4.92 from 745 votes

Funfetti Cake from Scratch

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2,270 Comments

Servings: 14 slices

1 hr 30 mins

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My light and fluffy, completely from scratch Funfetti cake recipe has over 600 five-star reviews and has even been featured on TV! ⭐️ It’s a soft white cake speckled with sprinkles and iced with buttercream frosting, perfect for beginners and advanced bakers alike. Makes the perfect homemade birthday cake! Recipe includes a how-to video!

Slice of funfetti cake on a plate with the remaining cake in the background.

Homemade Funfetti Cake Recipe

My fluffy Funfetti cake (also known as confetti cake) has been one of my most popular recipes for years (right up there with my “worst” chocolate chip cookies). Flecked with sprinkles, a plush, super soft texture, and a buttery, caramelized vanilla flavor–what’s not to love?

Developing this cake took me weeks and is still one of my proudest accomplishments (right there with my French macaron recipe). When I finally nailed it, I found that there were a few key ingredients that really made a difference, namely, whipped egg whites.

For maximum, fluffy softness (and snow-white color), this recipe calls for plenty of egg whites (and no egg yolks–save those for your tiramisu!). You’ll whip these separately with an electric mixer until they reach stiff peaks and then fold them (gently!) into the cake batter. This is easy and quick to do, and it’s critical for a light and fluffy white cake (don’t get me started on yellow Funfetti cakes–there should be no such thing!).

Tall funfetti cake decorated with a bright pink frosting border and sprinkles.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • Perfect taste, perfect texture. Largely thanks to the afore-mentioned whipped egg whites and a combo of butter and oil in the cake batter. Oil adds moisture, while butter adds flavor, so by mixing the two you achieve perfect balance. This is how I’ve designed so many of my cake recipes, and once you try it you’ll see why.
  • Bright white color. This serves as the perfect backdrop to colorful sprinkles. This Funfetti cake gets its pristine color from using egg whites only, clear vanilla (instead of regular vanilla), and a neutral oil.
  • So soft and fluffy. This gorgeous texture comes from a critical ingredient: whipped egg whites. I’ve repeated this technique in several recipes since, including my lemon cake, strawberry cake, and Oreo cake. All have a plush, light-as-air texture!
  • Frosted with an easy peasy classic buttercream, though you could technically use any frosting you like. Fruity pebbles frosting, strawberry frosting, and cream cheese frosting are all nice alternatives!

What You Need

For the Cake Layers

Overhead view of ingredients for funfetti cake
  • Flour. Back when I was first developing this recipe, cake flour was difficult for me to find and when I could, it was pricey. I developed this recipe specifically with the intention of achieving a light fluffy texture with regular ol’ all-purpose flour (and it worked *perfectly* if I do say so).
  • Egg whites. It’s important that you separate your own eggs (do not use eggs from a carton) and make sure not to get even a drop of yolk in the whites. Room temperature eggs work best, so try to remember to set yours out ahead of time if you can. If you forget, use my trick to quickly bring eggs to room temperature (just make sure to thoroughly dry the eggs before cracking them).
  • Milk. Whole milk is my preference, but I suspect a milk substitute (like almond milk) would work just fine. Whatever you use, ideally let it come to room temperature before adding it.
  • Butter & oil. As mentioned above and used in my white cake and vanilla cake, a blend of the two balances flavor and texture of this Funfetti cake perfectly. For the oil, opt for a neutral cooking oil like canola, vegetable, or avocado oil (I like avocado oil, but it’s a bit more yellow and so colors the cake slightly). Using a particularly yellow butter or oil can affect the color of your cake.
  • Baking powder. Not baking soda! It will seem like a lot, but it’s not (we’re making a big cake!). There is no baking soda in my Funfetti cake recipe, and that’s intentional. While this isn’t the main reason I don’t use baking soda, baking soda encourages browning and adding it would actually make the cake more golden inside.
  • Vanilla. To maintain that pristine white color, I use clear vanilla in the cake layers. If you would rather opt for natural vanilla flavoring it will work perfectly well, just know your cake may be tinted a bit more golden.
  • Sprinkles. Your sprinkle choice matters! Nonpareils can bleed into your batter and ruin that pristine white color. Stick with jimmies or quins–they add color without any bleeding.

SAM’S TIP: If you want to use cake flour instead of all-purpose flour, you must substitute properly. If you are using weights, the weight is the same; if you are using cups, you will need 4 1/2 cups of cake flour.

Frosting

This is a big three-layer cake, so you will need quite a bit of frosting to cover and decorate it. Just giving you a fair warning before anyone is alarmed by the amount of butter you’re about to see 😉.

Overhead view of ingredients including powdered sugar, butter, sprinkles, and more.
  • Butter. Yes, we are using a full pound (or four sticks) of butter here. Remember, this is a big Funfetti cake! I use unsalted butter and add salt separately, but if you use salted butter you likely won’t need to add any salt (taste-test the frosting and add a inch if needed — salt helps cut the sweetness and deepen the flavor).
  • Powdered sugar. I highly recommend measuring your ingredients with a kitchen scale for the most accurate results (I link to the one I use in the recipe card, it’s inexpensive). It can be very easy to over-measure powdered sugar, much like measuring flour!
  • Heavy cream. We’ll whip this into the frosting for a light and fluffy texture. Whipping cream or double cream would also work.
  • Flavoring. For the frosting, I sometimes like to use Princess emulsion instead of vanilla (I also use this in my frosted animal cookies–another fun recipe). It accents the buttercream with notes of citrus and almond and keeps it from being overbearingly sweet. If you don’t have any or can’t find it, regular vanilla extract works perfectly.

SAM’S TIP: For that popular Milk Bar birthday cake look, frost your funfetti cake scantly on the outside and top with my confetti crumbs!

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!

How to Make Funfetti Cake

Make the batter

Overhead view of a bowl of cake batter being stirred with an electric mixer.

When making the batter, you’ll want to start with an electric mixer or a stand mixer (fitted with the paddle attachment) to combine all of your ingredients thoroughly and properly. Creaming the butter in the beginning is actually important for the best texture.

You want to make sure everything is well-combined, but also be careful not to over-mix (this comes into play when adding the milk and then again adding the egg-whites). Over-mixing the batter can cause dense, dry, or sunken results.


Whip the egg whites

Overhead view of egg whites that have been whipped to stiff peaks.

Before you begin, make sure your bowl and beaters are completely clean, dry, and grease-free. Even a tiny bit of grease can prevent your egg whites from whipping properly!

Stiff peaks are our aim here! This means your egg whites will have greatly increased in volume, they’ll be bright white in color, and they’ll be fluffy. To test that you’ve reached stiff peaks, lift your beaters straight out of the whites. The peaks should hold firm without folding over or falling back in on themselves.

Fold in the egg whites and sprinkles

Gently is the way to go! Gently stir in all of the egg whites at once along with your sprinkles.

Use a spatula for this step and not your mixer. Your aim is to NOT over-mix. Instead, the goal is to combine everything without deflating those egg whites we just spent all that time whipping. Make sure to scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl to ensure everything is well combined.

Overhead view of a bowl of sprinkle-flecked cake batter being stirred with a pink spatula.

You will lose some of the volume as you fold the batter, but try your hardest to incorporate the egg whites gently without totally deflating them.


Bake

Two funfetti cake layers on a cooling rack after baking.

Use the toothpick to test your cakes for doneness; a toothpick inserted in the center of the cake should come out clean or have a few crumbs when inserted in the center of each cake.

It’s important to keep a close eye on your Funfetti cakes as they near the end of the bake time; underbaking your cake can cause it to sink, while over-baking can dry it out (even just a minute or two too long can do this).

The outsides of the cake bake into a pretty golden color, but don’t panic! The insides will still be snow white.

Decorate

Overhead view of a cake with a piped pink frosting border topped with sprinkles.

Let the cake layers cool completely before you decorate the cakes. I recommend using my buttercream frosting (in the recipe card below) as it’s a classic Funfetti cake pairing, but I have a whole catalog of frosting recipes that would work well here. Just note that most of those recipes are for 2 layer cakes so you will have to scale up by at least 50%.

I also recommend doing a crumb coating on the cake before decorating. This mean applying a thin layer to the outside of the cake then freezing it for 15 minutes before continuing to decorate. This will catch any crumbs and help your frosting apply more smoothly.

SAM’S TIP: New to cake decorating? I have a guide on how to decorate a cake that’s perfect for for beginner cake decorators! You’ll learn everything from what equipment you need to how to do crumb coat.

Cross section of a three-layer cake made with sprinkles and a bright pink frosting border.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much batter does this Funfetti cake recipe make? Can I use a different pan?

This recipe makes about 12 cups of batter. 

For a two layer Funfetti cake: I recommend you make my white cake recipe and add ⅓ cup of sprinkles. That recipe is actually the same as this one, but scaled down to fit two pans (and doesn’t have sprinkles, obviously!).

For a 9×13″ pan: you would technically need to reduce the recipe by ⅓. This can get tricky, so I usually recommend making the recipe as-is and using the excess batter for cupcakes (though they won’t have nice rounded tops–see below).

If you are looking for a good Funfetti cupcake recipe, I recommend making my confetti cupcakes or white cupcakes (add sprinkles) instead, as those form nice round tops. This recipe makes tasty cupcakes, but they bake up flat.

Can I use carton egg white?

I do not recommend it, as they provide inconsistent results (and most say they are not meant for whipping). Instead, separate your own eggs and repurpose the yolks in another recipe like my pastry cream, crème brûlée, lemon crumb bars, lemon curd, key lime pie, or chocolate pie.

Can I color this cake?

Yes! To do this, stir the food coloring into the batter before adding the egg whites. Gel food coloring is best for most vibrant color.

Overhead view of a cake with a piped pink frosting border with two slices cut on plates beside it.

A big thank you to every one of you who has already tried my Funfetti cake recipe and reviewed it 💕 I appreciate you!

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 💜

Slice of funfetti cake on a plate with the remaining cake in the background.
4.92 from 745 votes

Funfetti Cake from Scratch

This light and fluffy, completely from scratch Funfetti cake recipe has over 600 five-star reviews! It's a soft white cake speckled with colorful sprinkles and iced with buttercream frosting. Makes the perfect homemade birthday cake!
Recipe includes a how-to video!
Prep: 50 minutes
Cook: 40 minutes
Total: 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings: 14 slices
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Ingredients

  • 9 Tablespoons (127 g) unsalted butter, softened
  • 3 cups (600 g) granulated sugar
  • 1 cup (236 ml) neutral cooking oil, Use canola, vegetable, or avocado oil
  • 4 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 4 cups+ 2 Tbsp (516 g) all-purpose flour, (all of the flour goes into the cake batter, you will also need additional flour for preparing the cake pan)
  • 4 ½ teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 ½ teaspoons table salt
  • 1 ½ cup (355 ml) milk
  • 9 (315 ml) large egg whites, room temperature preferred
  • ½ cup (80 g) sprinkles, see note

Buttercream

  • 1 lb (453 g) unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 6 cups (750 g) powdered sugar
  • 6 Tbsp (89 ml) heavy cream
  • 2 teaspoons LorAnn Princess emulsion or vanilla extract

Instructions 

  • Preheat oven to 350F (175C) and prepare 3 8-inch round cake pans by generously greasing and flouring (be sure to shake out excess flour) and lining the bottoms of each pan with a round of parchment paper.
  • In stand mixer (or using an electric hand mixer), beat butter on medium-low speed until creamy.
    9 Tablespoons (127 g) unsalted butter
  • Add sugar and oil and beat until all ingredients are well-combined and creamy.
    3 cups (600 g) granulated sugar, 1 cup (236 ml) neutral cooking oil
  • Scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl and then stir in your vanilla extract.
    4 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • In a separate, medium-sized mixing bowl, whisk together your flour, baking powder, and salt.
    4 cups+ 2 Tbsp (516 g) all-purpose flour, 4 ½ teaspoons baking powder, 1 ½ teaspoons table salt
  • Measure out your milk. With mixer on medium speed, gradually alternate between adding the flour mixture and the milk to the butter mixture, starting and ending with the flour mixture. Stir until each one is almost completely combined before adding the next. Pause occasionally to scrape down sides and bottom of bowl.
    1 ½ cup (355 ml) milk
  • In separate mixing bowl (use a clean, dry, and grease-free bowl, use glass or metal), combine your egg whites and stir with an electric mixer, gradually increasing speed from low to high and continuing to beat on high-speed until stiff peaks form.
    9 (315 ml) large egg whites
  • Add egg whites and sprinkles to the batter. Using a spatula, gently fold your egg whites and sprinkles into your batter. Take care to scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl so that ingredients are well-combined, and take care not to over-mix.
    ½ cup (80 g) sprinkles
  • Evenly divide cake batter into prepared pans.
  • Bake on 350F (175C) for 35-40 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center of each cake layer comes out clean or with few crumbs (should not be wet). For best results, rotate your cake pans halfway through baking to ensure even baking. Cakes will be a light golden brown when done baking.
  • Remove cakes from oven and allow to cool for 15 minutes. Run a butter knife around the inside rim of each pan and carefully invert each onto a cooling rack.
  • Allow to cool completely before frosting.

Frosting

  • Place butter in the bowl of a stand mixer in a medium-sized mixing bowl. Use the paddle attachment or an electric mixer to beat butter on medium-speed until smooth and creamy.
    1 lb (453 g) unsalted butter
  • Add salt and beat again for about 20 seconds.
    ¼ teaspoon salt
  • Gradually, about 1 cup at a time, add powdered sugar, waiting until each cup is completely mixed before adding the next cup.
    6 cups (750 g) powdered sugar
  • One Tablespoon at a time, add the heavy cream on medium-high speed, waiting until each addition is well-combined before adding the next 2 Tbsp.
    6 Tbsp (89 ml) heavy cream
  • Add flavoring (vanilla extract or emulsion). and stir on medium-high for 30 seconds. Scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl with a spatula to ensure all ingredients are well-combined.
    2 teaspoons LorAnn Princess emulsion or vanilla extract
  • Transfer one layer of your cooled cake to serving platter. Use frosting to ice the top. Add the next layer, ice the top of that. Add your third layer on top and ice the top, and then do a thin “crumb coating” around the entire cake.
  • Transfer to freezer for 10-15 minutes, then remove and apply a clean, thick coat of frosting around the entire cake. For more detailed decorating instructions, see my post on how to decorate a cake.

Notes

Sprinkles

Use sprinkles/jimmies or round sequin “quin” sprinkles, do NOT use nonpareils or they may bleed through your batter and ruin the coloring of your cake.

Using 9″ pans

This cake may also be made in three 9″ pans, just decrease the baking time. Start checking the cakes for doneness at 25 minutes.

Storing

Store this cake tightly covered at room temperature for up to 3 days or in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. This cake may also be frozen, tightly wrapped in plastic wrap then foil, for up to 3 months. 

Nutrition

Serving: 1slice | Calories: 1136kcal | Carbohydrates: 155g | Protein: 11g | Fat: 54g | Saturated Fat: 25g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 100mg | Sodium: 345mg | Potassium: 290mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 100g | Vitamin A: 1171IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 112mg | Iron: 3mg

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

Like this? Leave a comment below!

Recipe originally published 4/13/16 — text and photos updated Feb 2025

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2,270 Comments

  1. Camille says:

    Hi Sam! I’m planning to do this on a 6×3 inch pan. Any advise?

    1. Sam says:

      My only advice here would be not to fill the pan more than 3/4 of the way full and keep an eye on it when baking so you don’t end up over baking it. 🙂

  2. Francesca says:

    Hi Sam! I only have buttermilk or unsweetened vanilla almond milk…which would be a better choice for this cake? I hate to mess with your recipes, but don’t want to run to the store again. Thanks in advance!

    1. Sam says:

      Buttermilk! It should work just fine and give the cake an enhanced flavor. Enjoy!

  3. Najiya says:

    Can I substitute cake flour for plain flour here for a more lighter cake

    1. Sam says:

      Cake flour will work in this recipe. 🙂

  4. Noel says:

    Hello do I need to double the recipe to do a 3 layer cake with 10″ round cake pans? Beginner cake baker here lol.

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Noel! You will need about 50% more batter here. If you want to be safe you can double the recipe and just make sure not to overfill the pans and discard any excess batter you may have. 🙂

  5. Jesse says:

    5 stars
    Hi Sam I’m planning on making this recipe for my girlfriend’s birthday cake. I did however want to make it into a rectangular cake. Is it possible to adjust the baking time for an 9×13 pan? Thanks in advance!

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Jesse! This will make a little more batter than you will need for a 9 x 13. You can bake it in the 9 x 13 just make sure not to over-fill your pan. 🙂

  6. Samantha says:

    5 stars
    Hi Sam! I made this recipe for my son’s birthday the last two years and we LOVE it! My question today is: Is there an easy-ish way to adjust the ingredients needed to make a small, 8″ cake? With corona in full swing, our party this year will be a party for 3 and we will not need much cake.. but still want to make this cake. It is THE birthday cake in our family. As I am not a math whiz, I thought I would reach out to you first before braving the adjustment of the ingredient values/amounts on my own. Thank you again for A+ recipes and content 🙂

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Samantha! Are you making a two layer 8″ cake or a one layer 8″ cake? If you’re making a two layer, my white cake recipe is essentially the same, only a 2-layer, and I would recommend that to you. You can fold in sprinkles at the end for the Funfetti look. I hope that helps!

  7. Susan Sanchez says:

    Can I use Liquid egg whites for this recipe?

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Susan! I really don’t recommend egg whites from a carton here. They can be much more difficult to whip to stiff peaks and the cartons I have seen always say you can’t whip them. That doesn’t mean it’s impossible but you really need to have your egg whites whipped to stiff peaks for the best results.

  8. Lena Moua says:

    Hi! If I would happen to make this would it be fine if I were to substitute the flour for almond flour?

    1. Sugar Spun Run says:

      Hi, Lena! Almond flour tends to lead to a dry, denser cake, therefore I don’t reccomend it for this recipe.

  9. Skylar says:

    Awesome day Sam,

    This cake looks AMAZING! The calorie count is 800 calories is that per slice?

    1. Sugar Spun Run says:

      Hi, Skylar. The calorie count is an estimate. If followed the recipe to the T and you divide the cake into 14 equal slices, one slice would be 800 cal.

      1. Skylar says:

        Okay, thank you for responding

  10. Zoe says:

    Hi Sam I want to make this cake but I only have two 8 inch pans. I could put the rest of the batter in a cup cake tin… how full should I fill the cake pans please so I don’t overfill. Appreciate your help!
    Zoe

    1. Sugar Spun Run says:

      Hi, Zoe! You want to fill the pans 2/3 of the way full. The rest can be baked into cupcakes. I hope that helps! Keep me posted on how your cake turns out. 🙂

      1. Zoe says:

        5 stars
        Hi Sam. The cake was a huge hit!! OMG it is amazing. Moist and delish. Another home run. Been making a lot of your recipes and everything turns out perfectly.
        Thank you so much!
        Zoe

      2. Sugar Spun Run says:

        Thank you so much, Zoe! I am so happy that you enjoyed the cake! 🙂

  11. Natali says:

    I would like to make this in a 3* 10 inch pans, how do i adjust the recipe?

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Natali! I would probably increase the batter by about 50% to make sure you have enough. 🙂

      1. Noel Jessup says:

        Thank you so much!

  12. Shannon Pritchett says:

    How can I make this recipe if I only have a stand mixer? I don’t have egg beaters.. 🤦‍♀️

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Shannon! You can beat the egg whites in your stand mixer, just make sure your bowl and beater are very clean and dry. I have had success beating egg whites with my paddle attachment as well as with my whisk attachment. I hope that helps!

  13. Ann Tortora says:

    5 stars
    I love this cake! Where do you get your adorable sprinkles from?
    Thanks!

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Ann! I’m so glad you enjoyed the cake! I actually buy them in bulk and mix them up for myself.

  14. Marie says:

    5 stars
    Hi, will this recipe work without a stand mixer? I haven’t found a way to make frosting like this with a handheld mixer anywhere. Thanks in advance!

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Marie! You can make this without a stand mixer. You shouldn’t have any issues doing the cake portion, but for the frosting it makes A LOT of frosting so it may be easier to do it in 2 different batches. 🙂

  15. Eva Parguian says:

    Hi Sam, planning to make this for my daughters birthday. My concern is, I live in the Philippines and it is quite humid here. My buttercream tends to melt easily once out of the fridge. I wonder what can I do to avoid it from melting. I’ve read about subtituting vegetable shortening to butter?!?

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Eva! I have heard about using shortening instead of butter. I don’t really like the flavor too much so I don’t recommend it but I think that would stop your melting issue. 🙂