Most cream cheese frosting can end up too soft and runny, unstable, or too sweet from an excess of powdered sugar added to thicken it enough to use on decorated layer cakes. It's a problem that most bakers face. Fear not: with a change in technique and an easy recipe, you can make thick cream cheese frosting that you can use to decorate cakes and with a lot less sugar!

Cream cheese frosting is notoriously unstable. The water in the cheese tends to separate out, creating a runny, loose frosting. Most people choose to add more powdered sugar to remedy the situation, but I've found a new way of mixing the ingredients that results in a thick cream cheese frosting made with half the powdered sugar than the classic recipe. Another option is to make this thick cream cheese frosting without powdered sugar, sweetened with white chocolate instead of icing sugar.
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Why Cream Cheese Frosting is Runny or Too Sweet
Typical recipes for cream cheese frosting have you cream the butter and the cream cheese together, then add A TON of icing sugar. Cream cheese frosting recipes call for so much powdered sugar because without the extra powdered sugar, cream cheese frosting tends to be runny, unstable, weepy, and soupy.

Why It's So Unstable
A block of cream cheese contains a lot more water than the same weight of butter. Remember that most grocery store butters have roughly 80 % fat in them, while cream cheese is half of that, around 40 % fat. What remains in both cases is mostly water, so cream cheese contains more moisture than butter.
When the cream cheese is creamed with the butter, and then the icing sugar is added in, the icing sugar draws out that moisture from the butter and the cheese. Butter has very little moisture to draw out, so you can make a thick, pipeable frosting with butter and icing sugar without much worry. But since cream cheese contributes double the moisture, when the icing sugar draws out that moisture, you end up with a soupy, runny, unstable cream cheese frosting.

This is the main reason why most cream cheese frosting recipes recommend a huge amount of icing sugar. Without all the extra powdered sugar, the frosting is too soft to work with. The frosting doesn't hold its shape when piped and it's quite unstable. Bakers tend to overload the frosting with powdered sugar to stiffen the frosting. This leads to a cloyingly sweet cream cheese frosting that doesn't taste very good.

How to make thick cream cheese frosting that is stable and can be piped
Without resorting to adding an excess amount of icing sugar, to make a thicker cream cheese frosting that can be used to frost a cake or decorate cupcakes, the solution is simple: change the order you mix your ingredients in:
- Step 1: Cream the butter with the icing sugar first, thereby coating all the little sugar molecules with fat
- Step 2: Once the butter and icing sugar are well mixed, THEN you add in the cream cheese. The sugar is coated with fat, therefore making it more difficult to draw out the moisture from the cream cheese. The cream cheese remains intact, and no water leeches out.
By following this mixing order, you can make a frosting with significantly less sugar. In fact, you end up with a frosting that tastes a lot like cheesecake, tangy and not overly sweet!

Cream cheese in the tub versus blocks of cream cheese
The cream cheese product you buy has an impact on this recipe. Cream cheese sold in the tub is formulated to be spreadable and that softer consistency comes the water content: cream cheese sold in the tub has slightly less fat and more water than cream cheese sold in blocks, which is much firmer.

That extra water in the tub product means your cream cheese frosting will be more prone to breaking down or becoming too soft. If you can, buy the cream cheese sold in blocks and make sure to buy full-fat cream cheese, preferably Philadelphia brand.

What recipes to make with it
Once you have mastered this thick cream cheese frosting recipe, you will see that it is so thick that you can use it to make layer cakes and for decorating. I've used this recipe for:
- eggless carrot cake
- berry chocolate cake
- cranberry layer cake
- spiced apple cupcakes
- pumpkin whoopie pies
- chocolate cake with cream cheese frosting
You know this recipe is good because this cream cheese frosting works great in layer cakes without the risk of sliding layers and weeping frosting!

There are so many ways to get creative with this frosting. You can alo use this frosting to fill whoopie pies and you can also colour it with gel food colouring for decorating. Try browning the butter, then cooling it to room temperature to give the frosting a nutty flavour.
Cream Cheese Frosting FAQs
The brand and type of cream cheese makes a HUGE difference in frosting recipes. You should use Philadelphia, full-fat cream cheese, sold in blocks of 250 grams (roughly, though the weight of the block depends on the country).
Any other brand may lead to a different taste and mouthfeel as some have more gums or different stabilizers which has an impact on taste and texture.
Also, in some countries, cream cheese is sold exclusively in tubs. Cream cheese sold in tubs may have more water in it. I recommend straining the cream cheese by placing it in a strainer lined with a few layers of paper towel or cheese cloth to try and drain the excess water before proceeding with the recipe.
Change the order you mix your ingredients in and your frosting will be thicker and you won't need as much sugar! Mix the butter with part of the icing sugar first, then add the cream cheese and the rest of the sugar (or as much to achieve the right flavour). You'll see that you won't need so much if you mix the ingredients in this order!
I do not suggest substituting any other type of sugar in this frosting recipe. The smooth texture of cream cheese frosting has as much to do with the butter and cream cheese as it does the icing sugar. You can't replace it here with anything else. This is not a baking substitution that I would recommend. If you would like a cream cheese frosting without icing sugar, try this white chocolate cream cheese frosting!
Cream cheese frosting is very versatile and tastes great with most types of cake. I love to frost chocolate cake with cream cheese frosting, and of course it goes well with spice cake and carrot cakes. It's great on cupcakes too, as you can see in the photo!
Yes, you should definitely store frosted cakes in the fridge. If you aren't a fan of cold cake, slice it cold and let the slice come to room temperature for about 30 minutes before enjoying.
Yes, you can, but don't leave it out for too long. I wouldn't suggest storing it on the counter for more than a day. Cream cheese frosting contains butter and cream cheese, and both of these ingredients spoil and go bad at room temperature, so opt to refrigerate as much as possible for long term storage.

If you tried this recipe for thick cream cheese frosting (or any other recipe on my website), please leave a ⭐ star rating and let me know how it went in the comments below. I love hearing from you!
📖 Recipe

Thick Cream Cheese Frosting for Layer Cakes and Piping
Ingredients
- 173 grams unsalted butter room temperature
- 218 grams icing sugar sifted after measuring
- 500 grams Philadelphia cream cheese (full fat, regular) cold
- 5 mL pure vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste (both are optional)
Instructions
- Cream together the butter and the icing sugar first until they are fluffy and creamy. When these two ingredients are well mixed, then you can add the cream cheese, all at once. Beat for several minutes until you have a thick, smooth frosting.
- Feel free to add vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste at this point to add a little flavour!
Notes
- Please use Philadelphia brand cream cheese because it's the best! The taste and texture of the frosting won't be as good with other brands.
- Where I live, a full-size block of cream cheese is equivalent to 250 grams (0.55 pounds).
- This is enough to frost a three-layer 6-inch cake.
- Calories calculated based on one tablespoon.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated and should only be used as an approximation.








Mollie says
I’ve made cream cheese frosting for a few months now with Philadelphia and extra thick double cream. Having these two together has been a good mix, however last night I did this but the cream and Philadelphia had been out of the fridge for a couple hours. It isn’t thickening up now. I did try adding powdered sugar but probably only 50g. I was wondering if I could thicken it by heating and cooling as I read that’s how cream is sometimes thickened?
Janice says
Hi Mollie,
When frostings and buttercreams don't come together right (like if the butter separates or the mixture curdles or is wet or loose), you have two options: to either heat up a portion of the mixture (you can do this with a hair dryer applied to the outside of the mixing bowl if it's metal or some will even microwave a portion of the frosting to melt it down) then rewhip OR to cool it all down in the fridge and try rewhipping. It takes a little trial and error but usually this works. I haven't yet tried the method for making cream cheese frosting with whipping cream or double cream. Still, these are the two tricks I'd play around with to get the frosting to come together. Hope that helps!
Dave says
I have literally come from the kitchen to this website after a bowl of cream cheese frosting I left in the fridge overnight has become a soupy mess as soon as I gave it a bit of a whip. I have an amazing smelling and looking 4 layer carrot cake ready to be frosted and making the frosting ahead of time made it looser not firmer - and now I get why!
I'm off to the market to get some philly and trying this method which makes total sense on how it works. THANKYOU for this.
Cooking DOES = Science
Robin griffin says
This is AMAZING! I love cream cheese frosting but hated dealing with it because it was too soft. This made an incredibly stable and thick frosting that tastes so good. Thank you for posting this!
Liz says
This frosting recipe was absolutely perfect!Substituted the butter with margarine everything else remained as on recipe...yield was 4 full cups.Couldnt get the block cheese here in Kenya, used our local browns cheese in a tub.
It's a keeper for sure.
Faith says
Hi liz...glad to know there's someone from kenya trying cream cheese frosting...just gave it a try today but it turned out to be a hot sweet mess...very runny...I'm disappointed but I'm glad I've made something out of the ordinary around here..will be trying this mixing method soon
Amanda says
Just wondering if this would be enough icing to cover and layer between a 2 tier cake? Thanks!
Janice says
Hi Amanda, this would be a two layer 8 inch cake? I think so. It makes between 3 and 4 cups, which is enough to frost a three layer 6 inch cake... I don't use a ton of frosting in my layer cakes as a rule though, so if you like to use a lot, perhaps you could 1.5x the recipe! Hope that helps!
Margot says
Why does it say "cook time 40 minutes?"
Janice says
It's a typo. Sorry about that. It really only takes about 20 minutes to make the frosting (possibly less if you are fast)! Thanks for letting me know!
Gaby says
Hk Janice, deos it make a difference The temperature of The ingredients? Some recipes call for room temperature of both butter and cream cheese. What do you recommend?
BTW, love your explanations!
Gaby
Janice says
Hi Gaby,
The temperature does make a difference. If the cream cheese and your kitchen are too warm, I have noticed the frosting may break down or seem less smooth, like the water is separating out. I prefer to use cream cheese that is cold/cool, which I find leads to a more stable result. The only problem I've had with fridge-cold cream cheese is that sometimes, there may be a fleck or two that doesn't mix in, but other than that, it's fine and nobody has ever noticed 😉
Julie Carey says
I'm getting ready to try this tip but want to know if you used the whisk or the paddle attachment?
Janice says
I usually use the paddle attachment. Works well! The only issue I've had at times is I'll notice a few small lumps of cream cheese that don't incorporate. But otherwise, it's perfectly smooth with the paddle in the end!
MPG says
The mixing order was a game changer! It makes so much more sense. Now I whip the heck out of the butter until it is super light, then the powdered sugar and THEN the cream cheese. It was divine and piped beautifully. Thank you!!
milo says
wow, clever tip! excited to try this. thanks
Crystal says
Thank you. I had been doing it this way but I didn’t write down the change I made from creaming the cream cheese and butter first to creaming the butter with the icing sugar first. I had to figure out why I’m getting this wrong AGAIN. So when I read this article I thought OK yes. Lol. Let me write this down so I don’t make the same mistake again. So thank you for sharing