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This Overnight Cinnamon Rolls recipe are the perfect make-ahead breakfast item. These rolls are soft and buttery. They have have a punchy cinnamon flavor and are topped with a fluffy cream cheese frosting. The best part about this recipe is that you can make the dough, assemble the rolls and have them rise in the fridge. The next morning all you have to do is bake!

You can say that I am a cinnamon roll lover. I love pumpkin cinnamon rolls, mocha morning rolls, gingerbread rolls and more!
Cinnamon rolls are a labor of love. They require two rises, making three separate components (the dough, the filling and the frosting), assembling, chilling, slicing, etc. Hence why I like to make the dough, the filling and the frosting the night before. This means we wake up the next morning and we bake!
Ingredients for Overnight Cinnamon Rolls

- Flour – This gives structure and body to the rolls.
- Butter – This provides richness and flavor.
- Cinnamon – We cannot have cinnamon rolls without cinnamon.
- Eggs – These provide richness to the dough and make it taste oh so good.
- Active yeast or instant yeast – We need lift and rise and we get it from yeast!
- Brown sugar – Brown sugar and cinnamon are best friends. (PS: If you have rock hard brown sugar, here’s a post on How to Soften Brown Sugar that is very helpful.)
For the rest of the ingredients, please refer to the recipe card below!

How to Make Cinnamon Rolls Ahead
Doing this all in one day (if you’re not a pro-baker and used to projects) might be a bit aggressive. If you do make these straight through, here’s how the steps will go:
Day #1
- Make the dough. Mix the dough until it’s all sticky and soft.
- Mix up the filling. The cinnamon sugar paste makes for a very neat cinnamon roll.
- Let the dough rise for 30 minutes.
- Make the frosting. I like to get this out of the way so we have it all prepped for the next day!
- Assemble the rolls. Roll out the dough, spread on the filling and then roll up the log and slice the rolls.
- Transfer them to a baking dish. And wrap that dish tightly with plastic wrap. Place it in the fridge to rise overnight.
Day #2
- The next morning, let the rolls come to room temperature for 1 hour. During this time, they’ll shake off their chill and become soft and fluffy again.
- Bake them and then add the frosting on top!

Tips and Tricks
- Activating yeast can be tricky! You want to wait until it gets nice and foamy. If no foam or bubbles form, you’ll have to start again to ensure activation.
- Instant yeast vs active dry yeast: Active dry yeast has to be activated in liquid until it’s foamy and alive. Instant yeast can be added to dry ingredients. You can use instant yeast with this recipe. To do that, mix into the dry ingredients (you can skip activating it).
- If you like, you don’t have to assemble the rolls. You can mix up the dough, place it in a greased bowl, wrap it tightly with plastic wrap and let it rise in the fridge overnight.
- For gooey cinnamon rolls: Pour about 1/4 cup of heavy cream to the bottom of the baking dish and spread it around. Then add the cinnamon rolls on top. Or you could drizzle the heavy cream on the top right before baking.

More Cozy Breakfast Recipes
Breakfast
The Fluffiest Pancakes
Breakfast
Breakfast Burritos
Holiday
Buttermilk Biscuits
Dinner
Chilaquiles
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Overnight Cinnamon Rolls Recipe

Equipment
- 1 9×9-inch baking dish (or 9×13-inch)
- 1 Measuring cup
Ingredients
Dough:
- 1/4 cup lukewarm milk, (about 115F)
- 1 (8g) tablespoon active dry yeast, (see below for instructions on using *instant* yeast)
- 2 3/4 (357g) cups all-purpose flour
- 3 (38g) tablespoons granulated sugar
- 1 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
- 3 large eggs, beaten in a bowl
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract or vanilla paste
- 1/2 (113g) cup unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into cubes
Cinnamon Roll Filling:
- 1/2 (113g) cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1/4 (30g) cup ground cinnamon
- 3 (39g) tablespoons light or dark brown sugar
- 3 (38g) tablespoons white granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract or vanilla paste
- Pinch kosher salt
Cream Cheese Glaze:
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 4 ounces cream cheese, at room temperature
- 2 (200g) cups powdered sugar, sifted
- 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract or vanilla paste
- Pinch kosher salt
- 1 tablespoon heavy cream
Instructions
To Make the Dough:
- To the bowl with of a stand-up mixer (alternatively, you can do this in a large bowl by hand), add the lukewarm milk. Mix in the active dry yeast and allow to stand and activate, about 8 minutes, until foamy and alive!
- To a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar and salt. To the bowl with the yeast mixture, add the beaten eggs and vanilla extract; then all at once, add the flour mixture. Attach the dough hook to your mixer and mix on low until the dough starts to become cohesive. With the mixer running on low, slowly add the cubes of butter.
- Knead on medium speed for about 5 minutes. Alternatively, if you’re doing this by hand, you’ll need to knead the dough for about 5 to 8 minutes. The dough will go from crumbly and separate to completely cohesive and smooth. The dough will be a little bit sticky. If it's super sticky, add another two teaspoons of flour. Remove the dough from the hook and bowl and form it into a ball.
- Transfer the ball of dough to a clean, lightly greased bowl (I used the flour bowl and just wiped it clean with a kitchen towel and then greased it with olive oil). Cover with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen towel and let it rise for about 30-45 minutes, until super supple and a little less than double in size.
To Make the Filling:
- To the bowl of a stand-up mixer (with the paddle attachment) or using a medium bowl and a fork, add the butter, cinnamon, brown sugar, white sugar, vanilla and salt. Mix and mash until the filling is completely smooth.
To Assemble the Cinnamon Rolls:
- Lightly flour your work surface and place the dough into the center. Lightly flour your rolling pin and roll the dough into a 1/4-inch thick square that measures 15“ x 15“ If it’s not a perfect square, then that’s totally ok.
- Add the filling to the dough and spread into a thin layer, using a butter knife or offset spatula. I smeared the filling pretty close to the edges. Starting from the edge furthest from you, roll the dough towards you, horizontally, into a firm log.
- Taking a piece of dental floss, trim off the ends. Cut the rolls into 1 inch rolls, for about 12 rolls. OR you could do 1 1/2 rolls for 9 rolls. I've done both depending on how many servings I need.
- Transfer to a greased 9 x 9 baking pan (or something comparable). Cover the baking dish tightly with plastic wrap and transfer to the fridge overnight.
To Make the Cream Cheese Icing:
- To the bowl of a stand-up mixer (or a large bowl) with the paddle attachment, mix together the butter and cream cheese until smooth. Add the sugars, vanilla paste, salt and heavy cream. Beat for about 20 seconds.
To Bake the Rolls:
- The next morning, remove the rolls from the fridge. Allow them to stand on the counter to come to room temperature for about 1 hour to 1 1/2 hours. This will depend on how cold your fridge is. I like to make sure they feel soft and supple. *See below for instructions on assembling the rolls and then allowing them to rise overnight in the fridge.
- Preheat your oven to 350F. Remove the plastic wrap from the baking dish and transfer to the oven to bake for about 18-20 minutes, until they've puffed up a bit and are medium golden brown.
- When the cinnamon rolls come out of the oven, let them stand for about 5-10 minutes. Then add on the icing to the warm cinnamon rolls.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

















Made these so many times for my family!! THE BEST!!
These came out perfectly soft and were such a hit with my family for Easter! I feel like most recipes mess up the glaze but this recipe made a really good one. Easily my new go-to for cinnamon rolls, and I’ll prob reuse the glaze recipe for other types of baked treats because it’s the best one I’ve tasted in a while.
Fantastic recipe!!! I make these everything there is a snow storm! I love the smell in the morning while the snow is falling outside!
so cute, so glad you loved them! 🙂
This is my go-to cinnamon roll recipe when I don’t want to spend too much time making a sourdough levain for a dough. Bakes perfectly every time!
Do you personally use the metric system when you’re making these rolls? I used this recipe for the first time using my kitchen scale like I normally do when baking (if you don’t use weight based measurements for at the very least flour when you’re baking, you’re missing out of perfect proportions every single time). The reason I ask is because my wet to dry ratio was very off and I ended up having to add a significant addition amount of flour (what would be roughly 0.5 to 1 cup more than what was called for). I actually went back and checked my kitchen scale to see if it was wrong because the dough was so wet. It wasn’t off balanced or over/undercompensating anything so I really do believe it is the recipe. There is such a large margin of error when you measure such a fine substance, like flour, in terms of volume instead of weight. Thoughts?
Amazing recipe! Have tried other cinnamon roll recipes but this one was so easy and a huge hit with my family.
Amazing recipe- this is a keeper! I have been trying recipes that I’ve found online, and oh my this one is extra gooey and delicious. I did increase the filling by about 50% so that probably made it extra gooey, but I’m not sad about it. I followed the recipe as it is listed. I did have to Google “Lukewarm” because I wasn’t exactly sure how warm to have the milk. I gave mine about an hour and 15 minutes to proof in the AM and they were incredible!
OOOO that sounds so good. thanks so much for sharing, micaela. 🙂
Amazing foolproof recipe!!!These were the best cinnamon rolls my family has ever had!I proofed for two hours on the counter,filled,cut and put in the fridge overnight. Took it out in the morning for an hour(we were hungry!) and baked for 20 minutes. Perfection!
wow amazing!! i’m so glad everyone loved it!!
If I want to assemble and then refrigerate overnight do I need to do the 2 hour prove first? Or does the overnight take the place of that prove and then I take them out for an hour in the morning before baking?
no need to do the proof first. i would just assemble them, put them in the baking dish, wrap the baking dish in plastic wrap and transfer to the fridge. before baking, let them rise for 1-2 hours until they’re doubled in size and aren’t cold anymore.
Hi Adrianna!
I have 2 question:
1. If I’m using instant Yeast, am I still adding the milk to the recipe, since I don’t need it to proof my yeast?
2. I am currently at the part of my second rise (I went with instant yeast since that’s what I had)… and I have the rolls proofing in the oven… it’s been an hour and they’re still the same size. My yeast is still well within its freshness period, so not sure what I could’ve done wrong? I left the dough in the fridge overnight, then left it out about an hour before using. Please advise 🙁
when using instant yeast, you add it to the dry ingredients. what’s the update? did it end up proofing?