Swiss meringue buttercream is better in flavor and texture than American Buttercream. Once you try it, you will want to use it on all of your cakes, cupcakes, cookies, everything! It is silky, pipes beautifully, and is stable. Watch the easy video tutorial and you will be a pro in no time!

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Swiss Meringue Buttercream Video
Swiss Meringue Buttercream (SMBC) is my favorite of the meringue frostings because it is not overly sweet or difficult to make, and this method pasteurizes the egg whites in the process – Hooray!! It is simple enough to use for everyday baking but the flavor is a special occasion worthy frosting (scroll down to see the fun design I made for my niece and nephew’s puppy-themed birthday party). This frosting makes me think of wedding cakes every time I make it!
Swiss Meringue Buttercream keeps really well overnight at room temperature without drying out or forming a crust as American buttercream will. You can completely assemble your cake ahead of time without taking up space in the refrigerator and it will look and taste just as good the next day. It’s also freezer-friendly (see instructions below).

Cook’s Tip for Swiss Meringue Buttercream
Butter should be softened at room temperature for about 1 hour (more or less depending on your room temperature). You want it to be still slightly cool to the touch and not overly soft or warm. If it gets too soft, refrigerate for 10 minutes at a time.
How to Make Swiss Meringue Buttercream
1. In a medium pot, add about 1-inch of water and bring to a simmer.
2. Thoroughly wash and dry the stainless steel mixing bowl from your stand mixer** (you don’t want any fat touching meringue). Add 7 egg whites and 2 cups sugar and whisk together. Place mixing bowl over a pot of barely simmering water, creating a seal over the pot (bowl should be over the steam, not touching water). Whisk constantly until sugar/egg white mixture reaches 160˚F (takes about 3 minutes). Sugar should be fully dissolved (you should not feel any sugar granules when rubbing the mixture between fingers), and the mixture will feel hot to the touch.


3. Wipe water from bottom of mixing bowl and transfer bowl to your stand mixer fitted with whisk attachment. Beat on medium-high speed until stiff glossy peaks form (about 15-20 minutes) and the bottom of the bowl feels completely at room temperature and not warm (important: if meringue is warm, it will melt the butter).

3. Once bowl is at room temperature, switch to the paddle attachment, reduce to medium speed and add butter 1 Tbsp at a time, adding it just as fast as it can be absorbed by meringue. Once all butter is in, scrape down the bowl and continue beating until the buttercream has reached a thick whipped consistency (3 min on med-high speed). If it looks lumpy or liquid at all, keep beating until smooth, thick and whipped.


4. Add 2 tsp vanilla extract and 1/4 tsp salt then mix on med-high until incorporated (about 1 min).

P.S. The tiny amount of salt at the end gives this frosting incredible depth of flavor.

Common Questions
For egg whites to become glossy and reach stiff peaks, it’s critical to make sure your mixing bowl and attachments are free of any grease, egg yolks, or water. You need to start with thoroughly clean and dry tools.
This is usually due to the mixture being too warm or adding the butter before the meringue has fully cooled down. Thankfully, it is easy to fix. Refrigerate the bowl for 15-20 minutes then continue mixing until the frosting thickens.
It is ok to use a high-speed electric hand mixer, but it may take 5-10 minutes longer of total mixing time. Also, a glass bowl will work but meringue may take longer to whip/cool down because glass retains heat longer.
Avoid using coarse sugar. Granulated sugar works best here. Also, make sure to heat your mixture over the water bath until it registers 160˚F on a thermometer.
Absolutely! See how we frosted our 9-inch, 2-layer Chocolate Cake with Swiss Meringue Buttercream.

Make-Ahead
- Room Temperature – Swiss Meringue Buttercream is a stable frosting, meaning it will keep well covered at room temperature for 1 to 2 days in a low humidity environment.
- Refrigerator – cover and refrigerate for up to 5 days. Bring back to room temperature to re-whip before piping.
- Freezing – SMBC can be frozen for up to 3 months. Transfer to a freezer-safe zip-top bag, squeeze out any excess air, and store flat for quicker thawing. Thaw at room temperature then re-whip for a few minutes to lighten it up.
More Frosting Recipes
We haven’t found a storebought frosting even comes close to homemade. If you love homemade frosting as much as we do, you’re sure to find some new favorite frosting recipes in this list:
- Chocolate Buttercream Frosting
- Cream Cheese Frosting
- Vanilla Buttercream
- Cupcake Frosting
- Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting
Swiss Meringue Buttercream Recipe

Ingredients
- 7 oz egg whites, from 7 large egg whites
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 1/2 cups unsalted butter, softened, (3 sticks)*
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/4 tsp fine sea salt
Instructions
- In a medium pot, add at least 1-inch of water and bring to simmer.
- Thoroughly wash and dry the stainless steel mixing bowl from your stand mixer (you don't want grease touching meringue). Add 7 egg whites and 2 cups sugar and whisk together. Place mixing bowl over a large saucepan of barely simmering water, creating a seal over the pot (bowl should be over the steam, not touching water). Whisk constantly until mixture reaches 160˚F (takes about 3 min). Sugar should be fully dissolved (you should not feel any sugar granules when rubbing mixture between finger tips). Mixture will feel hot to the touch.
- Wipe water from bottom of mixing bowl and transfer bowl to stand mixer fitted with whisk attachment. Beat on medium-high speed until stiff glossy peaks form (about 15-20 min) and bottom of the bowl feels completely at room temp and not warm (important: warm meringue will melt the butter).
- Once bowl is at room temp, switch to paddle attachment, reduce to medium speed and add butter 1 Tbsp at a time, adding it just as fast as it is absorbed by meringue. Once all butter is in, scrape down the bowl and continue beating until it reaches a thick whipped consistency (3 min on med-high speed). If it looks lumpy or liquidy at all, keep beating until smooth, thick and whipped.
- Add 2 tsp vanilla extract and 1/4 tsp salt and mix on med-high until incorporated (about 1 min).
Notes
Filed Under
And here are the puppy cupcakes I made using this Swiss Buttercream for my niece and nephews birthday party! The kids LOVED them!! Here is the vanilla cupcakes base that I used for these. I used mini M&M’s on the eyes, a Hershey’s chocolate drop for the nose, then used a rolling pin and my hands to form the ears out of tootsie rolls and the tongue out of a similar shaped pink candy (similar to an airhead candy).

If you make this frosting, let me know what you think of it in a comment below.
Hello, does this hold well under fondant?? Thank you in advance
Hi there! Yes! Several of our readers have reported great results with that!
Thanks for this recipe! I was trying a mirror cake for the first time, and wanted something not too sweet to go under the glaze. The frosting was easy to make, though I think my butter was too soft, as it wasn’t as stiff as I would have liked after mixing. Half an hour in the fridge firmed it up nicely, though. I was able to frost a three layer cake with a decent amount of frosting. I’m not sure this has completely turned me off American buttercream, but it IS delicious, especially as I subbed out 1/4 tsp of almond extract for 1/4 tsp of the vanilla. It doesn’t taste overly buttery, or not sweet enough; it’s exactly what I was looking for.
That’s so great! It sounds like you have a new favorite!
I’ve tried this recipe at least 6 or 7 times and I feel like it always takes 2 hours to do it 🙁 I’m not sure what I’m doing wrong, I’m still learning everything on my own. But the finish product always taste good. But it just takes SO long to get to it. It never looks like the photos though, I use a classic kitchen aid that I just got. Any advice ? Thanks !
Hi Kristi! Are you changing any steps in the recipe? Two hours seems excessive. Does it seem like it is taking the cream longer to form stiff peaks? Also, your classic Kitchen aid, is it fitted with the correct sized whisk to help with even mixing and micing all parts of the mixture within the bowl?
I use the whisk that comes with the KitchenAid so I believe it’s the correct one. I follow the directions and read each time as I’m dling the recipe. I think the peaks in getting are more soft than stiff. And it takes a long time for the bowl to get to room temperature. But I keep the sugar and egg whites on a Bain Marie while constantly stirring until I don’t feel any grains in the mixture.
Hi Kristi, it could also be due to using a smaller bowl – mine is a 6Qt stand mixer so the bigger bowl and greater surface area allows it to cool a little faster.
Natasha, I’ve always complained about traditional American buttercream that it’s gritty, overly sweet and leaves an after taste.
I’m so glad I stumbled across this recipe and decided to give it a shot. So easy to follow and oh my goodness, the taste is divine! I will not use any other icing ever again. This is 100% my go to. Love love love it. Thank you for sharing with us all.
Thank you so much for that wonderful review, Donna! I apprecaite your feedback!
Hi I’m making an eggnog cake, does this recipe pair well with it or should I add spices in the frosting to make it taste like eggnog? Thank you
I haven’t tried this with eggnog cake so I can’t say. I think that may be interesting to add to. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe
Can I use margarine instead of butter?
Margarine should work although I haven’t experimented with that. It should still be pretty stable with that.
Yay I use to make this at my old work place and have been searching for someone who did it the same way she did because I forgot a few steps …. THIS IS IT!
thank you
I so happy you found our recipe!
I made this a few days ago and i think ive finally found the best Swiss buttercream frosting ever. It’s silky, smooth and not overly sweet or greasy. Its simply amazing.
Do you think I could turn it into a chocolate buttercream?
Thank you so much for that amazing review, Mirza! I haven’t tried making this chocolate, but From my research, chocolate is always added at the end. I would probably start with 8-9 semisweet chocolate, melted and slightly cooled and whip it in at the end.
You are very welcome!
I ended up adding 3oz of melted semisweet chocolate and 3 oz of bitter 100%cocoa chocolate after adding the vanilla. I didn’t want the sweetness to go up because of the chocolate. And I also sifted about 1/4 cup of cocoa powder at the end and hand mix that in. Tastes amazing! I’ll re-whip on Friday for the cupcakes I’m making
That’s so great!!! Thank you for the wonderful review!
I just made this swiss meringue butter cream today and absolutely love it. I did put the bowl in the refrigerator for 10 mins due… I am assuming my kitchen was very warm due to cooking and baking all morning. After a little shock from the cool fridge it whipped right up strong and beautiful. I could have pipped it easily… Taste is amazing, soft and slightly sweet, not buttery and heavy.
Thank you for sharing this recipe and your article. You are an inspiration!
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review!
I made a swiss meringue buttercream from Chef Allan and it tasted wonderful, but didn’t hold up to indoor temps and was not ideal for building multi-layer cakes. Is this buttercream sturdier?
This one is pretty firm, yes! We have so many great reviews regarding this one holding up!
I am actually going to try this today, however I do have a question. If I wanted to make this chocolate how would I do that?
Hi Dacia, Thank you for the wonderful review, Mehera! I haven’t tried making this chocolate, but From my research, chocolate is always added at the end. I would probably start with 8-9 semisweet chocolate, melted and slightly cooled and whip it in at the end.
Hi, thanks you for this recipe. I’d just like to find out, if I use salted butter, can I skip out the extra 1/4 tsp of salt at the end or is it a must?
Hi Rubi. I recommend using unsalted because each stick of salted butter has 1/4 tsp salt so you would be tripling the salt in the recipe by using salted butter.
Just a quick update, I used salted butter because I didn’t have unsalted at the time. It came out perfect and everyone loved the icing. Thank you so much for sharing it!!
Thank you for sharing that with us, Rubi!
How much buttercream does this recipe make? I need to generously frost 50 cupcakes.
🙂
Hi Mirza, It will ice 24 plus cupcakes. One of our readers wrote “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.” If making for 50 cupcakes, it could be done if it was not generously iced, otherwise, you would need to make 2 separate batches of frosting.
Has anyone tried making a double batch of this? I have a huge cake and a lot of cupcakes to frost. Can I double up, or should I make two separate batches?
Hi Melissa, It will ice 24 plus cupcakes. One of our readers wrote “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.”
Absolutely love this recipe. I’ve been asked to make a red velvet cake for my managers baby shower. Will this frosting pair well with red velvet? Thank you!
Hi Coral, I do think this would work well with red velvet. I hope you LOVE it! 🙂
This is by far the best butter cream recipe I ever tried!
Wow! Thank you for that amazing feedback!
How much does this recipe make?
It will ice 24 plus cupcakes. One of our readers wrote “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.”
This Swiss Meringue Buttercream Icing is so gooooood. Ran into one problem. And it has happened with every Swiss Meringue Buttercream recipe that I have tried. Every time I add the butter it becomes loose and won’t come back together no matter how long I beat it (And yes I make sure it is completely room temp. before adding the butter). My solution is to place it in the refrigerator until it firms up then whip it with the paddle attachment and it beat-up. It comes out perfectly. Love the flavor of this one Some Swiss Meringue Buttercreams have too much butter and taste oily. This one is perfect. Thanks for sharing
I’m happy you enjoyed that Laurie! Thank you for your feedback and tips!
Hi, I’m filling and icing a large sponge cake which will be frozen for use in one week. Will the Swiss Meringue Buttercream be suited to freezing and de-frosting?
Hi Barbara, I have only tried refrigerating this type of buttercream but from my research, it should be ok to freeze. I haven’t tried freezing an entire cake but I think it can be done since this frosting is freezer safe. I hope that helps!
If your experience is anything like mine, you might find that it takes a REALLY long time for the bowl to reach room temperature. The second time I made this recipe, I put the bowl of egg whites and sugar in an ice bath and kept stirring it after melting sugar step. It cut a lot of time off and the result was better than my first try. Though I was too impatient the first time and didn’t wait until it was room temp so my butter melted too much while adding it to the meringue. I hope this helps someone out there!
Thank you for sharing that tip for swiss meringue buttercream! It’s great to know it works! 🙂
I had this problem today too! It was so frustrating because I was at 35 min mark of whisking the meringue, and the bowl was still hot (and my mixer hotter). So I thought no way it’s not ready, added my butter and it all melted. Now I’m sitting here mad lol and trying to see if there’s any way to fix it.
Hey there Vicky, This is usually due to adding the butter while the meringue is still warm (make sure it is completely at room temperature) or adding partially melted butter. This can be remedied usually by cooling the frosting for a bit and continuing to beat it. Once the frosting has formed, it is perfectly safe to pipe the frosting and refrigerate it afterward. It is a stable and sturdy frosting and it won’t fall apart 🙂