

A properly baked cake is sublime. It’s tender, moist, and has a perfect crumb. An overbaked cake, on the other hand, can be dry and tough. And maybe worse, an underbaked cake is gummy and dense. So we're here to help you nail a perfectly baked cake every time: Learn how to tell when cake is done with these easy tips.
We’ll walk you through the most difficult example – chocolate cake. You can’t see chocolate cake become golden brown like you can with vanilla or white cake, so you’ve got to use other signs to tell when it’s done.
We’ll teach you everything you need to feel confident gauging the doneness of any kind of cake, from chocolate to vanilla. We’re going to make sure you truly master how to tell when is cake is done.
There are five things to look for when deciding if cake is finished baking. Depending on the kind of cake you’re making, some of these tests will be more useful than others, so it’s important to learn them all.
We’ll start with the cake-testing techniques that don’t even require you to open the oven.
Once your cake nears the end of the bake time, peer through the oven window and check the edges of the cake. When your cake is done, the sides will have pulled away from the pan slightly.
The edges of the cake are the first part to set and become fully baked. They shrink inward as the rest of the cake bakes and the crumb tightens.
If you’ve greased your cake pan, a small gap will form between the sides of the cake and the pan when it’s almost done baking. The gap might be small: between 1/8” and 1/4” is normal. This tells you that the outer part of the cake is fully baked, and the center probably is too.
The edges pulling away is a good first sign that you’re close to the end of the bake time, but you'll also want to use a few other techniques before calling the cake done.
Note: If you’re making a sponge cake (like angel food cake), this test won’t work since you don’t grease the sides of the pan. The cake will stick to the sides of the pan even when it’s fully baked. This helps give the cake support, but it means you can’t look for the edges pulling away as a sign of doneness.
When checking out the sides of the cake, you should notice something else too. Something lovely.
When your cake is done baking, it’ll fill your kitchen with an amazing aroma of butter and sugar (read: happiness!).
Vanilla cake often smells sweet. Even though “sweet” is technically a taste, our nose and tastebuds are connected. When we smell scents of vanilla and sugar, our brains tell us, “There’s something sweet around here!”
To no surprise, chocolate cake gives off its trademark fragrance — chocolate, sometimes with hints of coffee — once it’s properly baked. It might remind you of s’mores, or hot chocolate, or other nostalgic chocolate desserts of your childhood. (Smell is closely linked to memory.)
Bottom line: Your cake is probably close to done if you can smell it. If you can’t detect any aroma, it usually needs more time in the oven.
Once your cake smells heavenly and the edges have pulled away from the sides of the pan, it’s time to open the oven and take a look.
When you’re making vanilla or white cake, look for golden brown edges. (Ever heard of “GBD”? It means “golden brown and delicious.” It’s chef-speak for when something is perfectly baked or cooked in the kitchen. You want your cakes to be GBD!)
The edges should have a slightly darker hue, like a perfectly toasted marshmallow. The center should have developed some color as well. Depending on the cake formula, it may turn a light honey color or deep golden brown. The more sugar in your recipe, the browner the cake will be when it’s done.
What about chocolate cake? Because of the cocoa powder in the batter, it sure is hard to tell if the edges are turning golden brown.
You can still take a close up look at your chocolate cake and inspect the edges and top. You might have noticed a change in color; sometimes chocolate cake batter has a reddish hue before baking. Chocolate cake will also transition from a shiny to matte finish once it’s baked. Look for these signs in addition to using the other techniques mentioned here to tell when your cake is done.
If your cake successfully passes the first three tests, it’s time to pull out a toothpick. Or better yet, find a paring knife.
While you may have grown up watching someone in the kitchen insert toothpicks or long skewers into cakes to test for doneness, toothpicks don’t have very much surface area. Consider using a paring knife, which more clearly reveals underbaked crumbs. A knife is especially helpful if you’re baking a cake or quick bread made from a thick batter, like pound cake or banana bread.
The idea behind this test is you can insert a toothpick or paring knife into the center of the cake to see if the crumb has set. If the tester comes out clean, it’s done. If it comes out gummy or with crumbs clinging to it, the cake needs more time in the oven.
While you can assess the cake using this technique, it’s not enough of a test on its own. (Sometimes a tester will come out mostly clean but the cake still needs more time in the oven.) Remember that this tip is just one of five we’re teaching you around how to tell when cake is done. Don’t forget to use the others too!
After you test your cake with a toothpick or paring knife, you’ll want to gauge the texture of the cake another way. The best way to do this is to gently press on the center of the cake with a few fingers to see if it springs back.
If your fingers leave little indents, your cake isn't done baking. Return it to the oven for at least 5 minutes before checking it again.
If the cake springs back to your touch, that’s a good sign that the crumb structure has set and your cake is fully baked. You can remove your cake from the oven and let it cool on a rack until your recipe instructs you to turn it out of the pan (if it does at all).
Some bakers like to use a thermometer to test the internal temperature of baked goods to see if they're done baking. For cake, this isn't so reliable. The internal temperature of cake varies based on the formula, ranging from 200°F to 210°F. Most classic cakes (butter cakes, pound cakes, chocolate and vanilla cakes, etc.) hover around 210°F when they're fully baked, but this isn't always a reliable threshold to look for.
Instead, use the five techniques outlined here to get a more complete understanding of whether your cake is done baking or not. You'll be better off, we promise!
It can be difficult to tell when cake is done baking, especially if you’re baking chocolate cake. That’s why we rely on all these signs together to tell when cake is done:
Use your senses to do these tests and gather information about the cakes you bake. Soon you’ll develop a gut feeling for when certain recipes are properly baked.
Remember that practice makes perfect (cakes), so keep on baking and honing your instincts by making more and more cakes!
Bake our Chocolate Cake recipe and gives these tests a whirl. If you have any other tips for telling when cake is done, please share them in the comments, below.
Thanks to Liz Neily and Jenn Bakos for taking the photographs for this post.
February 11, 2024 at 1:51pm
What about temperature? Can I use a thermometer to tell me when a Bundt cake is done? I've had trouble with sour cream coffee cake in a Bundt being underbaked when the testier pin seems clean/
February 24, 2024 at 9:48am
In reply to What about temperature? Can… by MartyAnne (not verified)
Hi MartyAnne, we aren't big fans of determining whether a cake is done by checking the internal temperature, although some of our recipes do list this. Here's what Annabelle says: "For cake, this isn't so reliable. The internal temperature of cake varies based on the formula, ranging from 200°F to 210°F. Most classic cakes (butter cakes, pound cakes, chocolate and vanilla cakes, etc.) hover around 210°F when they're fully baked, but this isn't always a reliable threshold to look for.
Instead, use the five techniques outlined here to get a more complete understanding of whether your cake is done baking or not. You'll be better off, we promise!"
September 25, 2023 at 5:12pm
You were extolling the benefits of using a half-sheet pan for baking a layer cake. What are the dimensions of a half-sheet pan? Secondly, do you recommend preferred manufacturers?
Thank you in advance for your wonderful baking tips.
September 28, 2023 at 4:27pm
In reply to You were extolling the… by Dan Campbell (not verified)
Thanks for asking for clarification Dan! A traditional half sheet pan is approximately 13" x 18". We love USApan which you can purchase from us here on our website. They are made in the US and last forever (even in our test kitchen where they see quite a bit of action)!
August 17, 2022 at 5:28pm
what about when the center of the cake sinks? was that a mixing problem? or is the pan too small?
August 21, 2022 at 9:15am
In reply to what about when the center… by Janet McIntosh (not verified)
Hi Janet! When cakes or quick breads sink after being removed from the oven, the culprit could be a few different factors but they mostly stem from an abundance of liquid remaining in the batter.
For instance, if the hydration of the recipe is altered in anyway by using either too much water/milk/eggs or not enough flour (or even a different type of that absorbs less liquid), then your oven will have a tough time evaporating it all in the prescribed bake time. For this reason, measuring your ingredients by weight instead of by volume would be the most accurate way to proceed.
The next thing to check would be your oven's temperature. Many home ovens like to claim they are preheated to the desired temperature when they are actually 25 or even 50 degrees off (typically on the lower side). Baking your product at this deficit can result in under baking and your product will not have set up enough to structurally support the rise it has achieved. For this reason, an oven thermometer is a handy purchase to verify that your oven is actually holding its temperature evenly in all areas. In addition to this if you are baking multiple products simultaneously, there will be some degree of insulation occurring so each product might take a little longer to bake through. Aside from the classic toothpick test, it is more reliable to insert a digital instant-read thermometer into your the center of your baked good to determine if the interior is indeed baked through. Most bread recipes would be considered completely baked between 190-200 degrees F whereas pastry application should read between 200-210 degrees F.
The last reason baked goods like to sink in the middle has to do with pan size. If a recipe is calling for a specific pan or vessel size and you have chosen a smaller version of that vessel, then your batter/dough could crest above the rim of the pan initially, but then topple onto itself once it is unsupported by the pan, contributing to a sinking or collapsed look in a product. Double checking you have the correct pan size listed in the recipe is always handy when setting out to bake.
I hope you found these tips helpful. Happy baking!
April 21, 2022 at 5:26am
really one of the amazing post.
July 31, 2021 at 2:47am
By the time the cake pulls away from the side of the pan the cake is way over baked.
Most recipes state 350°F, but that is way too high temperature for cake.
Baker needs to consider how batter bakes in the pan. Cake batter bakes from the sides to the center. The batter that is in contact with the pan (sides and bottom) will bake AND set first.
At 350°F, batter in contact with the sides of the pan will set before the center. The center will continue to rise. This is what creates the dome effect.
If the pan is made of anodized aluminum, is a coated nonstick metal, or a dark metal, it will conduct heat more intensely. This will cause the batter in contact with the sides to set faster, creating more of a dome affect, and a faster rise, resulting in a cracked center. It’s like a volcano.
A perfectly baked cake should be level. There should be no dark brown crust— especially on a white cake.
Even a chocolate cake should not have a crust on it.
Use a plain uncoated metal cake pan like Chicago Metallic uncoated or NordicWare Natural.
Use cloth baking strips (I like Wilton). Not use those silicone as it is a conductor of heat.
Line the cake pan with parchment paper.
Bake at 325°F for most cakes. The exception would be a cake with a lot of add-ins such as a carrot cake; a chocolate cake with several types of chocolate (cocoa powder, chopped chocolates).
Cream butter and sugar at 65°F, not “room temperature”
July 31, 2021 at 10:30am
In reply to By the time the cake pulls… by Cate G (not verified)
Thanks for adding your own cake baking tips, Cate!
March 1, 2022 at 7:26pm
In reply to By the time the cake pulls… by Cate G (not verified)
I used Mrs Richardson's Hot Fudge softened and blend 80% into the mix immediately prior to oven. I have been told for over 20 years that it is the best chocolate cake ever eaten. No icing. phenomenal "go with" is whipped cream with powderd sugar with Tahition and or madigascar vanilla. The flour absorbs the moisture and flavor from the HF and check fatisiously for doneness. I would be interested in your tests on this. Bethany has been very helpful for my initiation inot bread making.
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