Soft, perfectly pumpkin spiced and chewy, these easy vegan pumpkin oatmeal cookies with maple glaze are also gluten-free using only oats and oat flour. One bowl and no mixer needed for this recipe and despite having no eggs, no dairy, and no gluten, these are delicious fall flavored pumpkin oatmeal cookies!
Please don’t stop reading just because I said gluten-free and vegan! You will not know it – I promise, despite their “healthy” label, these pumpkin oatmeal cookies are chewy, deeply fall-spiced, unbelievably easy to make, and perfect for pumpkin season.
If you love pumpkin recipes, check out these other options:
- Pumpkin bars with cream cheese frosting
- Easy small batch pumpkin spice muffins
- Pumpkin pancakes
- Pumpkin chocolate chip bread
- Baked pumpkin donuts with maple glaze
Recipe Development Process
These super soft and chewy cookies came about because — have you caught on to how I create recipes yet? — I was feeling lazy a couple weekends ago. It was cool and crisp and very October-y outside, we were lounging around watching college football, and I really wanted some pumpkin oatmeal cookies with mega fall flavors.
Normal, right?
I actually have a go-to pumpkin cookie recipe from a friend that is chock full of gluten and definitely not vegan. It’s also one of those recipes that somehow contains four different kinds of sugar, and it involves creaming of butter and folding of flour and …all those fun baking things I sometimes have the energy to do, but this day did not.
Nope, on this particular day I felt like stirring everything together with a fork and dropping it on a cookie sheet and eating pumpkin oat cookies as soon as possible. I had a football game to watch, after all. It’s feelings like these that, in the past, have inspired such joys as my easiest chocolate chip cookies, so I knew my lazy tendency had the potential to lead me somewhere new and possibly great.
I have a tried and true recipe for banana breakfast cookies on here that uses only oats for the flour, so I decided to swap pumpkin puree in for the banana and use pumpkin spice seasoning instead of cinnamon. I also increased the amount of maple syrup slightly since pumpkin purΓ©e is not nearly as sweet as mashed banana. On the whole, though, these were already shaping up to be FAR healthier and easier than traditional pumpkin cookie recipes, and the only question was whether they’d measure up in taste.
Spoiler alert: they did.
Ingredients
How a few simple, wholesome ingredients can come together and create vegan cookies this magical without the use of eggs, butter, or sugar, I still really don’t know. It’s baking magic. No flax egg or egg replacer needed here!
- Old-fashioned oats (use certified gluten-free oats if needed). We’ll be turning half of them into oat flour; see below for details. Alternatively, you can use commercial oat flour! I like Bob’s Red Mill oats and oat flour.
- Canned pumpkin puree (homemade pumpkin puree would work too; do not use canned pumpkin pie filling or pumpkin pie mix)
- Pure maple syrup (can substitute honey, another liquid sweetener, brown sugar, or coconut sugar)
- Olive oil (can substitute coconut oil, or another neutral oil, melted butter or melted vegan butter)
- Pumpkin pie spice
- Baking soda
- Salt
- And for the maple glaze: powdered sugar and maple syrup
How to make vegan pumpkin oatmeal cookies
This recipe is unbelievably easy: one bowl and no mixer needed. If you buy oat flour, you won’t need a blender either.
Step 1: Use a blender to grind half the oats into flour, and half of them into chopped pieces. If you have commercial oat flour, you can skip this step and add the dry ingredients directly to the wet ingredients – see recipe card for details!
Step 2: In a large bowl, stir oat flour and oats with the rest of the ingredients thoroughly, until well-combined (no gluten formation to worry about here, yay!).
Step 3: Scoop the cookies into a parchment paper lined baking sheet with a small cookie scoop and flatten each of the cookie dough balls slightly with your fingertips if desired. If you don’t flatten them, no problem, they’ll just be a bit puffier.
Step 4: Bake for about 15 minutes until the edges are a little brown. If desired, make your maple glaze while they’re baking (simply stir together maple syrup and powdered sugar, with a little water to thin if needed).
Step 5: Remove the baked cookies to a wire cooling rack to cool completely, then finish with the glaze.
The whole recipe takes about 10 minutes to make (less if you’re faster at measuring than me), plus baking time. The pumpkin oatmeal cookies come out soft, perfectly spiced, and just sweet enough to curb the cookie craving but not cloyingly sweet. Hooray!
Storage
These gluten-free vegan pumpkin oatmeal cookies will keep, glazed or unglazed, at room temperature for up to 3 days in an airtight container. You can also store them in the fridge for up to a week or in the freezer, tightly wrapped in plastic, for up to 3 months. Simply thaw at room temperature for an hour or heat in the microwave for 30 seconds to serve.
The cookie dough can also be frozen and baked later: scoop dough onto a flat surface like a plate or baking sheet, and place in the freezer for an hour. Then store frozen cookie dough balls in a freezer-safe bag to be baked whenever cookie cravings strike! Bake from frozen for 15 minutes at 350 degrees F, or 17 minutes if you’d like them crispier on the edges.
Recipe Variations and Substitutions
Maple Glaze: I am of the opinion that nearly everything benefits from a maple glaze, and these pumpkin oatmeal cookies were no different. They came out of the oven smelling amazing, and they tasted amazing too, but they were just a little too plain for a dessert cookie. So I made a simple glaze of 1/2 cup powdered sugar and 2 tbsp maple syrup to drizzle on, and it made all the difference for me.
Could you skip the glaze and call these pumpkin breakfast cookies? Definitely. Would I tell anyone if you used the glaze and still called them breakfast cookies? Definitely not.
Add Chocolate Chips: This is another version that I’ve tried instead of using the glaze and it’s delightful. Pumpkin chocolate chip oatmeal cookies that are healthy, gluten-free, vegan, egg-free, all the things, but still absolutely delicious?? It’s wizardry. I would add 1/2 cup (85 grams) of dark chocolate chips or chopped chocolate to this recipe.
Add Nuts: chopped walnuts, pecans, almonds, or pumpkin seeds would be great here!
Substitution Options:
- use commercial oat flour instead of making your own oat flour (see recipe card for details)
- use quick oats instead of old-fashioned oats
- use any liquid sweetener or brown sugar or coconut sugar in place of the maple syrup
- use any neutral oil, melted coconut oil, or even melted butter in place of the olive oil
- use cinnamon or a combination of spices instead of pumpkin pie spice
- add vanilla extract if you want!
I highly recommend trying these healthy cookies on a day you’re feeling only semi-ambitious in the kitchen. You’ll feel super accomplished in a very short amount of time. And you’ll have the perfect fall cookie for this time of year — but trust me, they won’t last long.
More Healthy Oat-Based Recipes:
- Banana Oatmeal Breakfast Cookies (vegan, gluten-free; this recipe is adapted from that one!)
- Banana Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Muffins (gluten-free, vegan option)
- Honey Almond Granola (gluten-free, vegan option)
- Salted Maple Pecan Granola (vegan, gluten-free)
If you make this vegan pumpkin oatmeal cookie recipe, please leave a star rating and review to help other readers! Thank you!
Vegan Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies with Maple Glaze
Equipment
- Blender or food processor
Ingredients
For the pumpkin oatmeal cookies:
- 2 cups (180g) old-fashioned rolled oats divided (see below)*
- 1 cup (260g) canned pumpkin puree
- 1/4 cup (60 ml) olive oil
- 1/3 cup (78 ml) pure maple syrup
- 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
For the maple glaze (optional):
- 1/2 cup (56g) powdered (confectioner’s) sugar
- 2 Tablespoons pure maple syrup
Instructions
For the pumpkin oatmeal cookies:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place 1 cup (90g) of the rolled oats in a food processor or high-speed blender and blend on high speed until the oats become a flour-like consistency – you now have oat flour. Place in a large bowl.
- Take the other 1 cup (90g) of rolled oats and place in the same food processor or blender, and pulse or blend on low speed until the oats are in small pieces – about 30 seconds. Do not grind them into a flour. Place in the same large bowl with the oat flour.
- Add the pumpkin puree, olive oil, maple syrup, baking soda, pumpkin pie spice, and salt to the bowl and stir vigorously (I like to use a fork) until everything is well-blended.
- Scoop batter using a cookie scoop or a tablespoon onto two baking sheets lined with parchment. Bake for 15 minutes, or until edges are golden and cookies are set. They will be soft!
For the maple glaze:
- While cookies are baking, in a small bowl whisk together powdered sugar and maple syrup until smooth. Drizzle over cookies in whatever pattern you like!
Video
Notes
Like this recipe? Please rate it and leave a comment or tag me on Instagram @katiebirdbakes, and sign up for my email list to receive my recipes straight to your inbox every time I post!
These Vegan Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies with Maple Glaze look absolutely delicious! I love how comforting and seasonal they areβperfect for fall. Canβt wait to try these out in my kitchen! Thanks for sharing the recipe, Katie!
I made these cookies today and I am now obsessed! They are so yummy with or without the maple glaze. I changed the oil to homemade applesauce (unsweetened) and they turned out great! I have the second batch in the oven right now as my husband wanted to try them with chocolate chips (I added a handful). Thanks for a great recipe π
love those ideas! thank you!
Oh my goodness!!! This is such an amazing and simple recipe. My husband and 2 year old absolutely love these. They love that they aren’t like a typical cookie. More like muffin cookies, which I enjoy as well. The drizzle on top adds more moisture which I like. Definitely will be making these again, next time with chocolate chips! Thank you so much for sharing π
thank you!! muffin cookies, I like that description π
It seems I use up most of my pumpkin making pumpkin bread and pumpkin pancakes. So I was very happy to discover just the right amount of leftover pumpkin in the freezer and decided to try this recipe. Easy to make, no mixer required and also healthy…..the perfect combo for me! I did use the pumpkin spice seasoning and added a little extra ground cloves. We tried them as soon as they were cool enough to eat and enjoyed them even without the maple glaze (although that is probably a tasty addition) Great addition to your easy cookie recipe collection!
Thanks Phoebe! Glad you enjoyed this one!
Katie, these cookies were so lovely! Perfect with a cup of tea this rainy autumn evening. Thank you for the recipe, and I look forward to trying more! β₯
Thank you so much, Leah!
Wow! These were so easy and shockingly delicious!!! Perfect amount of sweetness.
Maple glaze takes it over the top. Will definitely make these again!! Thanks Katie π
Awesome! Thanks so much Charmaine!
I just made these with Buckwheat as substitute for a Gluten Free option. 1 cup Buckwheat Flour and 1 cup of Buckwheat. Has turned out very successful!
That’s great to know! Thank you Jenni!!
These look amazing! Do you post nutrition information? Canβt wait to try them out!
Hi Nicole – I don’t calculate nutrition information for my recipes but any online calculator will do it for you quickly if you enter in your ingredients! Hope you love the recipe!
Have you frozen these with the glaze or should they be glazed after being defrosted? Thanks!
Hi Lily – I haven’t tried freezing them with glaze. I think it would work, but it would probably taste better if you glaze them after being defrosted.
My glaze turned clear after I drizzled it over the cookies. Did that happen to yours as well?
Hi Lindsey – that can happen after a while. Doesn’t affect the taste!
Hi! I already have oat flour (finely ground). Is 1 cup of rolled oats equal to 1 cup of already ground oat flour? Iβve read differing measurements (some say 1:1 rolled oats:oat flour output; others say 1:3/4; others say 1:1/2).
Hi Nelly – I have found that it’s a 1:1 ratio when I’ve blended it myself. Hope that helps!
My boyfriend is vegan and we recently made these cookies together (I had also made them once before). The texture reminded me of muffins and the glaze really took the cookies to another level. Also, I like the recipe since you don’t need any abnormal ingredients to make it vegan. I will definitely be making them again in the future!
Note on vegan cookies: I’ve tried many vegan dessert recipes and often times I find vegan cookies to seem more “warmed up” rather than actually baked. I think due to the oat flour and the lack of animal products these cookies are kind of like that – don’t expect them to change too much from how they go in the oven. That being said, I don’t mind those types of vegan cookies and I liked these ones!
They are definitely softer than normal cookies – so glad you and your boyfriend enjoyed!
I’m anxious to try this recipe….how much canned pumpkin? I have 2 different sized cans.
Hi Melissa – the recipe calls for 1 cup of pumpkin puree, not a can. Just measure puree into a measuring cup!
Any substitute for the olive oil?
Hi Bobby – you can use any liquid oil you like, or even melted butter or melted coconut oil (measured after melting). Enjoy!
I used sweet potato instead of pumpkin…yummy
Great idea! Thank you for the review!
Made these today. So good. I love the level of sweetness: perfect. I made them small and ended up with 50.
Do you have nutritional info?
Thank you for recipe. Next time, Iβll double. π
Hi Christine – thank you so much for the review! So glad you enjoy these as much as we do. I don’t have nutrition info right now but you can plug the ingredients you used into MyFitnessPal or another online calorie calculator for an exact measurement π
Hi! Do you think if I use cinnamon works? I donβt have pumpkin spice.
The pumpkin puree is from natural pumpkin? Or it comes from a can?
I used organic pumpkin purΓ©e from a can and did 1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon and 1/2 teaspoon of nutmeg I would add clove too but I didnβt have any and I also added vanilla and chocolate chips. Hope that helps!
Hi Vale – you can definitely use cinnamon. Pumpkin puree from a can!
I will be trying these soon and will add chopped walnuts…
I hope you love them!
I made these for the grandkids with leftover pumpkin from making pancakes. They loved them and didn’t know they were good for them! I did forget the spice but they didn’t mind. I did add just a touch of GF flour because they didn’t quite look like yours. I may have got the ingredient measurements off a tad. They were a hit and I’ll be making them again. I’ll bet they would be good with walnuts or raisins added. May try that! Thanks for the recipe.
Yay! Thank you so much for the great review! I’m so glad your grandkids loved these.
ooo this is like the breakfast cookie. i am going make the mixture now before work and put it in teh oven afterwards…let you knowhow it turns out like
Yes, it is very similar to the breakfast cookies! I just changed out pumpkin for the banana π hope they turned out great!