Pecan Pie Bars are one of the best pecan recipes you’ll try and they are easier than pie. It’s a cross between a classic Pecan Pie and a cookie.
Loaded with pecans in a homemade caramel sauce filling and baked over a shortbread crust, these pecan squares are a crowd-pleasing, easy dessert. Add these to your holiday cookie platter!

This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.
We love dessert casseroles from Strawberry Pretzel Salad to Classic Tiramisu and ofcourse Baklava. If you are looking for a crowd-pleasing party or potluck dessert that fits into a 9×13 casserole, this Pecan Pie Bars recipe is a must-try!
Pecan Pie Squares Video
Watch Natasha make these Pecan Pie Bars. You will be surprised at how easy it is. We will never stop loving this Pecan dessert. Now go forth and bake!
Easy Pecan Pie Bars Recipe
The first time I tried this was at a wedding in Washington. My husband’s cousin’s wife, Tanya, made them for the dessert buffet and after trying them, I just knew I had to recreate them.
I made a batch of these and sent some home with my sister. Her words exactly – “that’s the best pecan recipe I’ve ever tried!” She was smitten. These pecan bars have that effect on people. Here’s why you’ll love this recipe.
- Amazing Texture – Pecan Pie Bars are gooey, chewy, and crunchy with a soft caramel filling that doesn’t get stuck to your teeth.
- Quality Ingredients – This recipe uses all-natural ingredients (no corn syrup).
- Big Batch – This recipe fills a 9×13 casserole dish and you can cut anywhere from 16 to 28 pieces which is great for holiday parties and feeding a crowd.

Ingredients for Pecan Pie Bars
These have just the right balance of textures and flavors, and are so satisfying. The ingredients are simple and consist of the crust and the filling.
For the Crust:
- All-purpose flour – creates the perfect sturdy base for the crust. I recommend unbleached, organic flour if you can get your hands on it.
- Powdered sugar – lightly sweetens the crust (most of the sweetness comes from the caramel topping).
- Salt – fine sea salt balances the sweetness
- Butter – use unsalted, cold butter which creates a rich buttery crust
For the Pecan Filling:
- Light Brown Sugar – has molasses which adds rich color and flavor to the caramel
- Honey – creates a soft caramel base
- Unsalted butter – adds richness to the caramel and buttery flavor
- Heavy whipping cream – make sure to use HEAVY cream which has a higher fat content to help the filling thicken up properly
- Salt – we use a bit of fine sea salt to balance the sweetness
- Vanilla extract – we recommend homemade vanilla extract for the best flavor.
- Pecans – coarsely chopped pecans add great crunch and texture to the filling

Pro Tip: If you don’t have pecans on hand or have an allergy, you can substitute pecans with walnuts or cashews which have a similar crunchy and chewy texture.
How to Make a Shortbread Crust
You can use either a food processor or a bowl and pastry cutter to make the crust. You want the butter to cut into the flour until it looks like a coarse meal with some pea-sized crumbs forming.
Press the crumbs into a parchment-lined 13×9 baking pan and press the crumbs evenly into the bottom then bake at 350˚F until set and lightly golden at the edges. Transfer to a parchment-lined

Pro Tip: Lining the pan will make it much easier to lift the bars out of the pan and serve. Once it has cooled, I transfer it to a cutting board and cut into squares or bars.
How to Make Pecan Pie Bars
- Prep – preheat the oven to 350˚F and coarsley chop the nuts if they aren’t pre-chopped.
- Prepare the crust – see instructions above. While crust is baking, I make the filling.
- Make the Caramel – In a large saucepan, combine brown sugar, honey, butter, cream and salt. Bring to a boil then simmer 2 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla and pecans.
- Spread pecan filling over your warm baked crust.
- Bake – return to the oven for another 20-25 minutes or until the top is bubbling and turns caramel color.
- Cool and Serve – once the bars are fully cooled to room temperature, remove from the pan, cut and serve.

Common Questions
You can use pecan halves or coarsely chopped pecans. I would buy whichever is less expensive and if you buy them pre-chopped then you can save yourself the step of chopping nuts.
Since there aren’t any highly perishable ingredients in the baked pecan pie bars, you can store them in an airtight container at room temperature for several days.
You will need to cut the recipe in half to fit a traditional pie pan or use the recipe to fill 2 pie pans. I also suggest lining the pie pans with parchment paper for easier serving and removal from the pan.
Yes! You can double the recipe, divide into two separate pans and bake them side-by-side in the oven.

Make-Ahead
- Storing: Once these pecan bars are cooled completely to room temperature, transfer to an airtight container and store at room temperature for 3-4 days.
- Freezing: You can freeze for longer storage. Transfer to a freezer safe zip bag, remove any excess air and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature before serving.

Pecan Pie Bars are such a decadent treat for the holidays and are a dessert everyone loves. Make them once and they will probably make it to your holiday rotation.
More Pecan Recipes to try
If you love these Pecan Pie Bars, then you won’t want to miss these recipes with pecans. Pecans are so versatile for sweet or savory dishes.
- Candied Pecans
- Baked Apples
- Russian Tea Cakes with Pecans
- Carrot Cake Cupcakes
- Roasted Sweet Potato Salad
- Sweet Potato Casserole
Pecan Pie Bars Recipe

Ingredients
For the Crust:
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup powdered sugar
- 1/4 tsp fine sea salt
- 12 Tbsp unsalted butter, cold, diced
For the Filling:
- 3/4 cup light brown sugar, packed
- 1/2 cup honey
- 12 Tbsp unsalted butter
- 1/4 cup heavy whipping cream
- 1/4 tsp fine sea salt
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 3 1/2 cups coarsely chopped pecans, 14 oz
Instructions
To Make the Crust:
- Preheat the oven to 350˚F. Line a 9×13 baking pan with foil or parchment paper (leave some paper hanging over the sides of the pan for an easier lift later. Spray with non-stick cooking spray and set aside.
- In the bowl of a food processor, pulse together the flour, powdered sugar, and salt and pulse a couple of times to combine. Add diced cold butter and pulse until the mixture resembles a coarse meal with some pea-sized pieces forming. Transfer the mixture to your prepared pan, pressing the crust evenly into the bottom of the pan. Bake at 350˚F for 18-20 minutes or until the crust has set and the edges are just lightly browned. Remove from the oven and set aside while you finish the filling.
Make the Pecan Pie Bars:
- In a large saucepan, combine the brown sugar, honey, butter, cream and salt. Bring to a boil then reduce heat and simmer for 2 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in vanilla and pecans, mixing until incorporated.
- Pour hot pecan filling over your warm crust. Return to the oven and bake for another 20-25 minutes until the top is bubbling and turns caramel color. Set the baking pan on a wire rack and cool completely to room temperature before cutting.
- Once the pecan squares are at room temperature, loosen the edges if needed and use the parchment paper or foil to lift the bars out of the pan. Transfer to a cutting board and cut into 2-inch squares. Serve at room temperature.
These were delicious and easy to make. I added a little rum for a kick. They were a big hit and a nice crowd alternative to pecan pie.
Sounds wonderful! I’m so glad you enjoyed the recipe!
Delicious! I typically do pecan pie for Thanksgiving, but decided to give this recipe a try (much to the dismay of my pecan pie fans). Everyone loved them and requested them for next year! Thank you for a great recipe!
You’re so welcome, Jill. I’m glad that you decided to try out this recipe and loved it!
These are AMAZING. Turns out I actually forgot to bake a second time once the filling was in. Which explains why mine were so runny. But the taste was amazing. Literally one of the only pecan pie recipes without corn syrup. The honey adds such a nice flavor. Similar to baklava. And the salty finish makes them addicting. Going to try to make it a traditional pie next.
These bars are amazing! They are fairly simple and hold up very well. Definitely a keeper!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it, Abbie!
Hi Nat!
Made this and my parents loved it! They asked me to make again but if possible, to make it slightly less sweet for their health. If I reduce the amount of powdered sugar/ brown sugar by half, would that ruin the consistency of the bar?
Hi Lisa, most of the sweetness comes from the caramel topping, you can use less of that to help the sugar.
Delicious and easy! Plan on making them for our church family this week 🍁🧡🍂🙌 definitely a keeper and a must try!
Thank you for sharing, Janelle!
Hello Natasha,
I have been using and loving your recipes for several years and they all have been fabulous getting rave reviews from my family. I just made the pecan pie bars but sadly most of them fell apart when I cut them. I reviewed the recipe and used 3 1/2 cups of pecans which was way more than 14 oz 😳😔
Anyway to salvage them?
Have a happy Thanksgiving
Hi Denise, I wonder if the pecans were chopped to small resulting in too many of them? It’s hard to save if you can salvage them without being there, but I hope you find a way to make them work!
If you still have the “bars”. They would make a delicious topping for a crumb ! Pecans are so precious I would hate to waste them!!
Hello Natasha,
I was wondering if I could make these with a pie crust and not a shortbread crust. If the answer is yes, would I need to blind-bake the crust before adding the filling?
Hi Andrea! I haven’t tested it myself, but I think it could work. Let us know how it is if you experiment.
I have made pecan pie bars in the past but I loved your recipe. The crust was so delicious with powered sugar in it! I just love your recipes. They tend to be my go to when looking for a recipe. Thank you Natasha!
Thank you, Jackie for sharing that with us!
What kind of honey should I use? First time baking with honey and I’m not sure the difference in kinds if that matters! Tysm!!
Hi Amelia, store bought honey works great here.
Hi Natasha!
I LOOVE your recipes and was looking for your pecan pie recipe when the bars recipe popped up. Do you have a pecan pie recipe? Preferably with maple syrup? Thank you!!
Hi May, I don’t have a pecan pie recipe, yet, but that’s a great suggestion!
I just made this and it is currently cooling! We are doing an early thanksgiving tomorrow so I am wondering if I should refrigerate it overnight or if it is ok to leave out covered at room temp? And how long/how many days can they be left out at room temp? I want them to be room temp for serving.
I Jessica, I have notes on this under the Make-Ahead section of the recipe. I hope you love it.
Hi there-
I followed your recipe, but found that the bars were bubbling and dark caramel in color after only 10 minutes back in the oven. I was afraid they were burning so I took them out, but I’m wondering if I should’ve left them in longer.
Hi Morag! It’s hard to tell what went wrong without being there. Did you make any substitutions to the recipe? I wonder if your oven runs a bit too hot? This recipe was tested in a conventional oven on regular bake mode. If you are using a convection/fan oven, you’ll need to make modifications to the time and temperature. I encourage the use of an Internal oven thermometer (Amazon affiliate link) to see if your oven is heating correctly. I hope that helps.
Can I substitute corn syrup for the honey? Would it be the same ratio??
Hi Ally, I haven’t tested this but the corn syrup serves a different purpose – it helps the pecan pie topping to set properly. It may need other modifications – maybe a little flour mixed in but I haven’t tested that substitution to make a recommendation.
I want to make these pecan pie bars for Thanksgiving, can I freeze them ahead of time?
Love all your recipes. Thank you!
Yes, you see can! See my notes for instructions on this in the blog above.
I wonder if I can double the crust but not the entire recipe to have a thicker crust base.
Great question Jackie, I haven’t considered a double crust for this, if you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe.
Your recipes are superb. Regarding your Pecan Pie Bars, can I half the recipe? Would I be able to use 8″x8″ pan? Thank you for excellent recipes.
Thank you so much. Halving the recipe should work well. You can halve all the ingredients and use a smaller pan. I hope you love it!
Wondering how I could use this recipe to make a traditional round pecan pie. Could I maybe just add in 2-3 eggs? What do you think?
THANKS!
Hi Ron! I’m sorry, I don’t have a suggestion for that. I haven’t tested it myself.
Living in an RV takes a wee longer but, these are yummy.
Love your cookbook, thank you. 🙏
Hi Glo! Thank you so much for purchasing my cookbook. That means a lot to me.
In your Pecan Pie Bars recipe can I use regular salt instead of 1/4 t. fine sea salt? Also, does the butter in the crust and filing have to be unsalted? I am anxious to try this as I love Pecans. Thanks for all the wonderful recipes.
Hi Luan. I prefer unsalted butter because it allows me to control the salt level. If you use salted I would omit the salt required in the recipe.
I haven’t made the squares yet but intend to as all your recipes have been great, I was wondering if the squares will freeze as I want to include them in my Christmas baking.
Thank you so much for all the wonderful recipes , 😍
Hi Jean, you sure can freeze this. I have a section on that in the recipe post – Freezing: You can freeze for longer storage. Transfer to a freezer safe zip bag, remove any excess air and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature before serving. I hope this helps.