Caramel cookie bars — gooey, rich, and impossibly hard to eat just one

Total Time: 1 hr 10 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Soft chewy cookie bars layered with thick gooey caramel and melted chocolate chips — a dessert that is dangerously hard to stop eating
A stack of three gooey caramel cookie bars on a white plate showing the thick caramel layer running through the middle of soft chewy cookie dough with melted chocolate chips throughout pinit

I have a weakness for caramel. Always have. There is something about that deep, buttery, slightly bitter sweetness that makes everything it touches immediately better. Caramel on ice cream, caramel in coffee, caramel drizzled over literally anything — I am here for all of it. So when I started experimenting with ways to get caramel into a cookie bar, I knew I was either going to create something incredible or eat a lot of mediocre attempts along the way.

Turns out it did not take many attempts at all. These caramel cookie bars are layered in the most satisfying way — a soft, chewy cookie base pressed into the pan, a thick layer of warm gooey caramel poured right on top, another layer of cookie dough crumbled over that, and then chocolate chips pressed into the surface before the whole thing goes into the oven. What comes out is something that looks almost too good to cut into and tastes even better than it looks.

The caramel pools between the cookie layers and sets into this sticky, gooey ribbon that you hit with every single bite. Combined with the melted chocolate chips and that soft buttery cookie dough — this bar is the kind of dessert people talk about. Fair warning: make a full batch because these disappear faster than you will expect.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • That caramel layer. Let’s be very direct about this — the caramel layer is the whole point. Thick, gooey, sticky caramel sandwiched between two layers of soft chewy cookie dough, melting into both layers as it bakes. Every single bite has caramel in it. There is no dry corner, no caramel-free zone. It is evenly distributed perfection.
  • Simple layered technique. There is no complicated pastry skill involved here. You press half the dough into the pan, pour the caramel over it, crumble the rest of the dough on top, and bake. The oven does everything else. If you can press dough into a pan and pour a sauce, you can make these bars.
  • One dough, two layers. You make a single batch of cookie dough and divide it. Half goes on the bottom, half goes on top. No separate recipes for different layers, no extra mixing bowls. The whole thing is more straightforward than it looks.
  • Incredible texture contrast. Slightly crispy edges, soft chewy cookie layers, and that gooey caramel ribbon running through the middle. Every bite gives you multiple textures at once and that contrast is what makes these bars genuinely addictive rather than just sweet.
  • Crowd pleaser without exception. These bars have never once failed to impress at a gathering. They look impressive, they taste incredible, and people always ask for the recipe. IMO they are the single best thing you can bring to a potluck, bake sale, or dinner party dessert table.
  • Stores and freezes beautifully. These bars hold up well at room temperature for days and freeze like a dream. Make them ahead, stash them in the freezer, and pull them out whenever you need a dessert that looks and tastes like you spent all day in the kitchen.

Ingredients and key notes

For the cookie dough:

  • 2 and 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled
  • 3/4 cup packed light brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup granulated white sugar
  • 2 large eggs, room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1 and 1/2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips, divided

Note: Melted butter is essential for the chewy texture in both cookie layers. Softened or creamed butter will give you a cakier, lighter result that does not hold the caramel layer as well. Stick with melted.

Note: Room temperature eggs blend into the melted butter more smoothly than cold eggs. Cold eggs can cause the butter to solidify slightly and create an uneven dough texture. Pull them out of the fridge 20 minutes before you start.

Note: The dough will be thick and slightly sticky — that is exactly right. It should not be pourable but it should be soft enough to press into the pan and crumble over the top without cracking.

For the caramel layer:

  • 1 cup good quality caramel sauce (store-bought or homemade)
  • 3 tablespoons heavy cream
  • 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt

Note: Use a thick caramel sauce rather than a thin caramel syrup. Thin caramel will soak straight into the cookie dough and disappear during baking — you want something thick enough to stay as a visible layer. Werther’s soft caramels melted with a splash of cream is an excellent option if you want a foolproof caramel layer.

Note: If using store-bought caramel sauce, warm it gently in a small saucepan with the heavy cream and salt, stirring until smooth. This loosens it just enough to pour easily without making it too thin.

Note: The salt in the caramel layer is not optional in my kitchen. That touch of salt against the sweetness of the caramel and chocolate is what takes these bars from good to genuinely unforgettable. Salted caramel is always the answer.

Note: If you want to make the caramel layer from scratch, melt 11 oz of soft caramel candies with 3 tablespoons of heavy cream in a saucepan over low heat, stirring constantly until completely smooth. Season with salt. This gives you a thick, stable caramel that bakes beautifully.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Preheat and prep the pan

Preheat your oven to 350°F / 175°C. Line a 9×13 inch baking pan with parchment paper, leaving overhang on all four sides if possible. This overhang is how you lift the entire slab cleanly out of the pan for cutting — do not skip it. Lightly grease the parchment. Set aside.

Step 2: Make the caramel layer

If using store-bought caramel sauce, combine it in a small saucepan with heavy cream and salt over low heat. Stir gently until smooth and pourable — about 2 minutes. If using soft caramel candies, unwrap them and melt with heavy cream over low heat, stirring constantly until completely smooth. Season with salt. Set aside to cool slightly while you make the cookie dough.

Step 3: Make the cookie dough

Whisk the flour, baking soda, and salt together in a medium bowl. In a large mixing bowl, whisk the melted butter with both sugars until smooth and glossy — about 90 seconds. Add the eggs one at a time, whisking well after each. Add the vanilla extract and whisk until the mixture is thick and slightly pale. Add the flour mixture all at once and fold with a rubber spatula until just combined. Fold in one cup of the chocolate chips. The dough will be thick and soft.

Step 4: Press the bottom layer

Divide the dough roughly in half. Take the first half and press it evenly into the bottom of the prepared baking pan. Use your hands or the back of a lightly greased spatula to get it into an even layer all the way to the corners and edges. The layer will be thin — that is correct. This is your base.

Step 5: Add the caramel layer

Pour the warm caramel mixture evenly over the pressed cookie dough base. Use a spatula to spread it all the way to the edges, covering the entire surface. Work relatively quickly — if the caramel cools too much it becomes harder to spread. Leave a very thin border around the edges if you want to minimize caramel from bubbling up and sticking to the pan sides during baking.

Step 6: Add the top cookie layer

Take the remaining half of the cookie dough and crumble it in chunks evenly over the caramel layer. You do not need to cover every single spot — the dough will spread slightly during baking and the caramel peeking through the top layer looks intentional and beautiful. Scatter the remaining half cup of chocolate chips over the top and press them lightly into the dough chunks.

Step 7: Bake

Bake at 350°F / 175°C for 25–28 minutes until the top is golden brown and the edges are set and pulling slightly from the sides of the pan. The center will look slightly underdone — that is exactly right. The bars continue cooking from residual heat after you remove them from the oven and the caramel needs time to set properly. Do not overbake chasing a fully set center or you will end up with dry bars and hardened caramel.

Step 8: Cool completely before cutting

This is the hard part. Let the bars cool in the pan on a wire rack for at least 30 minutes before attempting to cut them. The caramel layer needs this time to firm up enough to cut cleanly. If you cut them too early the caramel runs everywhere and while that is delicious it makes for very messy bars. For the cleanest cuts, refrigerate for 20 minutes after the initial cooling period. Lift out using the parchment overhang, transfer to a cutting board, and cut with a sharp knife — wiping the blade between cuts.

Serving suggestions

  • Serve at room temperature for the best texture — the caramel layer softens to that perfect gooey consistency and the cookie layers are at their softest and chewiest.
  • Warm individual bars in the microwave for 10–12 seconds and serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. The warm caramel melts slightly and pools around the ice cream in the most incredible way. This is the move for a dinner party dessert.
  • Drizzle extra caramel sauce over the top of the cut bars before serving for a more dramatic presentation. A pinch of flaky sea salt over the caramel drizzle finishes the whole thing beautifully.
  • Cut into smaller bite-sized squares for a dessert platter or bake sale — they hold together well and look impressive in small portions.
  • Pair with a strong black coffee or an espresso. The slight bitterness of the coffee against the rich sweet caramel is a genuinely excellent combination that balances everything out.
  • These are also exceptional straight from the fridge on a hot day when you want something cold, dense, and sweet. The caramel firms up when chilled and gives you a completely different but equally good texture experience.

Storage tips

Room temperature: Store bars in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days. Place parchment paper between layers to prevent the caramel from sticking bars together. In warmer climates the caramel can get quite soft at room temperature — refrigerating is a better option if your kitchen runs warm.

Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to a week. The caramel firms up considerably when chilled which makes the bars easier to handle and gives them a different but excellent texture. Let them sit at room temperature for 10 minutes before eating for the best experience.

Freezer: These freeze exceptionally well for up to 3 months. Wrap individual bars tightly in plastic wrap and store in a freezer-safe bag or container. Thaw at room temperature for about 90 minutes or in the fridge overnight. The caramel layer survives freezing and thawing beautifully — no texture loss whatsoever.

Make-ahead tip: You can make the cookie dough and caramel layer a day ahead and refrigerate them separately. Bring both to room temperature before assembling and baking. Alternatively, bake the fully assembled bars, cool completely, and refrigerate overnight before cutting — the caramel sets perfectly overnight and gives you incredibly clean cuts the next day.

Let’s wrap this up

I have made a lot of bars in this kitchen. Brownies, blondies, lemon bars, cookie bars of all kinds. But these caramel cookie bars occupy a very specific category that I call dangerous — the ones where you cut yourself a modest slice and somehow end up going back three more times before you realize what happened.

The caramel does that. It always does. There is something about that gooey sweet ribbon running through the middle of a soft chewy cookie that bypasses every sensible thought and speaks directly to the part of your brain that just wants to be happy.

Make these for someone you love. Make them for a gathering. Make them for yourself on a quiet afternoon and do not apologize for a single bar. That is what good food is for.

Until next time — keep it simple, keep it delicious.

With love, Kip.

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 25 mins Rest Time 30 mins Total Time 1 hr 10 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 11
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

These caramel cookie bars bring together a buttery soft cookie dough base, a generous layer of thick gooey caramel, and a crumbled cookie top studded with chocolate chips that melts into everything as it bakes. Each bar delivers a ribbon of sticky caramel running through the middle, surrounded by soft chewy cookie on all sides and pockets of melted dark chocolate throughout. Rich, indulgent, and genuinely one of the best bar desserts you will ever make.

Ingredients

Cookie dough:

Caramel layer:

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F / 175°C. Line a 9x13 inch pan with parchment paper and lightly grease.
  2. Warm caramel sauce with heavy cream and salt in a small saucepan over low heat until smooth and pourable. Set aside.
  3. Whisk flour, baking soda, and salt together. In a separate large bowl, whisk melted butter with both sugars until glossy. Add eggs one at a time then vanilla. Fold in flour mixture until just combined. Fold in one cup of chocolate chips.
  4. Press half the dough evenly into the prepared pan.
  5. Pour warm caramel evenly over the cookie dough base. Spread to the edges.
  6. Crumble remaining dough in chunks over the caramel layer. Scatter remaining chocolate chips on top and press lightly.
  7. Bake for 25–28 minutes until the top is golden brown and edges are set. Center will look slightly underdone.
  8. Cool in the pan for at least 30 minutes. Refrigerate for 20 minutes for cleaner cuts. Lift out, transfer to a cutting board, and cut into bars.
Keywords: caramel cookie bars, gooey caramel cookie bars, chocolate chip caramel bars, easy caramel bars recipe, caramel cookie layer bars, caramel blondies, easy dessert bars, baked caramel bars
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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Why is my caramel layer disappearing into the cookie dough during baking?

The caramel sauce was likely too thin. Thin caramel syrups absorb straight into the dough during baking and leave almost no visible layer in the finished bar. Use a thick caramel sauce or make the caramel layer using melted soft caramel candies — they are specifically designed to hold their structure during baking and will give you that distinct visible gooey ribbon in every bar.

Can I use salted butter instead of unsalted?

Yes. Reduce the added salt in the cookie dough from half a teaspoon to a pinch and omit the salt from the caramel layer or reduce it significantly. The bars will still taste excellent. Unsalted butter just gives you full control over the salt balance which matters more in a dessert like this where the salted caramel element is deliberate.

How do I get clean cuts through the caramel layer?

Two things make a big difference. First, let the bars cool completely at room temperature then refrigerate for at least 20 minutes before cutting — the chilled caramel cuts much more cleanly than warm caramel. Second, use a sharp chef's knife and wipe the blade clean with a warm damp cloth between every single cut. Caramel builds up on the blade quickly and drags through subsequent cuts if you do not clean it.

Can I make these without chocolate chips?

Absolutely. The chocolate chips are a great addition but the bars are genuinely delicious without them too — the caramel and cookie combination stands completely on its own. You could also swap the chocolate chips for white chocolate chips, butterscotch chips, or chopped pecans for a different flavor profile that works just as well.

Can I double this recipe for a larger batch?

Yes but use two separate 9x13 pans rather than trying to double the thickness in one pan. A thicker bar takes significantly longer to bake through and you risk burning the top before the center is set. Two pans at the same time in the oven is the right move for a double batch.

Why do the bars need to cool so long before cutting?

The caramel layer is essentially molten sugar while it is hot. Cutting into the bars before the caramel has set means it flows out of the cut edges and makes a mess that is very hard to control. The 30-minute room temperature rest followed by 20 minutes in the fridge gives the caramel time to firm up into that gooey but stable consistency that holds a clean edge when cut. Patience here is genuinely worth it.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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