Some of the best recipes in the world start with a can of crescent roll dough. I know that might sound like a controversial take but hear me out. That little can of dough is one of the most underrated things sitting in the refrigerated section of your grocery store and this cinnamon sugar pizza is exactly the kind of recipe that proves it.
The first time I made this I was looking for something quick and sweet to put together on a Saturday morning when everyone was still in pajamas and the idea of making actual cinnamon rolls from scratch felt like way too much commitment.
I pressed the crescent roll dough onto a pizza pan, brushed it with melted butter, covered it in cinnamon sugar, and slid it into the oven. Twenty minutes later I had something that looked and tasted like it required considerably more effort than it actually did.
The edges were golden and slightly crispy, the middle was soft and buttery, and the cinnamon sugar had caramelized into this incredible sweet crust across the whole surface.
It has become one of those recipes that I reach for when I need something fast that still feels like a treat. Three ingredients, zero stress, maximum payoff. If you have a can of crescent roll dough sitting in your fridge right now — and honestly you should always have one — you are about twenty minutes away from something really good.
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Lightly grease a 12-inch pizza pan or a large round baking sheet with cooking spray or a thin layer of butter. You can also use a rectangular baking sheet if that is what you have — the shape does not affect the outcome at all. Line with parchment paper if you prefer for even easier cleanup.
Open the can of crescent roll dough and unroll it onto the prepared pan. If you are using regular crescent rolls press the perforated seams together firmly with your fingers to seal them — you want one continuous piece of dough rather than individual triangles. Press and stretch the dough gently with your fingertips to fill the pan in an even layer about 1/4 inch thick. Work from the center outward and try to keep the thickness as uniform as possible so it bakes evenly. The dough does not need to reach the very edges of the pan — a border of about half an inch is fine.
Using a pastry brush or the back of a spoon, brush the melted butter generously and evenly over the entire surface of the dough all the way to the edges. Do not be shy here — an even, generous coating of butter is what creates the caramelized golden crust and makes every bite rich and buttery. If you run out of butter and there are dry spots on the dough, melt a little more and fill them in.
In a small bowl mix together the granulated sugar and ground cinnamon until evenly combined. Sprinkle the cinnamon sugar mixture evenly and generously over the entire buttered surface of the dough. Make sure every part of the dough is covered — bare spots will not caramelize and will look pale against the golden rest of the pizza. Gently press the cinnamon sugar into the butter with the back of a spoon so it adheres properly and does not just slide off during baking.
Bake at 375°F for 12–15 minutes until the edges are deep golden brown and crispy and the cinnamon sugar across the surface has caramelized into a glistening, fragrant crust. The center should look set and golden — not pale and doughy. If the edges are browning faster than the center, loosely tent the edges with small pieces of foil and continue baking the center until done. Every oven is different so start checking at the 12-minute mark.
Remove from the oven and let the pizza cool on the pan for 3–5 minutes before slicing. This rest time allows the caramelized cinnamon sugar crust to firm up slightly so it does not just slide off when you cut into it. Use a pizza cutter or a sharp knife to cut into triangular slices just like a regular pizza or cut into rectangles if that is easier. Add any optional toppings or drizzles at this stage while the pizza is still warm.
Serve immediately while still warm for the best experience. The crispy edges and soft buttery center are at their absolute peak right out of the oven. If you are adding a cream cheese glaze or powdered sugar icing drizzle it on now and watch it melt slightly into the warm surface which is honestly one of the better things you will witness in your kitchen this week.
This pizza is genuinely best eaten fresh and warm on the day it is made. If you have leftovers store them in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days. The crust softens as it sits but the flavor stays great. Avoid wrapping in plastic wrap directly as this traps moisture and makes the crust soggy faster.
Reheat slices in the oven at 350°F for about 5 minutes or in an air fryer at 350°F for 2–3 minutes to bring back some of that crispy texture. The microwave works in a pinch but it makes the crust soft and steamy rather than crispy so it is not the ideal option if you care about the texture.
This pizza does not freeze particularly well once baked — the texture of the crescent roll dough changes significantly after freezing and thawing. If you want to prep ahead, press the dough onto the pan, brush with butter and add the cinnamon sugar, then wrap tightly and freeze unbaked. Bake straight from frozen at 375°F adding about 5–7 extra minutes to the baking time. The result is close to fresh-baked and much better than freezing after baking.
This cinnamon sugar pizza made with crescent rolls is one of those recipes that I genuinely love sharing because the reaction it gets is always completely disproportionate to how easy it is to make.
People see it on the table and think you put in serious effort. You did not. You pressed some dough onto a pan, brushed it with butter, covered it in cinnamon sugar and let the oven do all the work.
That is the whole magic of this recipe — it delivers something that looks and tastes special using ingredients that cost less than a fancy coffee and takes less time than an episode of whatever you are currently watching. Simple, fast, genuinely delicious. That is what cooking should be and that is exactly what Recipes by Kip is all about.
Make this one this weekend and bring it to your next gathering. Watch how fast it disappears and then quietly enjoy the fact that you made it in twenty minutes. :)
— Kip
This cinnamon sugar pizza made with crescent rolls is the kind of recipe that sounds almost too simple to be this good — and yet here we are. Three ingredients, one pizza pan, twenty minutes, and what comes out of the oven is this golden, buttery, crispy-edged pizza coated in a sweet caramelized cinnamon sugar crust that is genuinely impossible to eat just one slice of. It works as a dessert, a breakfast treat, an after-school snack, or honestly just something you make on a Sunday afternoon because you have crescent roll dough in the fridge and a craving that needs addressing. Kids go absolutely wild for this and adults are never far behind. Simple food done right is always the best kind.