This Cinnamon Roll Cake Recipe skips the yeast and rising time for a fast, easy bake. Finish it with a quick cream cheese glaze and serve warm.

The Best Cinnamon Roll Cake Recipe
Cinnamon rolls are an iconic dessert, but they can be time-consuming. Waiting for the dough to rise twice, plus making the dough, filling, and glaze—it’s a lot.
While I spent months perfecting my Easy Cinnamon Roll Recipe (with no kneading, no mixer, and the quickest dough prep possible), it still takes a fair amount of time to get from start to cinnamon rolls on the table.
That’s why this Cinnamon Roll Cake recipe is the best:
- All the flavors you love from cinnamon rolls.
- No kneading, no rising, no mixer needed. We don’t even make the dough, thanks to a shortcut ingredient!
- This cake can be on the table in about 30 minutes. Seriously! The prep and bake time are both quick.
- It’s fun! This cake is a blast to assemble and even more fun to eat (obviously!).

The “Short-Cut”
So how do we finish this cake so quickly? With refrigerated buttermilk biscuits!
The biscuits are the perfect substitute for cinnamon roll dough, and no one will know you used a store-bought shortcut because this cake is just that good!
I like to grab a 4-pack of buttermilk biscuits to make either one large cinnamon roll cake or a couple of smaller ones. If there are leftovers, I use them for a breakfast favorite; Biscuits and Gravy!
Featured Comment
“Holy Cow!! This was DELICIOUS!!!! My family rated it a 20+ out of 10! Fantastic…and so easy. I don’t have a skillet, so just used an 8″ cake pan, and it worked perfectly. THANK YOU for the awesome recipe!”
– Kara
How To Make This Cinnamon Roll Cake Recipe
The full recipe is on the recipe card, but here’s a quick overview:
- Flatten each biscuit as thin as possible using a rolling pin or your hands.
- Dip the biscuit in melted butter, then in cinnamon-sugar.
- Roll the coated biscuit tightly into a cylinder and place it on the outer edge of the skillet or pie pan.
- Continue placing the biscuits in a spiral, seam side down, until they reach the center.
- While the Cinnamon Roll Cake bakes, whip up the glaze to spread over the warm cake!

What Pan To Use
This recipe is very forgiving. As long as you have plenty of butter, sugar, cinnamon, and biscuits, you can make the cake as big or small as you like.
I often make this cake in a small 6 to 8-inch cast iron skillet, but if I’m feeding others or feeling extra hungry, I use a 9-inch pie pan.
The bigger the pan, the longer the preparation takes, but you’ll be impressed by how quickly it comes together once the assembly line is set up.

Cinnamon Roll Cake Glaze Tips
- Set out the butter and cream cheese an hour before baking to reach room temperature. If they’re cold, the glaze may have unpleasant cream cheese chunks. To speed this up, try these quick methods for bringing butter and cream cheese to room temp.
- Salt and vanilla extract add essential flavor to the glaze. Even small amounts make a big difference!
- Slowly add powdered sugar to taste. More sugar makes the glaze sweeter and firmer; less keeps it tangier and softer. Adjust to your preference for this Cinnamon Roll Cake!

Storage
Cinnamon Roll Cake Recipe Storage
This cake is best enjoyed the same day it’s made, especially while warm. Like most homemade cinnamon rolls, this is particularly true with this cake because we’re using biscuits. The biscuits will harden and lose flavor the longer the cake sits out.
More Cinnamon Roll Favorites:
Desserts
Cinnamon Roll Cookie Recipe
Desserts
Cinnamon Roll Popcorn
Desserts
Cinnamon Roll Cheesecakes
Breakfast
Cinnamon Roll Monkey Bread

Cinnamon Roll Cake Recipe
Video
Equipment
- Pie pan or cake pan or skillet—really any size works! see note 1
Ingredients
- 2 7.5-ounce packages buttermilk biscuits see note 1
- 8 tablespoons unsalted butter melted
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon cinnamon
- 2 ounces cream cheese softened see note 1
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter softened
- 1/2 cup powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons milk I use whole milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Prepare Pan: Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease a pie pan, cake pan, or skillet with cooking spray.
- Flatten Biscuits: Remove biscuits from packaging. Flatten each with a rolling pin or your hands.
- Coat Biscuits: Dip each biscuit in melted butter, shake off excess, then coat in cinnamon sugar. Shake off excess again (see Note 2).
- Assemble Cake: Roll biscuits tightly and arrange in a spiral pattern in the prepared pan, starting at the outside edge and working inward.
- Bake: Bake for 20–25 minutes, adjusting for pan size. If edges brown too quickly, tent with foil.
- Make Glaze: Beat cream cheese and butter until smooth. Add powdered sugar, milk, vanilla, and salt. Beat until light and fluffy.
- Glaze Cake: Let cake cool 5–7 minutes. Spoon glaze over warm cake, letting it drip into crevices. Add more glaze once cooled slightly, if desired. Slice and serve warm.
Recipe Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.



















These are delicious!!!! We are making them for the 5th time since I pinned this! Right now my 7 year old is making them! Thanks
What size biscuits do you use? Regular or Grands?
Regular
OH my sweet freaking’ heavens.
Ok, I know I already commented on this, but I was just on Foodgawker, and looked at the most gawked recipes this month, and right there at the top, most views this month was this! Wahoo!! Congrats girl! So exciting. 🙂
I made the thing and the thing was perfect. It’s a fantastically delicious replacement to individual cinnamon rolls. Not to mention, this way I don’t feel quite so bad about eating so much… 🙂
Thanks for the wonderful recipe!
Can this be done with store bought unbaked cinnamon rolls as well?
I don’t see why not! Sounds like an even easier idea!!
I am a fellow blogger and wanted to do a post all about cooking in a cast iron skillet. I found your recipe and tried it this week and loved it! My family didn’t know that I “cheated” and used biscuits, and I appreciated not having to let dough rise! I’m mentioning my experience in this weeks blog and linking to your recipe. I hope others try it out and enjoy it as much as I did! Thanks!
Yay!! I am so glad you tried it and liked it! Thank you so much for your kind comment 🙂 And thanks for the link up Rebekah!
This is such a cool idea! I definitely have to try it. Thanks for sharing!
This looks both beautiful and delicious, and I’ll second everyone thanking you for saving us the rising time!
However, may I repeat Beth’s question from above because it looks like your reply might’ve applied to a different recipe:
Does this have to go into a skillet or could an 8-inch cake pan or even a 9-inch pie dish work, too?
Thank you! Can’t wait to try it.
Hey! It works best in a cake pan! 🙂
Thanks very much! I enjoy blowing my friends’ minds with new desserts. I’ll let you know if they swoon.
Haha! Love this comment! Can’t wait to hear the update I hope they do swoon 🙂
Considering this obvious display of genius, I have no problem crediting you as the “re-inventor of cinnamon rolls” 🙂 These look amazing!!
Haha! Thank you Michelle 🙂