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! just so you know i’m 13 years old and i love to bake. my mom is asking if you have classes that you teach? and if you do she said that i should sign up. are you Russian? because most of the things my grandma knows how to make, and i make stuff that you make! 🙂
Wow great job, I’m happy that you are already very interested in baking. However, I don’t have any classes available but I hope my recipes can help you get started.
Any suggestions for replacement of butter as family member has a dairy allergy.
Hi Marilyn, I really haven’t tried a substitution to advise. I also haven’t tried reducing the butter that much and without experimenting it’s difficult to guess if it would form properly.
Can I use this for a macaron filling?
Hi Brittany, I think it would still taste good but it doesn’t have a distinct flavor so I don’t usually use it for macarons.
Turned out perfect! Took a little longer to get to 160* F but other than that everything was exactly as expected! Thank you!
So great to hear that it was a success! Thank you for sharing that with us, Catrina.
Hello, will this be enough to cover a 3 layer cake 8 inches wide? (including a crumb coat)
hopeful that it’ll turn out well!
Hi Syd, it should be enough to cover a 3 layer 8″ cake. I frosted this chocolate cake with it so you can gauge.
This is by far the best buttercream I’ve tried – I use it as icing on cakes and with electric hand mixer because I don’t have a KitchenAid… it takes quite a long time to the point when you think it’s not going to work, but then suddenly it does… so just be patient. Love this recipe, thank you!
Thank you so much for sharing this with me Viktoria! I’m so happy you have enjoyed this recipe!
Can I keep Swiss icing in the fridge for 5 days?
Hi Paula, I can’t say it will be good for 5 days, but 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.
I didn’t have much luck with this recipe. I followed the directions, but no matter how long I mixed after the final step it never thickened. It remained a wet mess. I’m not sure what might have gone wrong. The meringue step looked great. I used 3 sticks of butter that sat out an hour. Added the 2 tsp of vanilla and
1/4 tsp of salt…followed the suggested times and when thickening didn’t happen, kept mixing….no thickening. I will say the flavor was very tasty, and I did manage to use what I had by applying it quickly and freezing it fast. But it never even came close to looking the texture of the icing in the pictures pictured on the recipe page. Just wet and drippy.
Hi Krissi, it can look soupy before it comes together and that is normal. If it stays soupy after a few extra minutes of mixing, it is likely due to adding butter before the meringue fully reached room temperature, or due to adding oversoftened or partially melted butter. I would suggest refrigerating 10-15 minutes at a time and continuing to mix and it should come together.
I definitely waited till the meringue was room temperature. The butter was as you suggested – out for an hour and still slightly cool to the touch. I suppose there is a possibility it was oversoftened but I’m not really sure what oversoftened would be? Your suggestion then is to refrigerate it then take it out and whipping it again? Because I did end up refrigerating some of it overnight hoping to use it for decorating, and after bringing it up to room temperature and whipping it again it was even wetter than the previous evening.
i have tried different smbc recipes but yours is the best. now i always use this recipe. thank you for sharing it.
Thank you, that is so sweet of you!
I just made this icing and I have to say it is the absolute best homemade icing I have ever tasted!! I’m fairly new to making cakes and icing from scratch. I made pumpkin spice cupcakes and it paired perfectly. This is my new favourite and it will be my go to recipe! I’m anxious to know if this recipe can be tweaked to make a chocolate Swiss buttercream.
Thank you so much!!
Thank you for the wonderful review, Tammy! I’m happy you like that!
How do you achieve such perfectly white colour? Mine is usually more yellow/creamy.
Hi Magda, we try to use a light butter. Some butters are more yellow in color and make this less white. I’ve tried organic unsalted by Simple truth brand and the longer sticks from Costco by Kirkland signature unsalted butter and both were very white in color.
Buy Violet Americolor gel-stick a toothpick in it and dot it in your icing & keep mixing it. It will turn white. Just be careful. If you use too much it can turn bluish or gray. Works wonderfully. There are video on youtube showing how it turns white.
Hi! Is there a way to make this without a thermometer?
Hi Kawthar, I have only made this with a thermometer, it would be hard to without it to be sure you reached the correct temperature.
Thank you for your help!
I first used this recipe in my brothers wedding cake for the Lemon merengue tier and lovedIt so much I added chocolate to it for the chocolate tier too (after trying soooo many recipes to get things perfect!) This recipe is so versatile and smooth as silk. I’d not tried Swiss’s merengue buttercream before this and now it’s all I use. It has worked well to decorate a Cookie Monster cake and a Fox cake too and seems to make the colours even more vivid.
Your comment made me smile, I totally agree this recipe is a winner! Thanks for the wonderful review.
I just made this icing and I have to say it is the absolute best homemade icing I have ever tasted!! I’m fairly new to making cakes and icing from scratch. I made pumpkin spice cupcakes and it paired perfectly. This is my new favourite and it will be my go to recipe! I’m anxious to know if this recipe can be tweaked to make a chocolate Swiss buttercream.
Thank you so much!!
That’s just awesome! Thank you for sharing that with me, Tammy!
Hi.I would love to try it tomorrow! Would this be enough to cover 6 layers (rainbow ) 8inch cake??
Hi Marta, 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. One of our readers wrote, “I put a generous amount on 24 cupcakes and still had some left.” I hope that helps
I want to make this for my daughter’s first birthday party tomorrow, but I don’t have a stand mixer. Is this possible to make without one? I have a hand mixer with the standard beater and whisk attachments, but obviously I don’t have the paddle attachment that a stand mixer would have.
Hi Sarah, to be honest, I have not tried it with a hand mixer because it takes a really long time to whip and that would leave you with a very tired arm! I also haven’t come across any recipes that I can recall where a hand mixer was used – maybe solely because it is not easy to stand over it that long. I wish I could be more help but I just haven’t braved this with a hand mixer. Also, a hand mixer is not as efficient at whipping and cooling a mixture so you may have to whip even longer.
Well, we did it. My husband helped and we beat the mixture for close to an hour, taking turns, but never achieved the peaks as shown in the photo. We took a chance and moved on to the next step. It turned out great! It is so tasty. I’ll definitely use it again, but I’ve officially requested a stand mixer for Christmas.
I’m glad it worked out for you Sarah!
I don’t know how to add pictures but I just made this frosting and it came out perfect and delicious!!!! Best frosting I’ve ever had and I’m proud to have made it myself! Thanks for the great recipe, Natasha!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for sharing that wonderful review with me!
Just tried this – looked great before butter and now it look looks like cellulite.. help!
Hi Kristen! I haven’t had that experience but I’m happy to troubleshoot. I do recommend reading through our tips and comments from readers that have experienced similar Also, was anything altered in the recipe?
I’ve just made this for the second time and it looks a little curdled as well, could I have over mixed it?
Hi Tanya, if it looks curdled, you need to continue beating it and it will correct itself. It is pretty normal for Swiss Meringue buttercream to look that way while beating and then it corrects after a few more minutes of mixing.
Can you color this frosting without it changing the texture?
Hi Crystalynn, I would recommend using a gel food coloring over a liquid one. I would add the at the very end.
Can i use icing sugar instead of granulated sugar for the swiss meringue buttercream?
Hi, I haven’t tested this with confectioners sugar and I suspect it would not work the same way.
I’m wondering if I can use this under fondant? My apologies if that’s been mentioned in your threads and I missed it.
Hi Christina, I honestly haven’t tried putting SMBC under fondant to advise. If you experiment I would love to know how you like that!