11 Vegan Cookies for People Who Are Tired of Store-Bought
Store-bought cookies are easy, but they can feel like the same box in a different wrapper. These 11 vegan cookies cover the homemade range, from chocolate chip and peanut butter to coconut, almond, carrot cake, and fudgy chocolate options. The list leans on simple doughs, short bake times, and a few gluten-free picks, so readers get better cookie options without turning baking into a project.

Carrot Cake Cookies with Cream Cheese Frosting

With 50 minutes total and 10 servings, Carrot Cake Cookies with Cream Cheese Frosting bring carrot cake into a handheld cookie. Shredded carrots, almond flour, oat flour, maple syrup, cinnamon, and walnuts or pecans build the cookie base, while vegan cream cheese, powdered sugar, and vegan butter make the filling. The sandwich format makes them feel more bakery case than boxed snack. Serve them chilled or frozen when the cookie tray needs something beyond plain chocolate chip.
Get the Recipe: Carrot Cake Cookies with Cream Cheese Frosting
Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies

For a classic option that still feels homemade, Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies bake in 25 minutes and make 12 servings. The dough uses ground flax meal, vegan butter, brown sugar, all-purpose flour, vanilla, baking soda, and vegan chocolate chips. Crisp edges and soft centers give them the kind of texture store-bought cookies usually miss. Keep this one for lunchboxes, cookie tins, or nights when the pantry needs to do most of the work.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies
Gluten-Free Vegan Peanut Butter Cookies

Made in 30 minutes for 18 servings, Gluten-Free Vegan Peanut Butter Cookies keep the ingredient list focused on peanut butter, flaxseed meal, almond flour, roasted peanuts, coconut oil, and vanilla. The cookies can bake softer at 10 minutes or crunchier closer to 15, depending on the texture you want. They bring a stronger peanut butter flavor than packaged versions. Pack them for bake sales, holiday boxes, or a coffee break that needs more than crumbs from a sleeve.
Get the Recipe: Gluten-Free Vegan Peanut Butter Cookies
Vegan Almond Flour Chocolate Chip Cookies

In 22 minutes, Vegan Almond Flour Chocolate Chip Cookies make 12 gluten-free cookies with almond flour, sugar, non-dairy milk, oil, vanilla, and dark chocolate chips. The almond flour gives the dough a richer base than standard flour, while the chocolate chips keep the cookie familiar. They work well when you want something close to a classic chocolate chip cookie without using the usual boxed option. Serve with coffee, oat milk, or fresh fruit.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Almond Flour Chocolate Chip Cookies
Vegan Amaretti Cookies

With 35 servings and a 1 hour 10 minute total time, Vegan Amaretti Cookies bring an almond-heavy Italian cookie into the lineup. Blanched almond flour, aquafaba, granulated sugar, powdered sugar, lemon peel, and amaretto liqueur or almond extract create a crisp outside and chewy center. The 30-minute chill helps the dough hold its shape before baking. Add them to a cookie tin when the usual grocery-store shortbread feels too predictable.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Amaretti Cookies
Vegan Coconut Macaroons with Chocolate Glaze

Ready in 25 minutes, Vegan Coconut Macaroons with Chocolate Glaze make 12 servings using shredded coconut, agave nectar, coconut oil, vanilla, cacao powder, and maple syrup. The food processor does most of the mixing, then the macaroons bake until golden before getting the chocolate drizzle. They give the tray a coconut option that is different from another flour-based cookie. Serve them for potlucks, gift boxes, or a small dessert plate with berries.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Coconut Macaroons with Chocolate Glaze
Vegan Crinkle Cookies

For a big batch with a bakery-style look, Vegan Crinkle Cookies make 40 cookies in 22 minutes. Dutch-process cocoa powder, flour, sugar, soy or coconut yogurt, vegetable oil, orange extract, vanilla, and two sugar coatings build the crackled tops and fudgy centers. The powdered sugar finish makes them look more special than anything from a plastic grocery tub. Use them for cookie swaps, holiday trays, or any dessert table that needs chocolate first.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Crinkle Cookies
Vegan Gluten-Free Chocolate Cookies

Built with almond flour and coconut flour, Vegan Gluten-Free Chocolate Cookies take 40 minutes and make 12 servings. Almond milk, coconut oil, vanilla, cocoa powder, monk fruit or sugar, and dark chocolate chips turn into a sturdy chocolate cookie without wheat flour. The dough does not need chilling, which keeps the process straightforward. These fit when you want a deeper chocolate cookie for a small batch rather than another standard sandwich cookie.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Gluten-Free Chocolate Cookies
Vegan Sugar Cookies

Soft centers and crisp edges make Vegan Sugar Cookies a 27-minute option for 12 servings. Vegan butter, granulated sugar, light brown sugar, almond milk, vanilla, all-purpose flour, cornstarch, baking soda, and baking powder keep the dough simple and flexible. Rolling each dough ball in sugar gives the outside a light coating before baking. Serve them plain, frost them, or add sprinkles when a basic cookie needs to feel more personal than store-bought.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Sugar Cookies
White Bean Chocolate Chip Cookies – Vegan & Gluten-Free

Made in 25 minutes, White Bean Chocolate Chip Cookies – Vegan & Gluten-Free use one can of white beans, maple syrup, almond butter, vanilla, lemon juice, baking powder, and dark chocolate chips. The beans blend into the batter, giving the cookies a soft texture without adding flour. That makes them stand out from both boxed cookies and standard chocolate chip recipes. Pack them with parchment between layers since they stay soft after baking.
Get the Recipe: White Bean Chocolate Chip Cookies – Vegan & Gluten-Free
Vegan Peanut Butter Cookies

With a 23-minute total time and 24 servings, Vegan Peanut Butter Cookies keep things simple with peanut butter, brown sugar, almond milk, vanilla, all-purpose flour, baking powder, baking soda, and sea salt. The fork-pressed tops give them the classic peanut butter cookie look, while the short bake keeps the centers soft. They travel well once cooled, so they fit lunchboxes, bake sales, road snacks, or the cookie jar that keeps getting checked.
Get the Recipe: Vegan Peanut Butter Cookies
