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.



I love this recipe and use it a lot, but I’m having trouble with it here lately being so airy and having bubbles. When I try to smooth it on cake with a bench scraper, it pulls huge holes in the sides. I try to smooth it up and down, back and forth, filling in the holes individually and resmoothing, to no avail. Any tips on why mine is full of such huge air bubbles?
Hi Katie, it could be either too high of speed or using the whisk attachment rather than the paddle attachment. Either the whisk or high speed will incorporate more air bubbles. I hope that is helpful in troubleshooting SMBC.
I experienced the same also. What I did to fix this is, right at the end when you finish making the buttercream turn the mixer right down to your lowest setting and continue mixing for about 10 minutes. It will knock out the air bubbles. I do the same with American buttercream also and it works. Make sure you’re using the paddle attachment.
Hope that helps you.
I’ve made this recipe so many times with no issue. But today I have made 3 batches but they were halved recipes and my buttercream has just split and the consistency is just not right I’m not sure what I’ve done
Hi Kahlia, did you allow each batch to cool completely to room temperature? You may need to refrigerate for 10-15 minutes to cool the mixture then try to rewhip.
I made this frosting for a cake that I made just for fun and it was amazing! I’m making it again for my son’s birthday cupcakes and any other frosting I need to make. Delicious!
So great to hear that, Samantha. I’m sure your son will enjoy his birthday cupcakes. Happy Birthday to him!
Hiya I’m thinking of trying this out tonight but dont want as much frosting how many eggs should I use if I’m wanting to half this amount, 3 or 4? Thanks xx
Hi Isha, here is what one of our readers wrote “I halved it and used 4egg whites, large eggs. It was perfect!” I hope that helps.
Hi Natasha,
I love your buttercream. I have now made several times and I think easier and faster if you put the hot egg and sugar mixture in an ice bath until almost room temp. It will come together much faster.
I had lots of egg whites and made a batch about 1.7 times your recipe. I strongly suggest that the sugar and egg whites be weighed to make sure you get the correct proportions.
My family likes lots of buttercream and 1.5 times your recipe is perfect for a 9 inch cake with lots of icing to decorate with. 🙂
Hi Jeff, thank you for sharing some tips with us. That is helpful we appreciate it!
Hi! Just some troubleshooting/’is this normal’ questions here! My SMBC kind of reduces in volume after coming together with the butter and appears less fluffy than when I was beating the meringue, is that normal? Also, is the only way to make it more fluffy is by beating it more as my SMBC has a little bit of resistance (instead of smooth and light) feel to it when I run my spatula through it. Final question! How can I make my SMBC taste/feel less oily? (I think it not being as light and fluffy might impact this component too). Thanks so much for your recipe and response in advance!!
Hi Olivia, yes that texture change is normal. Make sure to use the same quantities and proportions of ingredients without any substitutions. It shouldn’t seem oily but it is a buttercream so it will be more like a lightened up buttercream. I hope that helps.
I found this recipe a year ago and have made a lot of cakes and cupcakes with this!! It is wonderful to use and is SO tasty and fluffy. I have tried making it ahead of time and refrigerating it on two occasions now. Both times it goes in the fridge perfect, and after re whipping the next day just goes flat, runny, and separates. It is still cool to the touch and I can’t figure out why this is happening or if I can fix it.
Hi Amanda, you may need to let it rest a little longer at room temperature the re-whip again.
I have had this same problem on using it the next day or if I add color. Makes me sad when I end up throwing it out. I was thinking I might need to try another recipe but yours is so delicious without tasting to buttery. Any other thoughts on what to do when it appears to separate?
Hi Susan, once it is at room temperature, it should re-whip. It may be either too cold or just need a little longer mixer.
This happened to me as well, I took a hairdryer and put it on full blast aimed at the bottom of them bowl to heat up the bowl while the paddle attachment was on medium. It worked perfect! It’s basically too cold. When you warm it up a bit it comes back together.
Great idea! Thank you so much for sharing that with me Sophia!
Hi,
How much buttercream does this recipe make?
Thank you!
Hi Cybel, this recipe makes maybe 5 or 6 cups? It is enough to frost a 9″ two-layer cake OR it will ice 24 plus cupcakes so doubling it would be a good idea! One of our readers wrote, “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.” I hope that helps
Will this frosting keep its shape? For example regular whipped cream goes flat when not refrigerated. Will it happen to this type of frosting?
Hi Jules, this one keeps its shape much better than basic whipped cream. I would still refrigerate overnight.
Hi Natasha!
I was wondering how could I make this a Chocolate Buttercream?
Thanks so much.
-Mackenzie
Hi Mackenzie, I haven’t tested this with chocolate but here is what one of our readers wrote “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” I hope that helps.
Hi, I’m making a cake with this frosting tomorrow. do you have to store the decorated frosted cake in the fridge with? or is it OK to store overnight in a cold room? thanks
Hi Bethan, we recommend the fridge. It will be fine to cover and refrigerate for several days. I find it’s easiest to decorate the cake the day before and then refrigerate. You will want to let the cake sit at room temperature for the frosting to soften slightly.
Can I make it The day before and then just keep it in the fridge?
Hi Sofia, it will be fine to cover and refrigerate for several days, just be sure to bring it to room temperature then re-beat it to smooth and fluff the frosting
Hi Natasha.
How much does this rcipe make in cups?
i love your chanel. thank you.
Hi Anna, this recipe makes maybe 5 or 6 cups? It is enough to frost a 9″ two-layer cake OR it will ice 24 plus cupcakes so doubling it would be a good idea! One of our readers wrote, “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.” I hope that helps
This frosting was incredibly delicious! I have never made frosting before, so I was a little nervous about how this would turn out, but the recipe was very detailed and easy to follow. I will never go back to buying frosting from the grocery store, this recipe will be my go-to from now on!
I’m so glad you enjoyed that Katie! Thank you so much for sharing that with me! I’m all smiles
Hi! This sounds like a wonderful recipe and I’m planning to make it for my daughter’s first birthday in a few days. I was wondering what you think about adding a liquid based natural food coloring to this to make it less white? I read that if you make a distilled berry juice, you can use it to make buttercream frosting pink. Will adding moisture to it destroy the consistency? Thank you!!
Follow up question! What about adding chocolate to this?
I haven’t tried that yet to advise Lana but I imagine that should work. Please share with us how it goes if you do an experiment.
Can I use carton egg whites? instead of separating 7 eggs? if so, what amount of liquid egg whites should I use?
Hi Sara, I haven’t tested with carton whites but I have heard readers report both (that it works and others day that it doesn’t), so it may depend on the brand and whether or not there are any additives? One reader wrote: “I did try with the egg whites from a carton and it didn’t work. I started again, this time using egg whites from regular eggs and it worked beautifully.” If you test it out, please let me know how it goes.
Hello, I used carton egg whites and it was perfect. I use carton egg whites for meringues and never had an issue. Hope that helps
So great to hear that! Thank you so much for sharing that with us.
I use carton egg white without any problems. May even make sure they’re fresh perhaps and not one that’s been sittings on the grocery store shelf for a while
Can I use egg whites that were separated from the yolks yesterday and stored in the refrigerator until today, for the Swiss Buttercream frosting?
Hi Pat, that should work.
Hello, I’m thinking on making this buttercream. How much does this recipe make?
Hi Makayla, this recipe makes maybe 5 or 6 cups? It is enough to frost a 9″ two-layer cake OR it will ice 24 plus cupcakes so doubling it would be a good idea! One of our readers wrote, “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.” I hope that helps
Super tasty meringue!!
I have always loved swiss meringue but was a bit afraid of doing. I love your recipe it is not only easy to follow but also you give some great tips. It is for sure my go-to buttercream recipe from now on.
Love it! I’m so glad to hear that you enjoyed this recipe. Thank you for giving it a try!
Hello! Soo excited to try this recipe next week for my boyfriend’s birthday. This might be a stupid question but I’m UK based and just wanted to confirm granulated sugar is the same thing here as the US? Can anyone confirm? Would hate to use the wrong kind and make a mess of it! Thanks in advance.
Swiss Meringue Buttercream is my favorite to use, but I’ve always had trouble with every recipe I try. But your recipe is fool-proof, and it turned out perfect without any problems! Your directions and tips were so helpful, as always!
Thank you so much for sharing that with us, Alicia. I’m so glad that this recipe helped!