Pumpkin Carrot Cake combines two of the best spiced cakes into one! With warming fall spices and cream cheese frosting, it’s a cozy fall favorite.

Slice of pumpkin carrot cake revealing its soft and moist interior, topped with a delicious icing.

The Best Pumpkin Carrot Cake

This may be my all-time favorite cake, and I think my boys would agree! I took my two favorite cake recipes on this site (carrot cake and pumpkin cake), combined them, and was blown away by the results.

This cake has incredible depth of flavor and is so moist and tender. The cream cheese frosting ties everything together beautifully, and there’s no way I’ll make it through fall each year without baking this cake.

Wet ingredients being stirred together to create the batter.

Bring Ingredients To Room Temperature

Using room temperature ingredients will ensure the best-possible Pumpkin Carrot Cake texture.

  • Using room-temperature eggs helps them blend more evenly into the batter, giving the cake a lighter texture (the eggs trap air).
    • Soak refrigerated eggs in a bowl of warm (not hot) water for about 10 minutes to quickly bring them to room temperature.
    • Alternatively, pull the eggs out of the fridge about 30 minutes before using to make this Pumpkin Carrot Cake.
  • Using room-temperature butter and cream cheese for the frosting will ensure a smooth, luxurious frosting without unpleasant chunks of cream cheese.
    • Pull both out of the refrigerator about 45 minutes to 1 hour in advance.
    • Alternatively, remove the cream cheese from the packaging. Place in the microwave and heat for 5 seconds, flip each and microwave for another 5 seconds. Continue to do this on each side of the cream cheese until softened to room temperature. Flipping frequently helps to evenly soften. Repeat in a separate bowl or plate with butter (I’ve found the two don’t soften at the same rate.)
Dry ingredients being sifted over the wet ingredients and combined until smooth.

Pumpkin Carrot Cake Tips

  • Spoon and level the flour. If you pack in too much flour, the cake with be dry, dense, and less moist. Here’s a great video showing how to properly measure flour for this recipe.
  • Grate carrots on the small holes of the grater. To ensure the right texture and even dispersion, we want the carrots very finely shredded. This is attained with the small holes on a grater.
  • Thoroughly drain the pineapple. First, make sure you have the right can size — it’s easy to miss since there are so many different sized cans of pineapple! We want the 8-ounce (tiny!) can and for all the excess moisture to be drained out. I press out the liquid through a fine mesh sieve.
  • Don’t overbake. To avoid dry cake, you’ll want to make sure you don’t overbake the layers; they can go from perfectly moist to far less flavorful in just a few minutes.
  • Let the cakes cool for 30 minutes. Cool in the pan for 20 minutes before turning them onto cooling racks to continue cooling. Wait for the cakes to be 100% cool before frosting.

Quick Tip

Don’t feel like every bit of the frosting needs to be used on this pumpkin carrot cake. I prefer to have a bit extra than to scramble and make more if needed. Use leftover cream cheese on these amazing pumpkin cinnamon roll cookies, on waffles/pancakes, or on these pumpkin cupcakes!

Lining The Cake Pans

Stick to 9-inch cake pans for best results. Here are the exact cake pans I use.

Pumpkin Carrot Cake is so moist that if the bottom of the cake pans aren’t lined, the cake won’t come out nicely (I speak from experience!). Make sure you line the cake pan with parchment paper.

There’s an easy to way to do this; check out this photo slideshow or read the directions below:

  1. Tear off a sheet of parchment paper slightly larger than the cake pan.
  2. Fold the parchment in half.
  3. Then fold the parchment in half again.
  4. Fold into a triangle.
  5. Fold the triangle in half again.
  6. Hold the triangle against the bottom of the pan from the center outwards.
  7. Cut the parchment right where it meets the edge of the cake pan along the curve of the cake pan.
  8. Unfold the parchment and press into the bottom of the cake pan.
Carrot pumpkin cake batter in a pan, ready to be placed in the oven for baking.

Pumpkin Carrot Cake Troubleshooting

How To Get Even Cake Layers

When making a layered cake, divide the batter equally between the pans. This helps the layers bake evenly and look nice.
Pour the batter into each pan, then use a kitchen scale to check. Adjust as needed to make sure each pan has the same amount of batter.

What Makes The Cake Moist?

Using incorrect ingredients, over mixing the batter, or baking the cake too long or at too high of a temperature (incorrectly calibrated oven) can produce a dry cake.
To make a cake moist, be sure to follow baking directions carefully in a calibrated oven.

A slice of carrot and pumpkin cake with a bite taken out of it, packed full of flavor and perfectly complemented by the icing.


Storage

Pumpkin Carrot Cake Storage

Finished Cake: Store in the fridge, wrapped tightly or under a cake dome, for up to 3 days. Refrigerate due to the cream cheese frosting. The cake doesn’t freeze well once frosted.

Make Ahead/Freezing: Wrap cooled cake layers in plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to 2 days or freeze for up to 1 month. Defrost in the fridge for 24 hours before frosting.

I prefer making and freezing the layers ahead. They’re more flavorful after sitting. Thaw for about an hour at room temperature (they don’t need to be fully thawed) before frosting.


More Pumpkin Recipes

4.60 from 20 votes

Pumpkin Carrot Cake

Pumpkin Carrot Cake brings together the best of both worlds—rich, spiced pumpkin and carrot cakes—topped with a delicious cream cheese frosting. It's the ultimate cozy fall treat!
Prep Time: 45 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
Servings: 8 servings

Equipment

  • 2 cake pans 9-inch
  • Parchment paper
  • Sifter
  • Cooling Rack
  • stand mixer

Ingredients 
 

Wet Ingredients

  • 1 cup carrots shredded, 2-3 medium-sized carrots
  • 3/4 cup whole milk
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons lemon juice
  • 1-1/4 cups pumpkin not pumpkin pie filling and not the whole can
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1-1/2 cups light brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 3 large eggs
  • 3/4 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 (8-ounce) can crushed pineapple well drained
  • 1 cup sweetened coconut flakes

Dry Ingredients

  • 2 cups flour spooned and leveled
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves

Frosting

  • 2 (8-ounce) packages cream cheese soften to room temperature, do not melt
  • 8 tablespoons unsalted butter soften to room temperature, do not melt
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 4 to 5 cups powdered sugar
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons heavy cream optional
  • 1 cup chopped pecans optional

Instructions 

Cake

  • Preheat oven to 350°F. Spray two 9-inch round pans with cooking spray, dust with flour, and line with parchment paper (see note 1).
  • Peel and finely grate carrots, ensuring you have exactly 1 cup.
  • Whisk together milk and lemon juice, then set aside for 5 minutes (it will look curdled).
  • In a large bowl, mix pumpkin (make sure it isn’t watery at all), granulated sugar, brown sugar, oil, eggs, vanilla, and milk/lemon mixture until smooth. Whisk in carrots and pineapple until smooth.
  • Place a sifter over the bowl and sift in flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, and cloves, then add coconut and mix until just combined.
  • Divide batter evenly between pans (see note 2), then bake for 35–45 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove and allow to cool 5–7 minutes before inverting cakes onto a cooling rack for them to finish cooling.

Frosting

  • In a large bowl fitted to a stand mixer, beat softened cream cheese and butter until completely smooth. Add vanilla and a pinch of salt, then gradually mix in powdered sugar, 1 cup at a time until you’ve added 3-1/2 cups. Mix until you have a good frosting consistency. Adjust consistency with heavy cream if needed.
  • Remove 1/4 of the frosting for the center of the cake. The frosting won't be as firm as a buttercream, but firm enough to frost the cake.
  • Place a little frosting on the bottom of a cake pan (just to hold the bottom cake in place) and top with 1 completely cooled cake. Add the reserved 1/4 of the frosting into the center and smooth it. Add the other cake on top.
  • Use remaining frosting to generously frost the cake. If the frosting is too soft, either refrigerate it or add 1/2 cup powdered sugar. (You will likely have a bit of extra frosting, so don’t feel like you need to use it all on the cake.) Once the cake is frosted, decorate the sides with the chopped pecans if desired.

Video

Recipe Notes

Note 1: There’s an easy way to line the pans with parchment paper; check out this photo slideshow or read the directions in the blog post.
Note 2: Pour even amounts into each pan and then check the accuracy with a kitchen scale. Adjust the batter in each cake pan so that each pan contains perfectly even amounts.
Storage: Store cake in the fridge, tightly covered. Frosted cake does not freeze and thaw well, but unfrosted cake freezes nicely for up to a month.

Nutrition

Serving: 1serving | Calories: 953kcal | Carbohydrates: 144.6g | Protein: 9g | Fat: 40.1g | Cholesterol: 123.3mg | Sodium: 783.3mg | Fiber: 3.6g | Sugar: 114.5g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Meet Chelsea


Hello, and welcome to Chelseaโ€™s Messy Apron! Iโ€™m Chelsea, the recipe developer, food photographer, and writer behind the site. Iโ€™m passionate about creating simple, reliable, and delicious recipes that anyone can make.

Thanks for stopping byโ€”I hope you find something delicious to make!

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4.60 from 20 votes (7 ratings without comment)

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48 Comments

  1. Annemarie says:

    5 stars
    Hi – just love your recipes (and your stories make me laugh) . Can I keep the same ingredient measurements the same making the carrot pumpkin cake into large cupcakes? How long would I bake them? Again my muffin pan is for a larger muffin & not the standard. I also have a muffin top pan I could use too. Would either work w/ this mouth watering recipe? Thanks.

  2. Catalina says:

    5 stars
    I made cupcakes using this tecipe. Very moist! In the future if I were to leave out the co onut, would I add more flour?

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      So happy to hear that! I can’t answer that for sure without testing that substitution, but I don’t think it would be a 1:1 substitute. Wish I could be of more help!

  3. Denae says:

    You’re my new favorite food photographer. Gorgeous photos!

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      That means so much to me, thank you so much!

  4. Fazia Boodhoo says:

    Hi Chealsea, this cake looks so amazingly delicious!!!
    Can I use fresh pineapples and just grate it?
    ??

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      Thank you so much Fazia! Yes I think that would work great! You could also omit the pineapple if desired ๐Ÿ™‚ Enjoy!

  5. Thea says:

    Oh my goodness this looks fabulous! I make this recipe for carrot cake w/o the pumpkin, so can’t wait to try this addition! Has anyone tried to make this in a 9×13 pan yet? Also, I have Thanksgiving and also friends coming over for dinner, what’s your opinion on the pumpkin cheesecake strussel bars vs. this cake? I know, not a fair question?!

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      I hope you love this cake Thea! ๐Ÿ™‚ I haven’t tried a 9 x 13 pan, but perhaps someone else could chime in. That is a tough call!! I do tend to pick cake over cheesecake though, so I guess I’d choose this one! Either way you can’t go wrong though ๐Ÿ˜‰

  6. Susan Greene says:

    Sounds delicious! Is it possible to leave out the pineapple to cut down the sugar content?

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      You can leave it out ๐Ÿ™‚

  7. Julie says:

    Can you use your own pumpkin if you can’t get tinned variety?

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      As long as it’s not too watery it should be great ๐Ÿ™‚

  8. Michelle says:

    I just made a carrot cake for my coworker’s birthday (carrot cake is her favorite) and I think it’s time for a new recipe – it needs a little punch up! I’m so looking forward to trying your recipe instead. Thanks for posting!

    1. chelseamessyapron says:

      I hope you love this cake! ๐Ÿ™‚

  9. Julia says:

    Wow! This is the most beautiful carrot cake I’ve ever seen! I love the addition of pumpkin there. It must taste amazing – no wonder your family loved it!

  10. Shawnna Griffin says:

    hey girl- this cake looks amazing!!

    1. Gloria says:

      5 stars
      Hi CHELSEA!! How can we adapt this to a 9×13 pan? Cake & icing?? Looks lucious but I am horrible with layer cakes. THX!