The best way to finish soft sugar cookies is with sweet, colorful icing and playful decorations. This sugar cookie icing uses just a few simple ingredients and adapts easily to countless colors and styles so your cookies can look as good as they taste.

Why this recipe
Main ingredients: powdered sugar, light corn syrup, clear vanilla flavoring, almond extract, milk, gel food coloring (optional).
Quick steps: Whisk powdered sugar, corn syrup, extracts, and milk until smooth; divide and color the icing; pipe or spread onto cookies; allow to dry.
Total time and yield: About 12 hours total (including setting time); enough to cover roughly 24 standard sugar cookies, depending on how thick you ice them.
Why this recipe: The addition of almond extract alongside vanilla gives this icing a subtle, layered flavor that lifts the sweetness without overpowering the cookie. It sets with a light shine and a smooth finish, making decorating easy and attractive.
Ingredients for sugar cookie icing

You’ll need:
- 2¼ cups powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons light corn syrup
- ½ teaspoon clear vanilla flavoring (or vanilla extract)
- ½ teaspoon almond extract
- 2–3 tablespoons milk
- Gel food coloring (optional; use gel only)
Pro tip
Use gel food coloring only. Liquid color will dilute the icing and prevent it from setting properly.
Substitutions and additions
Vanilla flavoring: Clear vanilla flavoring is not identical to vanilla extract, but either works fine.
Food coloring: Gel colors work best and let you create any palette you like, from bright to pastel.
How to make sugar cookie icing
Our recipe developer says
This icing is easy to double. One batch yields about ¾ cup of icing, so scale quantities based on how many cookies you plan to decorate.
Step one: In a medium bowl, stir together the powdered sugar, light corn syrup, clear vanilla, almond extract, and 2 tablespoons of milk. Stir until smooth and lump-free. If the icing is too thick, add the remaining tablespoon of milk a little at a time; if too thin, add more powdered sugar until you reach the desired consistency.

Pro tip
If your icing is too runny, add a bit more powdered sugar. If it’s too thick, add a drop or two of milk until it flows smoothly.
Step two: Divide the icing evenly into small bowls—one bowl per color. Add 3–5 drops of gel food coloring to each bowl and mix until the color is even. Adjust the number of drops for deeper or lighter shades.

Step three: Transfer each color to a piping bag, quart-size zip-top bag (snip a tiny corner), or squeeze bottle. Pipe outlines first if desired; then flood the centers. Let the decorated cookies sit at room temperature for 12–24 hours so the icing can fully set and harden.
Pro tip
You can use small squeeze bottles instead of piping bags for more control when flooding cookies.

Ways to serve this sugar cookie icing recipe
This icing is ideal for holiday cookies, party favors, school events, and everyday baking. Use it on themed cookie shapes for Christmas, Valentine’s Day, patriotic holidays, birthdays, or any celebration. After flooding and allowing the icing to set, add sprinkles, sanding sugar, or edible shimmer while the icing is still slightly tacky to secure the decorations.
The neutral but enhanced flavor from the almond extract keeps the icing tasty without overpowering the cookie, so it pairs well with a range of sugar cookie recipes.
How to store this sugar cookie icing
Make ahead: The icing can be prepared in advance and kept in an airtight container. This saves time during busy baking sessions.
In the fridge: Store airtight for up to three days. Bring to room temperature and stir before using to restore a smooth texture.
In the freezer: Freeze in a freezer-safe container for up to one month. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then bring to room temperature and stir well before use.
Reconditioning: If the icing has thickened after storage, warm it briefly in the microwave in 5-second intervals, stirring between bursts, until it reaches the right consistency.

Why this is the best sugar cookie icing
This icing offers flexibility in color and consistency while remaining simple to make. The almond and vanilla flavors add subtle depth, and the gel colors deliver bright, stable hues without thinning the icing. It dries to a clean, glossy finish, making detailed decorating straightforward and professional-looking.
Because it’s easy to scale, tweak, and store, it’s a reliable go-to recipe for cookie decorating any time of year.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Freeze fully dried iced cookies for up to three months. Stack carefully with layers of parchment between cookies.
For outlining use thicker icing; for flooding use a slightly thinner consistency so it flows smoothly. Adjust with powdered sugar or milk until you reach the desired texture.
Outline the cookie with thicker icing using a piping bag. After the outline sets (about 10 minutes), flood the interior with thinner icing and smooth as needed.
Powdered sugar helps the icing set. Leave iced cookies at room temperature for several hours to allow the surface to harden.
Royal icing typically includes egg whites (or meringue powder) and dries very hard; decorating icing like this recipe uses powdered sugar, liquid, and corn syrup for a glossy finish and slightly softer set.
Glossy and smooth, this icing sets with a clean finish and makes decorating simple. Keep gel colors and squeeze bottles or piping bags on hand to make decorating faster and more precise.
More recipes you’ll love
- Minion Sugar Cookies
- Easy Gingerbread Snowman Sugar Cookies
- Swig Sugar Cookies
- Halloween Sugar Cookies
Get recipes on Pinterest
Follow Us

Get recipes on Facebook
Follow Us
