With rich cream cheese icing and a cinnamon-sugar filling, these fluffy sourdough cinnamon rolls deliver tangy flavor, a tender texture, and warm, gooey sweetness.

These sourdough cinnamon rolls start with healthy, fermented grains for increased digestibility, incredible texture, and extra flavor. Lightly sweetened sourdough wraps up ribbons of cinnamon sugar filling, adding the warmly spiced flavors to each bite. Baked until golden, each roll is topped with cream cheese icing, which is technically optional but highly encouraged. We enjoy this silky frosting over other sourdough recipes, like sourdough coffee cake, sourdough bread pudding, or sourdough lemon pound cake.
By mixing and fermenting most of the ingredients overnight, this recipe comes together quickly the following morning with basic pantry staples.
These easy sourdough cinnamon rolls serve well for a slow Saturday breakfast or a busy Christmas morning. Make these ahead of time, if needed! Ferment and assemble, then pop them in the refrigerator (up to 12 hours) or freezer (they’ll last months this way) to bake when you need them. Simply thaw, rise, and bake for perfectly fresh rolls!
If you are new to sourdough but enjoy the health benefits and tangy taste, make sure to check out all my sourdough recipes, including how to make your own starter.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Tender and sweet – These sourdough cinnamon rolls are soft and fluffy, with layers of brown sugar and cinnamon butter generously spread between the dough.
Long-fermented goodness – The overnight fermentation makes these rolls more digestible and nutritious, not to mention tender and tangy.
Perfect for special occasions – Warm, gooey cinnamon rolls with a decadent cinnamon roll icing elevate any occasion! Plus, they can be started the day before, then baked the day of.
Ingredients

Active sourdough starter – This is a sourdough starter that has been fed 4-12 hours before starting the recipe and is nice and bubbly.
All-purpose flour – I use freshly-milled hard wheat or unbleached all-purpose flour. If you’re interested in working with whole grains, I have lots of information on the blog on milling your own flour at home.
Butter – Use very soft butter for the filling. If it’s too firm, it won’t spread well; if it’s melted, it will seep into the dough.
Oil – Use a neutral oil like avocado oil or melted coconut oil.
A full ingredient list with exact amounts can be found in the recipe card below.
Tools You May Need
Stand mixer with dough hook attachment
How to Make Sourdough Cinnamon Rolls

Step 1: Add active sourdough starter, water, flour, oil, honey, and eggs into the bowl of a stand mixer with a dough hook attachment. Mix until the dough forms a ball, then knead for a few minutes on medium speed until smooth and glossy. A pinch of the dough should pass the windowpane test.

Step 2: Place the dough into a lightly oiled bowl and cover tightly. Ferment in a warm place for 8-12 hours or overnight. Note: I ferment dough with raw eggs for my sourdough brioche all the time without an issue. If this makes you uncomfortable, you can ferment the dough for four hours at room temperature and then refrigerate it overnight.

Step 3: The next day, preheat the oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Add baking soda, baking powder, and salt to the dough. Knead in the stand mixer or on a floured work surface for approximately five minutes until all the ingredients are well incorporated.

Step 4: Place the dough on a lightly floured work surface and use a rolling pin to roll it into a roughly 12×15-inch rectangle. It should be about 1/4-inch thick. You want the dough to be rolled evenly so that it bakes evenly.

Step 5: In a separate bowl, combine softened butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon. Stir until smooth. Spread the softened butter mixture evenly over the dough.

Step 6: Roll the dough up as tightly as you can, starting at the long end. When you get to the end, pinch the edge into the main roll to prevent leaking. Slice the rolls with a sharp knife, bench scraper, or thread. Alternatively, you can slice the rectangle of dough into 12 equal strips, then roll them up individually.

Step 7: Place the unbaked rolls into a greased 9×13 baking dish. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until the rolls are lightly browned and the dough is cooked through. Allow them to cool a bit before applying the icing.

Step 8: While the rolls bake, prepare the cream cheese icing. In a small saucepan over medium-low heat, add 6 ounces of cream cheese, 1/2 cup of heavy cream, 1/2 cup of maple syrup or honey, and 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract. Stir well. I use an immersion blender to get the icing really smooth. Pour over the warm cinnamon rolls and enjoy!

Tips
- Start the night (or up to 24 hours ahead) before you want to bake these sourdough cinnamon rolls, so the dough has a chance to ferment and build more flavor.
- The temperature of your kitchen will affect the fermentation. Find a warm place, such as inside the oven with the light on (heat off), on top of your fridge, or near some mild heat source.
- If you’re avoiding unfermented grains, use einkorn flour to dust the surface of the counter when rolling out the dough.
- I find that string or unflavored dental floss works best for slicing the cinnamon roll dough. A sharp knife also works, but is more likely to smush the rolls and lose some of the shape.
- Grease your baking dish generously or use parchment paper for no sticking.
- Keep the rolls spaced a bit apart so they have room to expand.
- This recipe has been edited to reflect changes made over the years of making this recipe. Some people had issues incorporating the eggs on the second day, so I changed this and started mixing them into the dough the night before. This works very well.
Recipe FAQs
Unfrosted cinnamon rolls can be covered and kept at room temperature for 2-3 days or frozen for several months. Store frosted cinnamon rolls in the refrigerator for up to four days. Let frozen rolls thaw and rise before baking.
Yes. Prepare the dough according to the directions. Form the rolls and place in a baking dish, wrap with plastic wrap, and place in the fridge for up to 12 hours or in the freezer for several months. You don’t want to leave the rolls in the fridge too long, or they may overproof. Allow to rest on the counter for two hours before baking if refrigerated, and overnight if baking them from frozen. Bake according to directions.
If you want to skip the long fermentation process, just use sourdough discard that has been fed recently in place of the active starter. Add all the dough ingredients and knead the dough until it becomes smooth, glossy, and passes the windowpane test. Follow the recipe from Step 4 on.
Yes. If allowed to rise too long, they will overproof and won’t hold their shape.
When making cinnamon rolls, avoid adding too much flour, overproofing the dough, using melted butter for the filling, overfilling the dough, and overbaking the rolls.
Baker’s Timeline:
You can make these or start them at any time. I like to start doughs at night time so they can rise all night. In the morning, they are ready to shape, boil, and bake.
Feed sourdough starter with flour and water.
Add all the ingredients to a stand mixer (minus the baking soda, baking powder, and salt) and knead until smooth and glossy. Cover tightly and ferment overnight.
Add baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Knead well until the dough is no longer sticky. Roll out the dough, prepare the filling, and spread. Form rolls, then bake for 20-25 minutes. Prepare and apply icing.
More Sourdough Recipes from the Farmhouse
- Long Fermented Biscuits
- Sourdough Peach Cobbler Recipe
- How To Make Sourdough Waffles
- Sourdough Chocolate Rolls
- Cinnamon Raisin Sourdough Bread
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love it if you could come back and give it 5 stars! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.

















It seems like I can’t get these to fully double in size for bulk rise. Never have this problem with my breads. Am I doing something wrong? I live in Florida so it’s warm.
This recipe doesn’t need to double because it uses baking powder and baking soda.
Ok so followed the recipe. Until bake time. I put a small layer of heavy cream in the bottom of the pan after putting the rolls in it. Then made cinnamon/brown sugar…sprinkled on top. Covered with foil, baked for 20 min. Uncover, baked till golden. They came out perfect! The icing, I did 8oz cream cheese, 2tbs butter, splash of heavy cream, vanilla and powdered sugar. Whisked and let sit until rolls were out of the oven and slightly cooled.
Amazing!
The dough was fine to work with, but the flavor was very underwhelming. Particularly the icing. My toddlers enjoyed them (which is really all that matters), but my husband and I found the flavor of the icing to be odd and not at all like the sweet and tangy traditional cream cheese frostings that we are used to having with cinnamon rolls.
I’m sorry you didn’t enjoy the icing!
I wanted to love this after all the work it was. My dough was pretty much like a rubber band. It was tough and elastic like. My stand mixer can’t handle heavy dough, so I had to knead by hand. I’m assuming this is where things went awry. While somewhat tasty, they were very dense.
After letting the dough rise for 8 hours can I put the bowl into the fridge and do the rest in the morning?
Yes, that’s fine.
I tried your blueberry muffins last night. Wonderful! Thank you.
Can you make in advance? Do I bake them and then freeze? Then rebake on the day I want to serve them?
Yes, I would bake them and then freeze them, without the icing. You can thaw them and warm them up in the microwave or the oven and then add icing.
will it turn out the same if I do a double recipe?
Yes, it will
Can you freeze this??
We are going camping and wanted to remake the cinnamon rolls then cook the next morning.
Yes, that should work! I recommend baking and then freezing them since they are leavened with baking soda and baking powder.
I made these yesterday and am pleased with how they turned out.
I had difficulty spreading the cinnamon sugar filling so some of them didn’t have any of that gooey filling.
I skipped the cream cheese frosting.
I had a hard time understanding at what point in the dough prep I’m supposed to use the window test so I kept adding water to rework the the first phase of the dough kneading because it kept breaking. In the end I gave up and left it to proof overnight as is.
In the morning when I added the baking powder and soda and salt and put it back to knead in the mixer it passed the window test. So it felt like a lot of work in step 1 but I think next time will go better.
I just gotta trouble shoot the cinnamon filling because it didn’t spread it was clumpy. Still I have gorgeous imperfect cinnamon rolls this week for my coffee that taste delish!
I just made these today, I cooked them in a baking pan, as I don’t have a cast iron pan to cook them in. I found that they were really cooked on the outside but a little undercooked inside. Do you know if I could cook these in a dutch oven with a lid on and get a more consistent baking?
I’ve not personally tried this, but I am sure it would work!
First time making these and they turned out PERFECTLY! I did a long cold ferment (2 days in the fridge to reduce gluten) and it was totally fine. I also used coconut sugar in place of brown sugar. Thank you so much for the recipe!