4.94 from 793 votes

The Best Carrot Cake Recipe

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1,804 Comments

Servings: 14 slices

1 hr 10 mins

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If you’re looking for a carrot cake recipe thats perfectly moist, warmly spiced, and guaranteed to impress, you’re in the right place. My version is easy to make with pantry staples and produces consistently excellent results. Top it off with my popular cream cheese frosting for truly the best carrot cake recipe.

A slice of the best carrot cake recipe on a white plate with white flowers in the background. A bite missing from the slice.

If I had to choose a favorite cake recipe on my blog, I think this carrot cake recipe would be it. Maybe I’m biased, but even though I’ve shared some fun and flavorful cakes like my pistachio cake, lemon blueberry cake, and tiramisu cake, this carrot cake is hands-down the classic I will reach for first every time.

There’s something about its unbelievably moist crumb, the perfect amount of warm, cozy spices, and yes, that all-time favorite cream cheese frosting. It’s sweet without being too sweet, carefully crafted with both butter and oil and just the right amount of carrots –the flavor is so good that even Zach reaches for a second piece.

I know you are going to love this one just as much as I do, so let’s dig in!

What You Need

Overhead view of the ingredients (labeled) needed for my carrot cake recipe.

Here are a few of the key ingredients that make this carrot cake recipe the best carrot cake:

  • Flour. All-purpose flour works best here. Avoid cake flour whichi s lighter and finer and doesn’t give us the structure required for this heartier cake.
  • Sugar. A blend of granulated and brown sugar is best. For the brown sugar, you can use light or dark (makes the cake a bit richer and sweeter) or use a blend of both (my preference, also what I do in my brown butter chocolate chip cookies and chocolate chip cookie recipe).
  • Oil AND butter. This combo is key for maximizing the flavor and texture of the cake. While oil adds moisture (and helps keep the cake soft and moist, even after refrigeration) butter adds rich depth of flavor. A blend of these two ingredients balances flavor and texture (and it’s a trick I use in many of my cakes, like my vanilla cake recipe and chocolate cake recipe!).
  • Eggs. Since we’re working with room temperature ingredients (and possibly even slightly warm butter, your eggs should be room temperature to ensure a batter that combines evenly (cold eggs can “shock” the batter and make it difficult to combine properly).
  • Carrots. Do not use pre-shredded or “matchstick” carrots! They are way too thick to use in this carrot cake recipe, unless you like biting into discernible chunks of carrot (I do not!). I usually need about 4 carrots for this cake, and I always peel my carrots before grating them (I do the same thing for my carrot cake cookies). You could use a box grater, but I prefer to use my food processor.
  • Nuts. You can use either chopped walnuts or pecans, or you can leave them out entirely.
  • Cream cheese. This is for the cream cheese frosting. Make sure you’re using brick-style cream cheese, as the tub-style can make for a frosting that’s too runny.

As always, this is just an overview of the ingredients I used and why. For the full recipe please scroll down to the bottom of the post!

Sam’s Tip

To grate your carrots in the food processor, first use the “shred” blade. Once your carrots are shredded, switch to the standard blade and briefly pulse until the carrots are fine pieces. Don’t overdo this step or you’ll end up with carrot puree (this is also why I start by using the shred blade on my processor; I’ve found that just tossing the carrots in with my standard blade quickly breaks down the carrots too much).

How to Make My Carrot Cake Recipe (Step-by-Step)

collage of four photos showing how to make carrot cake
  1. Whisk together the flour, sugars, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and spices in a large mixing bowl.
  2. Add the oil and butter and mix well, until the dry ingredients (and sugar) are well-moistened (an electric mixer makes this easier). Then, add the eggs one at a time, stirring well after each addition. Finally, stir in your vanilla extract.
  3. Fold in your carrots and nuts (if using) and make sure they are well distributed through the cake batter.
  4. Evenly divide the batter between two 8″ baking pans that have been greased, floured, and lined with parchment circles (key for keeping cakes from sticking!). Bake at 350F for 40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out with a few moist crumbs.
collage of two photos showing how to frost a carrot cake after baking
  1. Let the cakes sit in their pans for 10 minutes after baking, then invert them onto a cooling rack. Allow the cakes to cool completely before frosting.
  2. Prepare your frosting, frost your cake, and serve!

Sam’s Tip

While a single batch of frosting will cover this cake, I typically increase the recipe by 50% (or even double it!) to allow for a thicker coating and decorative piping on top.

cake pans filled with carrot cake batter

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use this carrot cake recipe for cupcakes?

While you could, I personally found this carrot cake recipe to be a bit too heavy for cupcakes, causing them to be a bit trickier to eat in hand-held form. Because of this, I developed a carrot cake cupcake recipe that I would recommend using instead. It’s still flavorful and delicious, but not so moist that it requires a fork for eating.

If you’re interested in more carrot cake variations, I also have a carrot cake cookie recipe you can try out, too.

Can I add raisins to my cake?

Yes, you can. I’d recommend stirring in a heaping cup when you add the carrots and (optional) nuts. The amount is up to you, about a cup should be a good amount.

Why did my carrot cake turn green!?

The best way to prevent a green carrot cake is to peel your carrots before shredding. If this step is skipped, the peels sometimes take on a green color after baking. This is harmless and the cake can still be enjoyed, but it’s not quite as attractive.
Some sources also claim that your cake may turn green if you accidentally use too much baking soda or if you don’t mix your dry ingredients well enough (and the baking soda isn’t evenly distributed). The baking soda in my recipe is well balanced so that is not an issue you should run into if you bake my carrot cake recipe.

More Frosting Options:

Instead of cream cheese frosting, this carrot cake recipe would also be excellent with my brown butter frosting, Swiss meringue buttercream, ermine frosting, whipped cream frosting, or vanilla frosting.

a slice of frosted carrot cake on a white plate with the rest of the cake in the background

More Spring Recipes to Try:

Enjoy!

Let’s bake together! Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified of all the newest recipes, and find my free recipe tutorials on YouTube 

Close-up of a slice of my carrot cake recipe with a bite missing.
4.94 from 793 votes

The Best Carrot Cake Recipe

Soft, moist, and perfectly spiced, my carrot cake recipe has been a reader favorite for years! This cake is beginner friendly and surprisingly simple to make. Top it off with my cream cheese frosting (recipe included below) for what will be truly the best carrot cake of your life!
Be sure to check out the how-to video!
Prep: 30 minutes
Cook: 40 minutes
Total: 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 14 slices

Equipment

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Ingredients

  • 2 ½ cups (315 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar
  • 1 cup (200 g) light or dark brown sugar¹, firmly packed
  • 1 ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon table salt
  • 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1 cup (235 ml) cooking oil, use canola, avocado, or vegetable oil
  • ½ cup (113 g) unsalted butter, melted
  • 4 large eggs, room temperature
  • 1 Tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 3 cups (340 g) grated carrots², peel before grating
  • 1 cup (125 g) chopped walnuts or pecans, optional

Cream Cheese Frosting³

  • ½ cup (1 stick) (113 g) unsalted butter, softened
  • 8 oz (226 g) cream cheese, softened (brick-style, not spreadable)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 4 cups (500 g) powdered sugar

Instructions 

  • Preheat oven to 350F (175C) and prepare two 8-inch pans⁴ (see note for using different sized pans) by lining the bottoms with parchment paper and lightly greasing and flouring the sides.
  • In a large bowl, whisk together your flour, sugars, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
    2 ½ cups (315 g) all-purpose flour, 1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar, 1 cup (200 g) light or dark brown sugar¹, 1 ½ teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 1 teaspoon table salt, 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon, ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • Add your canola oil and melted butter and stir well (batter will be pretty stiff and thick at this point, I usually use an electric mixer or my stand mixer to combine everything nicely).
    1 cup (235 ml) cooking oil, ½ cup (113 g) unsalted butter
  • Add eggs, one at a time, stirring well after each addition.
    4 large eggs
  • Stir in vanilla extract.
    1 Tablespoon vanilla extract
  • Stir in carrots and nuts (if using) until ingredients are well-combined.
    3 cups (340 g) grated carrots², 1 cup (125 g) chopped walnuts or pecans
  • Evenly divide carrot cake batter into prepared baking pans and bake on 350F (175C) for 37-40 minutes (a toothpick inserted in center should come out mostly clean with only few moist crumbs).
  • Allow cakes to cool in the pans for 10 minutes, then run a knife around the edge and invert onto cooling rack to cool completely.
  • Allow cake to cool completely before covering with cream cheese frosting.

Cream Cheese Frosting

  • Combine butter and cream cheese in a large bowl and use an electric mixer to beat until creamy, well-combined, and lump-free.
    ½ cup (1 stick) (113 g) unsalted butter, 8 oz (226 g) cream cheese
  • Add vanilla extract and sprinkle salt into the bowl and stir well to combine.
    1 teaspoon vanilla extract, ¼ teaspoon salt
  • With mixer on low, gradually add powdered sugar until ingredients are completely combined (be sure to scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl with a spatula).
    4 cups (500 g) powdered sugar
  • Once your cake has cooled completely, cover with frosting.

Notes

1Brown sugar

Either light or dark brown sugar will work fine, dark brown sugar will make your cake slightly more moist and rich, but light brown sugar works perfectly if you don’t have dark on hand.

²Carrots (& how to grate them)

For me, this usually requires about 4 large carrots. I always peel my carrots before grating. Make sure to use the small shred of your box grater. Another way I like to prepare my carrots is to use the “shred” setting on my food processor and then switch to the blade and briefly pulse the carrots so that you have fine pieces of carrot (don’t over-do it though, or you’ll have carrot juice!). Whatever you do, don’t use store-bought “matchstick” carrots, they’re not nearly thin enough!

³Frosting

A single batch of my cream cheese frosting recipe will cover this cake, but because I like a lot of frosting and will usually pipe decoration on the top of the cake, I sometimes increase the recipe by 50% or even double it.

⁴Cake pans, different sizes

The following bake times have been reported by readers who have tried making this cake in different sized pans. Keep in mind bake time will generally be longer when using a glass pan, and very dark pans may require less time. The best way to test that your cake is finished baking is to use the toothpick test: a toothpick inserted in the center of the cake should come out with a few moist crumbs (not wet batter) or clean.
  • Two 9″ pans: bake for approximately 30-33 minutes. 
  • 9×13″ pan: bake for approximately 45-50 minutes
  • Bundt pan: bake for approximately 55 minutes.
  • Four 6″ pans: bake for approximately 40 minutes
  • Cupcakes: See my carrot cake cupcake recipe.

Storing

If you’re eating this cake the same day you make it or within 48 hours of making it, and you are able to store it somewhere cool and dry, you do not have to refrigerate it–though you do want to store it in an airtight container. Any longer than that I would recommend storing in an airtight container in the fridge where it will keep for about 5 days.
 

Nutrition

Serving: 1slice (calories calculated with frosting but without optional nuts) | Calories: 533kcal | Carbohydrates: 86g | Protein: 7g | Fat: 19g | Saturated Fat: 8g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 5g | Monounsaturated Fat: 4g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 88mg | Sodium: 448mg | Potassium: 195mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 65g | Vitamin A: 4283IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 84mg | Iron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Like this? Leave a comment below!

This recipe was originally published August 22, 2018. Recipe is unchanged, but has been updated with new photos and more helpful information and a video.

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4.94 from 793 votes (328 ratings without comment)

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Recipe Rating




1,804 Comments

  1. Maureen says:

    5 stars
    Another home run recipe! My grandmother has requested THIS recipe for her 90th Birthday Cake…
    I’m trying to serve about 25 people, I was thinking 2 10 inch rounds? Doubling the recipe will be far too much? Would you increase by a half?

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Maureen! The recipe as is will make about 8 cups of batter. I believe you will need about 12 cups of batter for the 2 10 inch pans so increase the recipe by 50%. 🙂 Happy birthday to your grandmother! 90 is impressive! 🙂

    2. Chris says:

      Might be too late to reply, but the ratio of an 8″ pan to a 10″ pan is roughly 2:3, assuming the pans are the same height. So adding 50% more to the recipe would be the right call.

  2. jeannie says:

    i would like to add crushed drained pineapple. do i need to adjust any ingredients ? Thanks, Jeannie

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Jeannie! Others have added it without other adjustments, but I haven’t personally tried it so I can’t say for sure how it would work.

      1. Carmen says:

        3 stars
        I live at a high elevation and the middle of mine sunk. I used 8inch pans and followed the recipe down to the gram. It also came out really greasy and buttery to the touch I’m not sure why. Flavor was good though.

  3. Katherine says:

    5 stars
    This is the best carrot cake recipe I have ever made. My husband just loves it. He can’t get enough. And the frosting is the best by far. Thank you for this yummy recipe.

  4. Rhyann says:

    Im trying to make this for a 3 layer 8 inch heart shaped cake, do you think I should double 1.5x the recipe? Thx!

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Rhyann! I’m not sure how much batter your pans will hold, but this will make about 8 cups of batter so adjust accordingly. 🙂

  5. Kamryn says:

    If I were to make 2 6” cakes, can I half the recipe?

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      That should work. 🙂

  6. Ashley says:

    5 stars
    My first carrot cake and it was amazing! Love that nuts are optional

  7. Dawn Griffin says:

    5 stars
    Very moist and tasty Carrot Cake and easy to make , will be making it again.

  8. Vicki Whitworth says:

    4 stars
    I love this recipe but it seems a bit oily/greasy. I checked to be sure my measurements are accurate for the oil and butter. Any comments or suggestions are appreciated.

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Vicki! I’m sorry to hear it turned out oily. I haven’t ever experienced it being oily. 🙁 My best guess is that you may have needed a little more flour in the batter. I hope this helps! 🙂

  9. Tricia says:

    5 stars
    First time making carrot cake and it was delicious! My daughter and I are not big carrot cake fans, but this recipe changed that. I did slightly less powdered sugar in the icing (about 3-1/4, to 3-1/2 c) and it was fine. So happy I tried this and thanks for sharing! This is the second recipe of yours I have made and no matter the category, from sides to dinner to dessert, your recipes come out great.

  10. Tricia says:

    Can I add applesauce to the batter or is that overkill? Thanks, Sam, I can’t wait to make this today and will let you know how it turns outT

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Tricia! I would recommend trying it as is. You won’t need the applesauce. 😉 Enjoy!

  11. Char says:

    5 stars
    I havemade this cake a ton of times. it is absolutely amazing! Thank you for your recipes. I always come to your website for goodies.

  12. Rose Reynolds says:

    5 stars
    cake is very good, but I am adding lemon shavings into the frosting to give it that zing.

  13. Kimberly West says:

    Why use unsalted butter in the icing and add salt?

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Kimberly! There are actually many reasons to use unsalted butter. I cover a lot of them in my post on salted or unsalted butter. I hope you enjoy the read. 🙂

  14. Kaitlyn says:

    4 stars
    Everything was amazing!

  15. Tricia says:

    I can’t wait to try this recipe! My boyfriend loves carrot cake. Question: I have a mini food processor in which I can basically chop or mince the carrots. Is it better I use a grater to grate them manually? As you mentioned, I don’t like actual pieces of carrot in the cake. About how many carrots would yield 3 cups? Thanks and I’ll be sure to report back in once I’ve made it!

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Tricia! You can use your food processor but be sure to not overdo it so you don’t end up with a carrot puree. As far as how many you need, that’s going to vary greatly. It typically takes me somewhere around 4 carrots. 🙂