The Best Monkey Bread
This pull-apart monkey bread is ooey, gooey, and full of buttery cinnamon sugar goodness. The from-scratch dough is so easy to work with!
Monkey bread is a delight that I fully believe everyone should experience. This easy, homemade version is one of our go-to holiday breakfasts. Think of it like a pull-apart cinnamon roll!

Easy-to-Worth-With Dough
Many versions of monkey bread call for using canned biscuit dough. No disrespect to those versions, but making a homemade dough is a game changer for monkey bread.
This dough is simple to make a dream to work with!
- Make the dough and let it rise until doubled
- Turn the dough onto a lightly floured or greased countertop and pat into a thick square or rectangle.
- Cut the dough into 64 equal pieces.
- Roll each piece into a round shape (doesn’t have to be perfect!)
If you end up with a few more or a few less pieces, no biggie. If the pieces aren’t all exactly uniform and resemble dented ping pong balls rather than perfectly round balls, again, no biggie! A rustic attempt is a totally valid attempt here, because it all works out in the end.




Assembling Monkey Bread
Dip the dough pieces in melted butter followed by a roll in cinnamon + brown sugar.
You don’t have to do this one at a time. It works to pile a bunch of dough pieces in the melted butter, let the excess butter drip off, and then load those buttered pieces over to the cinnamon and sugar bowl for a quick dusting.


Layer all the coated dough balls in a well-buttered bundt pan.
Try to arrange them as evenly as possible staggering them slightly so they aren’t stacked exactly on top of each other.
Let the monkey bread rise until very puffy. This step is crucial! Rising long enough here ensures a light and fluffy pull-apart monkey bread that is irresistible (as compared to heavy dense pieces of monkey bread that will only make you very sad).
Bake until golden and then turn out onto a serving tray or plate. While still a little bit warm, drizzle with the glaze. It will sneak into all the little nooks and crannies giving an extra boost to the ooey, gooey charm of this best-ever monkey bread.




Serve Warm
Without a doubt, this cinnamon sugar monkey bread is best served warm.
In fact, when I make it, my family helps devour it before it even has a chance to think about cooling off completely. The nibbly, bite-size, pull-apart pieces are irresistible.
There are hundreds of comments below of people who have tried variations or baked in different types of pans. Read through them for a whole heck of a lot of monkey bread inspiration!

Rave Reviews for Monkey Bread
This recipe has been receiving extremely high praise for over ten years. It really is the best monkey bread recipe.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 10/10 love this!!!! Will make again -Isabella
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I am in love! Someone else commented that these taste like the center of a cinnamon roll and that is spot on. These are pillowy soft and indulgent. Your instructions were clear and I was able to create a picture perfect dessert. My family was certainly impressed. I must thank you so much for this recipe. I will be making these again and again for sure! -Sam
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Every piece tastes like the inside of a cinnamon roll, heaven!! I will never use biscuits again! Thanks for another winner. –Amanda
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I made this for the first time today, and it was amazing. I did the make ahead method, and every step is informative and helpful. This really was the most delicious monkey bread I’ve ever had, It has a caramelized flavor that just keeps you going back for more. Wonderful Recipe! -Raquel

FAQ for Monkey Bread:
Yes! Follow the recipe through step #8. Cover the pan with plastic wrap and place the pan in the refrigerator before letting the monkey bread rise up to 12-18 hours. A couple hours before you want to bake it, remove the pan from the refrigerator and let the monkey bread come to room temperature and rise until puffy and risen 1-2 inches below the top of the pan (this exact measurement will depend on the dimensions of the Bundt pan you are using). Bake as directed in step #7 and proceed with the recipe. You can speed up the rising process by placing the refrigerated monkey bread into a warm oven (not warm enough it will bake the bread! just warm enough to help the rising – I preheat my oven to 170 degrees and then once it reaches temperature, I turn it off but keep the oven light on).
I have never baked this in another size/style of pan, but you could definitely experiment with a 9X13-inch pan for more of a rectangular presentation or split the dough into two loaf pans. I do not recommend an angel food cake pan; the sugar/butter mixture will leak out the bottom and make a big mess.
Yes.

The Best Monkey Bread
Ingredients
For the pan:
- 2 tablespoons softened butter
Dough:
- 2 tablespoons (28 g) melted butter
- 1 cup warm milk (about 105 to 110 degrees F)
- ⅓ cup warm water (about 105 to 110 degrees F)
- ¼ cup (53 g) granulated sugar
- 2 ¼ teaspoons instant yeast
- 3 ¼ cups (462 g) all-purpose flour
- 2 teaspoons salt
Brown Sugar Coating:
- 1 cup (212 g) packed light brown sugar
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- ½ cup (113 g) butter, melted
Glaze:
- 1 cup (114 g) confectioners’ sugar
- 2 tablespoons milk
Instructions
- In a large measuring cup or bowl, mix together the milk, water, melted butter, sugar, and yeast.
- In a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, add the flour and salt. With the mixer on low speed, add the milk mixture. Increase to medium speed and knead until the dough is smooth, 5 to 7 minutes. Add additional flour a couple tablespoons at a time only if the dough is sticking to the bottom of the sides of the bowl. After kneading, the dough should be soft, supple and slightly sticky without leaving a lot of dough residue on your fingers.
- Place the dough in a lightly greased bowl, cover, and let the dough rise until doubled, 1 to 2 hours.
- Spread the softened butter evenly in a 12-cup bundt pan, using a pastry brush or piece of wax or parchment paper to ensure all the nooks and crannies of the pan are well-buttered. Set aside.
- Lightly punch down the dough. On a very lightly floured or greased countertop, press the dough into a thick rectangle or square, about 8 or 9 inches across. Use a bench scraper or pizza cutter to cut the dough into 64 small pieces.
- Roll each piece into a round ball shape. It doesn't have to be perfect.
- Combine the brown sugar and cinnamon in a bowl or shallow dish.
- Dip the dough pieces in melted butter and then roll evenly in the sugar mixture. Place the dough pieces in the prepared Bundt pan, offsetting the dough balls so they aren't stacked exactly on top of each other.
- Cover the Bundt pan and let the bread rise until noticeably puffy and nearly doubled, 1 to 2 hours.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Uncover the bundt pan and bake until the bread is golden brown and the bread is baked through, 30 to 35 minutes. An instant-read thermometer inserted into the bread should read 190 to 200 degrees F.
- Cool the monkey bread in the pan for no longer than 5 minutes (any longer and the bread will be too sticky and hard to remove!). Turn the bread onto a platter.
- In a small bowl, whisk the confectioners' sugar and milk together until smooth. Drizzle the glaze over the top and sides of the warm monkey bread. Serve warm.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: adapted slightly from Cook’s Illustrated
Recipe originally posted Oct. 2012; updated Jan. 2024 with new photos, recipe notes, etc.

Awesome, Awesome, Awesome! Made this and filed it top of the recipe list. Can’t make it too often, cause can’t stop eating!
I made the dough and let it rise, right now it is currently in the oven and I just forgot that it had to rise again… is it ok if it doesn’t rise a second time?
Did the monkey bread turn out? The second rise helps the little pieces of dough to bake up fluffy.
These are amazing! I will never use a different recipe! Made them the night But and baked them this morning. Had them for breakfast this Christmas morning and will do it every year! Thank you for sharing! Perfectly delicious without being overly sweet! (Still sweet, but not sickeningly.)
So excited to make this for Christmas breakfast!
Question: In the make ahead tip, it says to make it through step 5 and then put in the fridge before letting it rise and then take out and proceed with Step 7. I just want to verify that if you want to make it ahead, you should still dip and roll the balls like in Step 6 before refrigerating, right? I just want to make sure I’m not missing anything. Thank you!
Yep! Assemble it completely in the pan and cover and refrigerate overnight.
The perfect treat for a snow day. Thank you for another great recipe.
Hi, just confirming that I need to add in the salt at the beginning (step 2). Is that correct?
Can’t wait to try this!
-Olivia M.
Yes, that is how I make it.
Do you know time/temp difference for making muffins?
I think you could bake at the same temperature and maybe check after about 17-20 minutes?
Hello – love the recipe but I find 3 1/4 cup of flour is too little and my dough is always too wet. I add essentially 4 cups of flour to get the correct recipe. Could there be another issue?
Depending on elevation and humidity and such, it’s ok to have to add 1/2 cup (or a little more) flour.
Hello! Love your recipe! Can yoj make this with bread flour? Thank you!!
The texture of the monkey bread will be a bit more dense and chewy with bread flour, but you can swap it in for the all-purpose flour.
I made this today using 32 Rhodes frozen dinner rolls (don’t judge me ) which I defrosted and then halved. I don’t have a Bundt pan so I just used a 9×13 and followed the instructions exactly. When it had been out of the oven for 5 minutes I turned the whole thing out onto a parchment lined baking sheet and it worked perfectly. Everyone in my family loved them!
Can you substitute GF flour? Thanks
I haven’t tried that, Donna – it’s usually a bit tricky to substitute gluten free flour in yeast doughs like this. Sorry I’m not more help!
Hi Donna! I made these with Bob’s Red Mill GF flour and they turned out amazing! They obviously don’t rise too much but if you use a good quality GF flour they turn out really good!
This is the recipe that lead me to your blog over four years ago. I wanted monkey bread completely from scratch and not one that used premade biscuit dough (yuck!). Everyone in my family absolutely loves it. My father has requested this for Father’s day for the last three years. I love how easy the recipe is to follow and that this works perfectly at 7600 ft without having to change anything. Thanks for amazing recipes! A day hardly goes by that I don’t use one of your recipes.
Thank you so much, Jordan!
Could you use frozen bread dough? I know it wouldn’t taste as good but wondering if it would work to save time. Thanks!
I haven’t tried it, but you could certainly experiment!
Have made this a few times, to the point where if I don’t make it, people get upset. Time consuming, but so worth the effort. Why make rolls when we can have this?
Hello; You can not imagine how grateful I am for your recipe. I wanted to make this monkey bread and it has been very difficult for me to find this recipe from scratch. I do not want to give my family processed foods, I also do not understand the good cuisine with processed foods. Once again, thank you and take care of yourself a lot. Regards from Spain
Hi Mel,
I noticed there are no eggs in the recipe. Is this normal?
There aren’t any eggs in this recipe.
We haven’t eaten this yet but the dough was really nice to work with. I was worried when I started making balls and putting them in the Bundt pan that there wouldn’t be enough but by the time I was done and then this morning when I pulled it out of the fridge, it was perfectly risen. Can’t wait to try it!
I made this for breakfast this morning (Christmas). I found that the pieces that were at the bottom of the Bundt pan (the first pieces into the pan) were nice and gooey but the top pieces were drier. Next time I would use more butter and brown sugar mixture that the recipe calls for and make sure the last pieces to go in the pan are gooey as well.
You were right. This is the best and I was not disappointed! This will be the recipe I use every time in the future! I did melt the remaining butter and sugar and pour it over the monkey bread after I turned it out just for some extra gooeyness. I also added pecans and raisins because, why not? Thanks for the great recipe!
Thanks for reporting back!
Hi Lisa!
…how did you incorporate the raisins? Just peppered throughout the balls as you’re putting them in the pan?
I’m planning to make this tonight to bake tomorrow morning for Christmas. My one question is will it be gooey enough without pouring a sugar mixture over it like the traditional recipes do? Would that be overkill? I would like to try it as is before messing with it, but I also don’t want to be disappointed with lack of caramely gooey deliciousness. I’m used to making the canned biscuit dough version.
Thanks!
I have the same question!
I posted a new comment because I couldn’t see this one initially. It was great so no worries!
Can you use buttermilk or almond milk
Could definitely try!
Just wondering if I use “regular” yeast and dissolve in the 2 Tbsp of warm water, do I still add the 1/3 cup of warm water in addition to the 2 tbsp?
Yes, still add the 1/3 cup warm water.
Hi there! What size Bundt pan is this recipe for? Thank you!
I use a 10 or 11-cup pan.
Thanks Mel! Looking forward to making it Christmas morning!
OMG! The best! So easy to make.
THE BEST monkey bread, hands down! I have made it so many times and everytime it was a winner. Super simple, hard to mess up and always a crowd pleaser! Everyone always requests it and it has become a staple for gatherings!! LOVE IT.
Mel, could I make the the monkey bread through step #5 then freeze the entire bunt pan?
I haven’t tried that, but usually recipes like this freeze great, so I think it is worth a try!
It worked!! I wrapped the entire bunt pan really well with plastic wrap and froze. I got it out the night before and put the pan in the fridge. I got the pan out about an 1 – 1 1/2 hours before I wanted to bake to finish the rise and bring to room temp on the counter. It baked up perfectly!! This is a game changer for Christmas morning . One less thing to do on Christmas Eve!
I am 11 years old and I love baking I have heard and seen lot’s of people make monkey bread and I thought it was time for me to give it a try I’m currently waiting for the second rise and I can’t wait to try it will be using more or your recipes in the future
My family absolutally loved it, i made it last night and its almost gone. Will definitely make it again and its my new favorite!!
Oh my gosh!!! So good thank you for sharing. I can’t wait to try more of your recipes. Thank you for sharing.
Mel, your instructions are spot on! I let it rise a little too long on the 2nd rise and it was a touch too much. Once in the oven, a few of the balls slipped off. I got them back in place though
Hafa Adai Mel, greetings from the island of Guam. Made it today, Helped chase the “lockdown since March 15” blues away! My family said hands down best monkey bread they’ve ever tasted! Si Yu’os Ma’ase!
Could you please measure out your flour like normal, then weigh it in grams? Ice been doing a lot of bread baking and it’s all in weights, so I weighed my 3 1/4c flour and it came out to almost 550g. That’s a ton more than 120g/cup King Arthur says. Thanks!
I used a scale for this recipe, and my dough was super wet and sticky until I added a lot more flour. I ended up adding at least another half cup of flour, at least 450g total. I really appreciate recipes that have weight measurements now, just because there is such wide variability when measuring ingredients.
Hey Mel, I’m going to unashamedly ask this question. Could I use store bought biscuit dough, prep it the night before & refrigerate like you’ve instructed for the homemade dough? Let’s just say, pregnant with baby #5 & not feeling the homemade dough process right now!
Hi Meredith! I wish I knew for sure! I haven’t tried it so I don’t know but I definitely think it’s worth a try (and you deserve some award for even wanting to make monkey bread of any sort being pregnant with #5!)
This is SO yummy!
Has anyone made the dough in a bread machine using the dough cycle? I am curious if it would work as I have used my bread machine for other dough recipes and that worked. Thanks in advance!!
These are so good! I made the dough in the breadmaker on the dough cycle and did the first rise there as well. We really like cinnamon so I added extra. I also made “muffins” instead of an entire cake and they turned out amazing! I cooked for about 18 mins. I did not use the glaze. I’d make smaller balls next time for the muffin style ones but this is recipe is a keeper.
This was hands down the best monkey bread I’ve ever made. I did need to use more butter and cinnamon sugar and I made a cream cheese glaze but the dough was tender and delicious! Thank you! .
could I substitute brown sugar with white sugar?
I haven’t tried that – but you could experiment!
I would not. These are basically cinnamon rolls.
Hi..this is a fabulous recipe..thank you.
I don’t have a bundt pan so I use my Dutch oven with a small round bowl in the middle. Ive made this 3 times this way..i do butter the bowl..
Thank you for this recipe.
This is the tastiest family treat! Great recipe and definitely will become a part if our regular treat for family breakfast or afternoon snack/tea.
Made this last night and my bf and I devoured it! We didn’t have a bundt pan so I just shoved a buttered ramekin in the middle of our springform pan, and it worked relatively well. I really appreciate that you included the amount of time to wait for the dough to form, i usually get impatient and end up adding flour to my stand mixer and ruining my dough. This came out perfect after 7 minutes.
I made a few minor adjustments. After the second rise I poured roughly 2tbsp of melted butter/ cinnamon sugar over the balls before putting them in the oven. I also made a cream cheese frosting to go on top/dip on the side. Heavenly. Tastes just like Cinnabon. Saving this recipe and now diving through the rest of your recipes to find something new to bake.
I don’t have instant yeast…. what’s the direction for regular yeast.
Use the same amount of active dry yeast, dissolve it in 1/4 cup water with a pinch of sugar until foamy and bubbly and use in the recipe.
I bake and cook A LOT. (and never write reviews) I always search for the best recipes with great reviews to try out. I came across this one-I’ve never had monkey bread because the the canned biscuits style never appealed to me. So I made this recipe and it was absolutely amazing and will be one I bake often! The whole family loved it.
Thank you, thank you! I have tried too many times to make cinnamon rolls and I just can’t stand trying to flatten it out and shake it into a rectangle and then having to try and roll it just right . But we love the taste of them. So I had a brilliant idea to do monkey bread itself. And while it is still time consuming, it is soo worth it. Thank you for an easy to read recipe that turned out phenomenal. I didn’t get a chance to make the glaze and they were still devoured before the night was over. (We did end up using an old angel food cake pan since we don’t have a bundt pan and it worked like a charm.) Thank you for a wonderful eating experience! 🙂 Now I can’t wait to try your other cinnamom recipes!
I just made this for Easter dessert. It is now my favorite dessert to make. It was incredible. Thanks for the recipe.
Yum! Followed recipe exactly and came out perfect.
Can I make this with a dairy free butter and oat milk?
You can definitely try – I haven’t tried it myself
I made this today using earth balance instead of butter and almond milk instead of milk. The dough was a little sticky and didn’t form into pretty balls as well as Mel’s, but it baked up really well and was absolutely delicious!
Only monkey I make!! So good!!
Made in a round 12in high side crock. Added granny Smyth and pineapple to the middle layer, baked a little longer that stated due to the fruit. Everyone went ape.
First off, thank you so much for perfecting this recipe and for sharing it in such a clear and easy way to follow! The measurements were spot-on and nothing was wasted/not enough.
OK, so now for the review: THIS. IS. THE. BEST. MONKEY BREAD. RECIPE. EVER! The title is not a rouse, people!
I made it once, following the recipe diligently (as one should the first time out of the gate), and it turned out perfectly!!! It was gone within an hour -after sharing with neighbours, of course (yes, we use U to spell that word in Canada;)), and DH was a bit sad.
So I’m making it again, less than a week later, and DH will finally get some of this decliousness!
My *only* comment/advice: IF you use salted butter, like I did, I’d reduce the amount of salt in the dough. I’ll try by 1/2 this time. And before you all @ me, I KNOW one should bake with the unsalted variety, but reality happens, folks.
Again, thank you LOADS for this wonderful recipe!
I added pecans and it’s so good. However, I’d only use 1 teaspoon of salt. It tastes a bit salty.
Worth the effort! Made exactly as written. This was delicious and devoured so fast!