Easy Royal Icing
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With millions of page views and more than one hundred 5-star reviews since 2020, this easy royal icing recipe has been so many people’s solution to making royal icing without meringue powder. My trusted easy royal icing recipe for sugar cookies will totally change the way you think about royal icing. It comes together super quick and you don’t even need a mixer! Best of all, this is royal icing is made without meringue powder.

Many years ago, when I started learning how to bake from scratch, I began with a cake decorating class.
It was in that class I learned how to, first and foremost, decorate a cake with simple buttercream, but it’s also where my baking skills blossomed and I learned many more crucial skills surrounding cake decorating.
Believe it or not, I brought a cake I made from a box to my second cake decorating class. But by the third class, I had tried my hand at doing it from scratch, and I believe that’s where my passion for baking was born.
It was my science away from science, when science was still my full time job, and it was interesting, fun, therapeutic, and something that made me really proud.

When I started taking the second set of classes which covered decorating cakes a little more in depth, I learned all about traditional royal icing, which in the grand scheme of cake decorating is fairly simple, but to a beginner can be a little intimidating.
WHAT IS TRADITIONAL ROYAL ICING?
Traditional royal icing consists of powdered sugar, water, and meringue powder, which is simply an egg white substitute made primarily of dehydrated egg whites and stabilizers.

It can be finicky and hard to navigate at first, and it requires the use of a mixer. It is absolutely perfect for piping intricate royal icing flowers and other components to cakes and cupcakes, but when I started working with cut-out sugar cookies, I didn’t love the extra work that went into traditional royal icing.
“We made this to decorate shortbread Christmas cookies this year. We divided it into three bowls & colored it. Super simple, worked great, and tasted good.”
Melissa, reader
Though cut-out sugar cookies aren’t all that difficult, they can take up some time between rolling, baking, cooling, and drying (I prefer to decorate day-old cookies, personally).
I longed for a simple and easy cookie icing that was made without meringue powder and didn’t require me to get out my mixer again.
Did you also know that the enemy of traditional royal icing is grease? So ensuring all of your equipment is completely spotless is one more thing to think about and prepare for. Not into it for my cookies.
And thus my easy royal icing recipe was born!
Once I made myself this easy recipe for decorating my sugar cookies, I’ve never looked back.
And I’m sharing all my tips and tricks with you here so that you, too, can have the best icing to decorate your next batch of sugar cookies.

This is also a great gingerbread house icing recipe that’s easy and can involve the kiddos. AND! It’s an easy Christmas cookie icing which means more time for baking and less time for standing over the mixer.

Gingerbread house photo courtesy of Renee of Kudos Kitchen By Renee
INGREDIENTS FOR THIS EASY ROYAL ICING RECIPE
You only need a few ingredients for this recipe, and you may already have them all on hand.
For this quick royal icing, you will need:
• light corn syrup
• powdered sugar
• vanilla extract
• warm water (hardly an “ingredient!”)

Because this royal icing is made with corn syrup, it’s not ideal for piping flowers and intricate pieces to adorn your cakes and cupcakes. But it is an ideal royal icing recipe for cookies because it outlines and floods (fills in) quite easily with just a simple addition of water.
HOW TO MAKE EASY ROYAL ICING
If you haven’t already seen the video floating around on this post, the video shows you exactly how to make this royal icing. It really is as simple as stirring together the ingredients, but there is one teeny tiny catch…
You’ll need to test the viscosity of the icing before it’s ready to use.
Now, don’t let that terminology scare you. This simply means you’re going to stir your royal icing up, drip some of it right back into the bowl, and then count to see how long it takes the drip to dissipate.
I aim for 12 seconds. Which I think is perfect for making a general outline that will seamlessly blend with your flood (the icing you use to fill in).
You can see in the video that I like to make a sort of squiggle so I can see a large area of dissipating icing.
If you’re looking for more of a traditional outline royal icing that you want to allow to dry before you fill it in, aim for 14-15 seconds. This is also the viscosity you’d want for piping details on top of already dried icing.

I will, however, warn you that at the 14-15 second range, it becomes quite difficult to press through a piping tip, and I find it works best to keep a warm compress or cup of warm water close by to loosen up the corn syrup as needed, especially in colder weather.

The best part about this icing is that since you don’t need a mixer, if the viscosity is wrong, dump it back into the bowl, add more water to thin it out or more powdered sugar to thicken it up. No big.
See? Easy!
“The icing was so easy to make thanks for the recipe. I have always been so scared to try it but you made it simple so thanks for that.”
Sheri, reader
WHAT ARE THE BEST TOOLS FOR PIPING ROYAL ICING?
When it comes to actually using this royal icing, I tend to use decorating bottles for my flood icing, but I always run the risk of the icing getting low and an air bubble blasting through the tip and ruining my hard work. So sad!!
I find it best to use piping bags, either disposable or reusable, fitted with Wilton tips #2 or #3.
You can also use larger tips like a 1A if you’re using it for something like a gingerbread house and you need a little more volume in your squeezes.
And, for coloring royal icing (and any icing or frosting, really), I always always always recommend gel colors. My favorite are AmeriColor and they are seriously the best.

(AmeriColor gel colors pictured here with ingredients to make my rainbow cake)
They won’t water down the icing you worked so hard to get juuuust to the right consistency, and the color selection is huge and gorgeous. Find them in a 12 pack or a 50 pack (the one I have!).
So there you have it. My super easy and quick royal icing that doesn’t require much work for you. It’s reliable, it’s stable, it actually tastes good, and it’s the perfect way to decorate any and all of your cookies, not just ones that you roll and cut out.
Truly, it is the best royal icing recipe I know that isn’t the traditional.
I’ve also used this royal icing to decorate things like bundt cakes, when I want to make a royal icing drip cake. The viscosity of this icing makes a gorgeous drip!

Beautiful royal icing drip cake courtesy of Lindsay from The Live-In Kitchen

I hope you’ll give my simple royal icing recipe a try and I can’t wait to see all your beautiful cookies!

Here’s a list of all of my roll-out/cut-out cookies this royal icing goes great with:
•easy cut-out sugar cookies
•funfetti cut-out sugar cookies (pictured above this list)
•spiced gingerbread cut-out cookies
•pumpkin spice cut-out sugar cookies
•peppermint cut-out cookies
•chocolate cut-out sugar cookies
EASY ROYAL ICING RECIPE FAQS
More Favorites from Fresh April Flours
Easy Royal Icing Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 and ½ cup (180g) powdered sugar
- 2 Tablespoons (30mL) warm water
- ½ Tablespoon (10g) light corn syrup
- ⅛ teaspoon vanilla or almond extract
Instructions
- Place powdered sugar in a medium bowl and set aside.1 and ½ cup (180g) powdered sugar
- In a small bowl, combine warm water, light corn syrup, and extract. Stir until corn syrup is dissolved.2 Tablespoons (30mL) warm water, ½ Tablespoon (10g) light corn syrup, ⅛ teaspoon vanilla or almond extract
- Add sugar water to powdered sugar and stir until completely combined. Mixture will be thick. The consistency you're looking for is a slowly dripping icing that disappears into the bowl within about 12 seconds. Add water by drop if you think it's too thick. If it becomes too thin, add more powdered sugar by the teaspoon. Use immediately.
- If you need to wait to use your icing: cover tightly, and use2 within 1 day. You will need to stir it up again and possibly add more water before using. Re-test the consistency before using.
Video
Notes
- What do to with royal icing: this easy royal icing recipe is also perfect for gingerbread houses and royal icing drip cakes.
- Tools for decorating: I prefer to use decorating bottles for my flood icing, but I always run the risk of the icing getting low and an air bubble blasting through the tip and ruining my hard work. That said, I find it best to use piping bags, either disposable or reusable, fitted with Wilton tips #2 or #3. You can also use larger tips like a 1A if you’re using it for something like a gingerbread house and you need a little more volume in your squeezes.
Nutrition Disclosure
All nutritional values are approximate and provided to the reader as a courtesy. Changing ingredients and/or quantities will alter the estimated nutritional calculations.
Brilliant! I use this for all my sugar cookie decorating now!!
Awesome, Riley! Thank you 🙂
The best icing recipe I’ve tried thus far!
I love hearing that, Puja!
The easiest icing ever
Wow, love that, Patricia!
Turns out really well and it very tasty.
Thanks so much, Sara!
Fantastic recipe! Very easy to make and delicious.
Thanks for trusting my recipe, Savannah!
Easy and quick to make. Came out perfectly the first time
Thanks so much, Verushka!
Amazing, very easy, and delicious!
Thanks so much, Jennifer!
Icing turned out good, got a little dry during but I made it work and definitely stayed fresh on the cookies for the days following.
Thanks for letting me know, Becca!
Made for my moms birthday, worked perfectly.
So glad to hear that, Lizzy!
recipe=good
my decorating skills=bad
Hahahaha, totally fair. You’ll get there! Thanks so much!
How long do I have to wait until icing is dry enough to stack cookies?
Hey, Lisa– I would make sure they’ve dried at least 12 hours and maybe even 24. They may appear set on the surface, but you want to make sure they’re all the way set through to the point of contact with the cookie to prevent any cracking or mashing of icing.
Hi can I use golden syrup instead of corn syrup?
Hey, Fathima– I have never worked with golden syrup, but if it’s equivalent to corn syrup, then I say try it and let me know, please!
YOU GUYS!… this stuff is AMAZING!!! Thank you, best recipe ever!
Thanks so much, Shae!
Could you use milk instead of water? also…does it decorate well as far as after flood layer dries going back and decorating on top?! Thanks so much!
Hey, Rachel– I have never used milk, and yes, it would work just fine, but it wouldn’t be shelf stable since it has uncooked dairy. And yes, it does work nicely with flooding and drying and going back over. Enjoy!
I have not yet tried this recipe, that being said I am looking forward to giving it a try. I have a question are you able to decorate on top of it, roses, faces, and drawings etc. You mentioned it might bleed, so it will need to dry totally and hard to be able to stack? Would love to find a easier way to make RI. thanks for sharing
Hey, Vicky– YES, you can decorate on top of this royal icing. I have only had bleeding in more humid weather and if I don’t let the icing dry REALLY REALLY well before putting another color next to/on it. Let me know how it goes!
thank you for replying! I look forward to giving it a try
Great recipe! I used almond extract! I added edible images and they were perfect.
Awesome, Stephanie! Thank you!
The icing was so easy to make thanks for the recipe. I have always been so scared to try it but you made it simple so thanks for that.
I’m so happy to hear that. Thank you, Sheri!
Such a simple, yet effective royal icing recipe! Turns out beautiful!! Also such an easy to follow recipe!
Thanks so much, Lacie! I’m so glad you enjoyed the recipe.
This recipe sounds great. I’ve never made royal icing because of the egg content. I can’t get corn syrup where I live. Do you think I could substitute it with liquid glucose?
Hey, Joanne– YES, you can use liquid glucose, but it has a much lower water content than corn syrup, so you’ll need to adjust a bit. Start with a 1:1 sub, then add a bit more water about 1/8 teaspoon at a time to get the right consistency. Let me know how it turns out!
Hi was wondering if you have ever had cookies change color like I did black bats for Halloween and the black looked faded in spots?
Hey, Brenda– personally, no. But black is a tough color since it is SO dark and requires so much die to be a true black color.