. I also used her suggestion of lowering the temp to 325 as well. I just had to watch it. It came out beautifully. I like the crunching ends personally!
I’ve been making this for years now. Double the recipe and don’t forget salt on top–the salt absolutely makes the bar! Thanks so much for sharing it n_n
I doubled this, baked in a 9×13 metal plan lined with parchment. They are really, really good and made for those who prefer soft cookies over the crispy edge cookies. Flaky sea salt on top is a must imo because they are very sweet. The only thing I’d do differently next time is chop up a dark chocolate bar instead of chips to cut down the sweetness.
Another amazing recipe!
I looked everywhere for a soft, chewy, delicious cookie bar recipe that I could make anytime and this one is AMAZING! So soft, buttery, oh man. I have only made it once and that was last weekend. I already got some more butter and flour yesterday to make them today. I made them with milk chocolate chips the first time and this time I got a bag of Heath bar. I just know the bit of saltiness and butter along with that taste of Heath bar will be so so perfect. Can’t wait to share this recipe with more than just my mom and dad! Thanks
I liked the taste of the recipe. But it’s not soft. I baked in 9 inch round. Saw a different comment saying the bake time is less than stated. I baked for 30 mins but that seemed too much. Maybe remove at 26 min mark. Remember the crust hardens as it cools.
To mix in the chocolate chips I used my hands together squish the batter and chips together (like mixing meatloaf by hand) Worked great!
A nine inch round pan has a smaller volume than a 9 inch square, so they should cook faster than what the recipe calls for.
I love this recipe, I doubled it and it worked perfectly in a 9×13 pan. Soft, delicious bars, not dry at all!
As always, such a yummy recipe!! Love your recipes, they’re my go to!!
Hi,
I would sincerely appreciate it if someone could get back to me about this recipe. I have made these bars at least half a dozen times and EVERY SINGLE TIME they end up seriously underbaked. I have obviously tried increasing the bake time, checking my oven temp, etc, but no matter what I do I end up with: a beautifully baked product, toothpick comes out clean. Then bars cool. The middle sinks and when I slice into them, they do not look fully baked. I would love to send you a picture. What is going on with this recipe? It’s driving me nuts since I cannot get mine to look like your photos! Today, I tried something different: room temp butter instead of melting in the microwave and using full eggs instead of adding extra yolks. The result was slightly less underbaked, but still the same sinking in the middle and looking underbaked. I am always paranoid about whether these are even safe to eat. I baked in a pyrex dish for 45 minutes (I doubled the recipe). Please help since chocolate chip bars are one of my favorites desserts, Sally’s recipes are my favorites, but I can’t keep wasting ingredients this way!
Hi Vera! I am just seeing this comment now, and can absolutely help. First, expect some sinking in the center. This is completely normal because they’re denser bars. Just like cookies deflate a bit after baking, the same thing happens here. But, the center should not be raw. I recommend lowering the oven temperature to 325°F (163°C) and extending the bake time. If the edges are browning quickly, tent the pan with aluminum foil. Have you ever tried these M&M cookie bars? You can replace the M&Ms with more chocolate chips. The recipe is a little less than double these bars. I think the recipe works very nicely if you want to try it!
This just happened to me as well, but it was my first time making them. I was bummed, but that is why I am reading through the comments section of this recipe. Will try again, lower the temp. to 325 and increase the baking time. So happy it’s not the pan as I love my 9×13 Pyrex pans. Fingers crossed.. I will let everyone know how it goes.
I’m not glad this has happened to you, but glad I’m not the only one! This has happened to me multiple times, so I was glad to see some helpful hints. It is super frustrating because they are so good!
Just realized I’m out of cornstarch and I’m about to make these bars! What happens if I leave it out of the recipe?
Hi Bethany, you can leave it out in a pinch. The bars will still be plenty soft.
I usually never leave bad reviews, but had to warn anyone trying to double this recipe. Tried to double it in a 9X13 per instructions, and like others found that it wouldn’t set. I was surprised to see it was at least 1.5 inch thick when it baked up, right up to the rim of the glass bakeware (chose this after seeing the pictures of the glass pan). Even after 1 hour in the oven the middle was still goopey, even goopier than brownies, but the top and edges were crunchy hard. I typically don’t have issues with the oven running low (in fact I usually have to take things out of the oven before the recipes indicate). I think someone else who said you should only multiple the original recipe by 50% at most is right, as this seemed to be way too much dough for the pan.
I quadrupled the recipe last night and the result was perfection. I did two 9×9 and one 9×13. Thank you.
These are my go to! Always get a rave review!
I enjoy making these bars for my husband who loves them. And they’re so much faster than making cookies!
I would like to make this recipe but I only have a 9 inch round pan, would that work?? Thanks!!
Hi Sofia, you can use this chocolate chip cookie cake recipe instead.
Thank you!!
Not my kind of cookie bar…this recipe had more of a banana bread type texture. I thought the cornstarch was a weird ingredient.. I’ve never had a cookie where my mouth get dry afterwards. I’ve tried other recipes from this site that I’ve greatly enjoyed, this one is not for me!
I doubled the recipe and baked in a 9×13 metal pan. These turned out bread like and not at all chewy. I was expecting a different texture. They looked beautiful but were somehow bland unfortunately. Normally, love your recipes though.
This recipe looks delicious! I notice that you melt the butter. Could I use canola oil instead of butter? If so, should I make any other adjustments to the recipe?
Hi Margaret, if swapping for an oil, melted coconut oil would be your best best. Let us know if you give it a try!
I doubled the recipe, and found the cooking time to have been too long. They were a bit dry, and quite bland. I own all of Sally’s cookbooks, and always turn to those and this website when I need a dessert recipe. This is the first time I was not impressed with the results. The cookie version has a better, more expected texture and flavor.
How smart! I forgot to soften butter, so I went to make my usual chocolate chip cookies, which uses melted butter. Stumbled upon this recipe, which is the same recipe but baked in a pan! So, no chilling time either! It’s also the same recipe as your “one dough three ways” in the cookie addiction cookbook. So many possibilities for a quick cookie batch now! We really like the cinnamon pecan cookies, I will be trying those as a bar for sure! My sons favourite combo is the pretzel, butterscotch chip and dark chocolate chip ones. Wouldn’t those be cute with mini pretzel twists pushed in to the top of each one?
I adore this recipe and have made it several times. It was one of our go-tos during lockdown and it brought us joy during that time but now it’s fun to make them as a special treat. One question: would it absolutely ruin things if I tried making these with whole wheat flour? I’m trying to lean away from white flour where I can and my son (who also LOVES these) hasn’t even noticed when I use it in his favorite banana bread. Thoughts? Thank you for your wonderful recipes!
Hi Amanda! So glad to hear these are a favorite for your family. While you could try using whole wheat flour, the bars will definitely lose some of their soft and chewy texture. They may even taste a bit dry. You could first try swapping half of the flour with whole wheat flour, see how it goes, and then adjust for future batches. Hope this helps!
These are delicious and were so easy to make. Thanks for another fabulous recipe!
This was so easy and I enjoyed making these with my toddler. I used parchment for lining and ended up having to bake for about 37 minutes in a 9″ square pan. They were perfectly chewy with crispier edges from the pan (much like the edge pieces of a good brownie) and were a great addition to our neighbor’s cookie plates for Christmas. This recipe is a keeper!