These Oatmeal Fig Cookies are made with a super chewy oatmeal cookie base bursting with crunchy pecans and sweet delicious dried figs. They’re full of amazing texture and flavor, and really are the best oatmeal cookies you will ever make!

While not your traditional oatmeal raisin cookies, I dare say that these oatmeal fig cookies are even better! They have crispy edges and are extremely chewy. If you aren’t a big fan of oatmeal cookies like I used to be, these will surely change your mind.
These chewy oatmeal fig cookies are adapted from Jessica Gavin’s Chewy Cranberry Oatmeal Cookies from Jessica’s cookbook. They are made with all brown sugar which contributes to their delicious chewiness.
Table of Contents
Why you’ll love this recipe
- This fig cookie recipe is very easy to make, whether you have a stand mixer or not.
- The delicious cookies offer tons of flavor and texture: chewy, crunchy, crispy, nutty and with a hint of cinnamon.
- The recipe is versatile and you can make many different variations using different nuts and dried fruits, like these mango cookies or these pistachio cranberry cookies.
- Even if you’re not a fan of oatmeal raisin cookies, you may find yourself a convert after tasting these tasty chewy treats.
Ingredients and substitutions
As always, you’ll find the complete list of ingredients and quantities in the recipe card at the end of this post. Below are some notes and substitution tips:

- Butter – butter is obviously a good place to start when making cookies. I use unsalted butter in this recipe, it allows you to control the amount of salt added. If you need to, you can use salted butter, simply reduce the added salt by at least half.
- Sugar – brown sugar is used in these oatmeal cookies to give them their extreme chewiness. I use light brown sugar since it is a pantry stable for me. You can turn up the chewiness with dark brown sugar, or turn it down by substituting part granulated sugar.
- Egg – just one whole egg is used to bind everything together.
- Vanilla – pure vanilla extract enhances the flavor of these cookies and adds complexity.
- Flour – plain ole all-purpose flour will work for this recipe.
- Leavening agents – both baking powder and baking soda are used here. Baking soda will be activated by the acidity in brown sugar and baking powder will give additional lift in the oven.
- Salt – I use kosher salt for all of my recipes. If you’re using table salt, you will want to reduce the amount by half.
- Cinnamon – just a little bit of cinnamon is added in the cookie dough for a bit of extra complexity. You can turn it up or down depending on your preference. Readers have also tried other spices as well, like clove.
- Pecans – add a nutty flavor and a crunchy texture to these oatmeal fig cookies. Try walnuts if you don’t have pecans.
- Dried figs – as I mentioned earlier, instead of the classic raisins, I use dried figs in these oatmeal cookies. If you don’t have dried figs or don’t want to use figs, any dried fruits would work here. If you want to use fresh or frozen figs, I’ve compiled notes from readers who have tried it below in the FAQs section.
- Old fashioned rolled oats – is an obvious must for oatmeal cookies. Old-fashioned rolled oats will give that perfect chewiness and an oaty flavor to these fig cookies. I don’t recommend using quick cooking oats or steel cut oats as they will result in different texture. Quick cooking oats tend to be mushier and will likely disintegrate into the cookies without leaving a whole lot of texture while steel cut oats take longer to cook and will likely result in a much chewier texture.
Tools you may need
- A stand mixer or electric hand mixer will be handy to help you make the cookie dough. However, it is possible to make these cookies by hand.
- A kitchen scale will be useful for exact measurements.
- A large cookie scoop to divide the dough evenly.
How to make oatmeal fig cookies
The following instructions, step-by-step photos, and tips are here to help you visualize how to make the recipe. You can always skip straight to the printable recipe card at the end of this post.
Cream together softened butter and brown sugar for 2 minutes until the mixture is light and fluffy.

Add egg and vanilla, and continue to beat for another 2 minutes until thoroughly combined and creamy.

Sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon and stir in the salt. Add the flour mixture to the wet ingredient mixture and stir to form the cookie dough.

Add pecans, dried figs and rolled oats to the cookie dough and stir until evenly distributed.

Divide the cookie dough with a large (¼ cup) cookie scoop. Chill in the refrigerator and bake six cookies to a tray and one tray at a time.

Baker’s tips
- Chilling is recommended – while this cookie dough can be baked right away without needing to chill first, I recommend keeping the dough refrigerated at least while the oven is preheating or longer if you have time. Allowing the dough to rest is essential to flavor development and helping the cookies spread less in the oven.
- Don’t crowd the oven – always bake one tray at a time to ensure even cooking, especially if you’re baking in a conventional oven (not convection). This will give space for the hot air to circulate in the oven, minimizing hot spots.
- Rotating the baking sheet – while not 100% necessary, if you know your oven has hot spots, rotating the tray ⅔ of the way through baking will ensure more even browning of the cookies.
- Making the perfect oatmeal cookies – these cookies will spread, to make them round like these photos, you can use a spatula or a large round cookie cutter to reshape them right when they come out of the oven.
- Variations – feel free to use different dried fruits, nuts and spices to change up the flavors with the season or to your liking.
Storage
As with all homemade cookies, these oatmeal fig cookies taste best within 1 – 2 days. But they can be kept in an airtight container at room temperature for 3 – 5 days. To prevent the cookies from drying out, you can store a slice of bread in the container with the cookies.
You can freeze the baked cookies for up to 3 months, but I prefer freezing the cookie dough instead. This way you can have warm freshly baked cookies anytime! Frozen cookie dough will last up to 6 months.

FAQs
I used Mission figs in these dried fig cookies but Turkish figs would work too.
I have not made these with fresh figs, though I suspect they may add too much moisture to the cookie dough. Some readers have come back to share their results using fresh figs. Here are their notes:
One reader substituted 1 cup of finely chopped fresh figs successfully. However, she also used Krusteaz gluten free flour blend, vegan butter and a flax egg. I suspected the gluten free flour substitution may have helped with the additional moisture.
Another reader cooked the fresh figs to reduce the water and caramelizing the sugar in the process. She used 1 cup of cooked figs with 1 stick of butter. Note that this is less butter than what the recipe called for, reducing the total amount of liquid ingredients.
You could also try to dry the figs yourself if you have a dehydrator, but I understand conventional ovens may not have a low enough setting for drying fruits and it would also take a very long time.
Along the same line with fresh figs, I think frozen figs will add even more moisture since frozen fruits release even more water when thawed. If you want to use frozen figs, I think cooking it down to reduce the water and making thick jam could work. Though you may still need to make some other modifications.
A stand mixer or an electric hand mixer will make the process easier but you can certainly make these oatmeal fig cookies by hand. The most labor intensive process is beating the wet ingredients until the mixture is well aerated.
Scoop the cookie dough into balls and freeze them solid on a baking tray first, then store them in a freezer bag, this way they won’t stick together.
You can bake the cookie dough straight from frozen, simply increase baking time by 1 minute.
Note that frozen dough balls will not spread as much. When you rotate the baking tray at the 10-minute mark, you may see that some of the dough balls haven’t spread at all. Don’t worry, by the end of the 16 minutes, they should spread out and flatten into cookies.
You can also thaw the dough first on the baking tray before putting them into the oven if you want, though not necessary.

More bakery style cookies
- Hawaiian Kitchen Sink Cookies
- Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Pecan Cookies
- Biscoff Butter Cookies
- Milk Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Oreo Chocolate Chip Cookies
Hungry for more?
Oatmeal Fig Cookies

Equipment
Ingredients
- 6 oz unsalted butter, room temperature, 170 g
- 1 ½ cup light brown sugar, 274 g, lightly packed
- 1 large egg
- 1 ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 ¼ cup all-purpose flour, 169 g
- ¾ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 cup pecans, roasted and chopped, 114 g
- 1 cup chopped dried figs, 146 g
- 1 ¼ cup old fashioned rolled oats, 100 g
Instructions
- Toast the pecans in a skillet over medium heat for a few minutes until slightly toasty and fragrant. Roughly chop the nuts and add to a medium mixing bowl along with the rolled oats, and chopped dried figs. Stir together and set aside.
- In a small mixing bowl, sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and cinnamon. Stir in the salt, and mix until evenly distributed. Set aside.
- In a large mixing bowl or in the bowl of your stand mixer, add softened butter and brown sugar, beat with the paddle attachment on medium speed for 2 minutes until light and fluffy. Add egg and vanilla extract, and continue beating until thoroughly combined and creamy, another 2 minutes.
- Lower the mixer speed to stir and slowly add the flour mixture, mix until just combined. Add the oat mixture and stir until evenly distributed. Give the mixture a final stir with a spatula, scraping the side and bottom of the bowl to ensure even mixing.
- Use a large (4 tablespoons) ice cream scoop to divide the dough into 16 dough balls. Refrigerate for 30 minutes to an hour, or at the very least while the oven is preheating.
- Preheat the oven to 350°F.
- Place 6 cookie dough balls on a lined baking sheet about 2” apart, and bake one tray at a time for 15 minutes in the middle of the oven until the edges are golden brown but the center is still under-baked. Rotate the baking sheet at the 10 minute mark.
- Remove the baking sheet from the oven and immediately use a large round cookie cutter or a spatula to gather or push in the uneven edges to make the cookies rounder and more evenly shaped. This step is optional but it makes the cookies prettier since they do spread unevenly in the oven.
- Let the hot baking sheet cool on a wire rack for 5 – 10 minutes. Then remove the cookies from the baking sheet and place them on another wire rack to cool completely.
Notes
- Note that in this recipe softened butter is used, and not melted butter.
- Make sure to use old-fashioned rolled oats and not quick cooking oats or steel cut oats.
- Cookie dough can be kept in the fridge for 3 – 5 days or in the freezer for up to 6 months.
- Frozen cookie dough can be baked straight from the freezer, add 1 minute to the bake time.
- Store baked cookies at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 5 days along with a slice of sandwich bread to keep the cookies moist.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I made these using fig preserves instead of dried figs. I had way to many jars of preserves and was looking for a way to use them (besides fig bars) Our tree was LOADED this year! The cookies turned out great !! (My preserves are really thick. I had added some ginger to the jars when I made it, and it went well with the cinnamon that the recipe calls for. Keeper for sure!!
Thank you, Dawn! Glad to hear it works well with your homemade fig preserves, sounds delicious!
Can you make the cookies smaller and if so how to change baking time?
Yes, you can make them smaller, simply decrease baking time. Depending on how small you make them, you can do 2 tablespoon or 3 tablespoon of dough, and bake for 11-12 mins or 12-13 mins respectively. The key is to watch for golden brown edges and slightly undercooked center. Hope this helps. Let me know if you have any other questions.
This is a great tasting cookie. As I put the cookies into the oven I realized I forgot the oatmeal!! I was too late to make any changes so I went ahead and baked them. They are delicious, I can’t wait to make them with oatmeal! Ha Ha (the one change I did make was to use only one cup of sugar. )
Recipe is a keeper! I had an abundance of fresh figs and used fresh diced.
Some of us do not like nuts so we left those out. we did use choc chips. I scooped the dough by hefty tablespoons onto parchment lined baking tray and chilled for an hour. Baked for 20 min and the cookies were well formed, very soft but held their shape. I made a 2nd batch with dried cranberries and did not chill the dough. Again, dropped by tablespoons onto parchment lined baking tray and baked for 20 min, Turned out more raised than the fresh fig batch and were delicious!
The fresh figs have more water so that’s why they spread a bit more than the dried cranberries version. But I’m glad both versions worked out well and that you enjoyed this recipe 🙂
My cookies did not hold form. They look like a pile of cooked ingredients. Probably because I used Bluebonnet in place of butter. Cosmetics a flunk, flavor A+
Awe I’m sorry to hear that, Lorraine, glad it still tastes good, such a bummer tho!
We have figs coming out the ying yang and I was nervous to try this recipe with fresh figs, but I did and they were delicious!! Huge hit. Thanks!
Good to know Kailie, did you make any of the modifications recommended by other readers in FAQs section or did you do anything differently? It would be helpful to others if you could share! 🙂
I had 5 lbs of dried figs and not enough ways to use them. Made these with walnuts instead of pecans.. they are incredibly delicious.
So glad to hear you enjoyed these cookies 🙂
QUESTION??? I don’t own a stand mixer…can I make these cookies without one?
Do you have an electric hand mixer? Just use it with a mixing bowl, it should do the job. If not you’ll need to beat the butter by hand, more work but entirely possible.
I have a fig tree so have a bag of figs in the freezer. Can I use frozen figs instead of dried?
Hi Rebecca, I think frozen figs would add too much moisture to these cookies as frozen fruits tend to release a lot more liquid when thawed. Some readers have made these with fresh figs so you could try if you use fresh figs from your tree instead of frozen ones. However, I have never made these with fresh or frozen figs and can’t guarantee the results. Either way, I think both fresh and frozen figs will add additional moisture not accounted for in the cookie dough, additional flour and chopped nuts may help balance it out. Hope this helps, and if you do end up making it come back and let me know how it turns out.
I love fresh figs and am not a fan of sweets or desserts. Just made these with a combination of almond and brown rice flour. Added a few organic unsweetened 100% cacao dark chocolate chips and BEYOND DELICIOUS!!!
I also used organic dark brown sugar. 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Thanks Carrie! Glad to hear the substitutions work out well.
Hello!! I see the darker mission figs are what seems to be sweeter and used for baking, but I only have the lighter Turkish figs, will the cookies be as good with these?
You should be able to use those too, I’ve used them before, but you are right the mission figs are the more common ones. How do he lighter one taste? As long as you like them and they taste good, they would be good in these cookies. Just make sure you actually enjoy eating them as is before using them in baking.