Holiday traditions evolve, but some rituals remain beloved year after year. One such tradition is the classic Cookie Swap (also called a Cookie Exchange). It’s a joyful, time-saving way to share treats, connect with others, and build a variety of cookies without baking dozens of different recipes yourself.
The concept is straightforward: each guest brings several dozen homemade cookies. Guests sample each other’s cookies during the gathering, then build a box of assorted cookies to take home. In practice, a cookie swap gives you many different flavors for the effort of making a double batch of a single recipe—perfect for gifting or enjoying throughout the season.
- How to Host a Cookie Swap
- Make Ahead
- 20 Cookie Swap Recipes

How to Do a Cookie Swap: Gather friends before the holidays to bake, share, and swap cookies—fun, social, and time-saving.
How to Host a Cookie Swap
Below are practical tips to plan a successful cookie exchange for friends, neighbors, co-workers, or school groups. Keeping things organized and communicative will help the event run smoothly and ensure a wide variety of cookies.
1. Invite your guests
A group of about 8–12 people is ideal: large enough for variety, small enough to manage. Send invitations by email or printed card and include date, time, location, and clear expectations. Give as much advance notice as possible—holiday schedules fill fast—and pick a convenient time like a Sunday afternoon or an early weeknight.
Tell guests what to bring and set a baseline quantity, such as 2–3 dozen cookies per person. Consider a first-claim system for specific cookie types so you avoid duplicates and encourage variety.

2. Create variety
Use a shared signup (a simple spreadsheet or event app) so guests can list their cookie choices. Ask everyone to avoid duplicating a previously chosen recipe. Set a deadline for sign-ups so bakers can finalize recipes and shop without stress. This helps ensure a wide, balanced selection on the day of the swap.
3. Set rules for allergies and ingredients
State upfront whether the event will be nut-free, gluten-free, or have other dietary parameters. If you won’t screen recipes, let people know so they can decide whether to attend. Request that each baker bring a printed recipe card or a clear ingredient list for their cookies. This helps guests with allergies and makes it easy for people to recreate favorites after the party.

4. Serving platters and to-go containers
Decide whether guests should bring serving platters and containers or if you’ll supply them. Even when asking guests to bring containers, keep extras on hand for those who forget or for an abundance of cookies. Using uniform containers for the swap portion can keep portions fair.
Consider presenting a sampling of each baker’s cookies and reserving the rest for assembly at the end of the party. Labels that include cookie names and ingredients are helpful—ask guests to submit names and ingredient lists ahead of time or to bring cards to place next to their cookies.
5. Offer snacks and drinks
Complement the cookie table with savory options so people can balance their palate: vegetables and dips, small sandwiches, a cheese or charcuterie board, or other finger foods. Include non-sweet options to prevent everyone from filling up on cookies and to keep the event feeling like a full gathering.

Create a simple drinks station with wine or beer, sparkling water, and nonalcoholic options. Warm beverages—mulled cider, hot chocolate, tea, or coffee—are a cozy addition in cooler months and easy for guests to serve themselves.
6. Share recipes
Encourage guests to share recipes electronically—via a shared document or group message—so everyone can access the recipes after the event. Many invitation and signup tools also allow you to collect and share recipes in one place.
Make Ahead
Do as much prep as you can beforehand. Set up plates, utensils, napkins, and the drinks bar in advance. If helpful, bake and freeze your own cookies ahead of time so you can focus on hosting. The best cookie swaps are relaxed: guests celebrate, share recipes, and go home with a variety of treats—and less stress during the holidays.
20 Cookie Swap Recipes

Chewy Molasses Cookies

Snickerdoodles

Mexican Hot Chocolate Cookies

Homemade Chewy Gingersnaps

Soft Chocolate Pumpkin Cookies

Gingerbread Cookies

No-Bake Haystack Cookie

Chocolate, Peanut, and Pretzel No-Bake Haystack Cookies

S’Mores Haystack Cookies

Peppermint Bark Haystack Cookies

Big Chewy Brownie Cookies with Dried Cherries and White Chocolate Chips

My Favorite Oatmeal Cookies

Fractaled Chocolate Chunk Peanut Cookies

Best Soft Chewy Sugar Cookies

Nut-Free Snowball Cookies

No-Bake Buckeye Balls

Soft Pumpkin Cookies

Kitchen Sink Cookies

Old-Fashioned Peanut Butter Cookies
