16 Halloween Sweets your Kids will love!

These Halloween desserts bring playful color, creepy themes, and lots of sugar to the table. Theyโ€™re designed to be fun to make and even more fun to eat, with eyeballs, worms, and spiders popping up in every bite. Youโ€™ll find everything from cake mix shortcuts to cookie cups and candy-coated creations. These ideas are great for adding some edible mischief to your Halloween celebrations.

Halloween Sprinkle Cookies

Halloween Sprinkle Cookies. Photo credit: Mamas on a Budget.

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These cookies are loaded with bright Halloween sprinkles in every bite. A soft sugar cookie base provides the perfect canvas for festive colors and textures. You can shape or cut them to fit your theme or keep them simple and round. They bake quickly and look great on a holiday platter.
Get the Recipe: Halloween Sprinkle Cookies

Halloween Cake Mix Cookies

Some orange and black sprinkled cookies on a cooling rack.
Halloween Cake Mix Cookies. Photo credit: Upstate Ramblings.

With cake mix as the base, these cookies are extra soft and easy to make. Add-ins like chocolate chips, sprinkles, or candy eyes give them a spooky twist. They’re fast, customizable, and perfect for baking in large batches. Use Halloween-themed colors to make them stand out.
Get the Recipe: Halloween Cake Mix Cookies

Maple Cinnamon Mummy Cookies (YUM!)

Two round cookies decorated with white icing to look like mummy faces, each with two round candy eyes, placed on a wooden surface.
Maple Cinnamon Mummy Cookies (YUM!). Photo credit: Trop Rockin.

These cookies combine warm fall spices with fun mummy-style decoration. Iced with zigzag lines to look like bandages and topped with candy eyes, theyโ€™re playful and tasty. The maple and cinnamon flavors bring a cozy touch to the usual Halloween lineup. They’re a fun twist on the typical sugar cookie.
Get the Recipe: Maple Cinnamon Mummy Cookies (YUM!)

Spider Cookies

Spider Cookies. Photo credit: Mamas on a Budget.

Chocolate or peanut butter cookies get topped with round chocolates and candy eyes to create little spiders. Licorice or piped chocolate makes the legs, giving them a creepy crawly look. Theyโ€™re cute enough for kids but still a bit spooky for Halloween. These cookies always disappear fast.
Get the Recipe: Spider Cookies

Monster Oreo Balls

Monster Oreo Balls. Photo credit: Mamas on a Budget.

Crushed Oreos and cream cheese are rolled into balls, dipped in colorful candy melts, and finished with candy eyes. Each one can look like a different monster depending on how you decorate. They’re bite-sized and rich with chocolate flavor. Make them ahead of time and keep them chilled until ready to serve.
Get the Recipe: Monster Oreo Balls

Green Monster Muffins

Green muffins with candy eyes and chocolate chips arranged on a white wicker plate and a white dish, on a wooden table.
Green Monster Muffins. Photo credit: Thriving In Parenting.

These muffins are tinted green and decorated with silly monster faces. Candy eyes and jagged icing make them look like little creatures. They’re usually banana or chocolate chip based, keeping the texture moist and sweet. Great for breakfast or snacks during spooky season.
Get the Recipe: Green Monster Muffins

Dirt Cups with Cookie Cups

Dirt Cups with Cookie Cups . Photo credit: Practically Homemade .

These treats take the dirt cup idea and build it into a cookie shell. Each cookie cup holds pudding, crushed cookies, and gummy worms. The crunchy base adds structure and extra flavor. They’re great for individual servings and look great on a dessert tray.
Get the Recipe: Dirt Cups with Cookie Cups

Graveyard Dirt Cups

A glass cup filled with chocolate dessert, candy eyes, a gummy worm, and a cookie marked RIP, surrounded by fake eyeballs and yellow leaves.
Graveyard Dirt Cups. Photo credit: Thriving In Parenting.

Each clear cup is filled with pudding and cookie crumbs to create mini edible graveyards. Top them with bone candy, gummy worms, and cookie tombstones for full effect. They’re simple to assemble and look great lined up for a party. A fun make-ahead option for any Halloween event.
Get the Recipe: Graveyard Dirt Cups

Dirt Pie

Dirt Pie. Photo credit: I Heart Eating.

This is a larger version of the dirt cup, made in a pie dish with layers of pudding, cookies, and candy. You can top it with more crushed cookies and gummy worms or add tombstone cookies for a graveyard look. It slices easily and serves a crowd. It’s one of the easiest Halloween desserts to assemble.
Get the Recipe: Dirt Pie

Monster Eyeball Cookies

Sugar cookies decorated to look like colorful eyeballs are arranged on a wooden tray and plates, with a plastic black spider placed nearby on a white wooden surface.
Monster Eyeball Cookies. Photo credit: Low Calorie Eating.

Brightly frosted cookies topped with big candy eyes for a fun and goofy monster look. You can go bold with color or keep it simple, depending on the vibe you’re going for. Kids love decorating these with different eye shapes and expressions. They’re a silly, festive treat that everyone loves.
Get the Recipe: Monster Eyeball Cookies

Halloween Candy Bark

Rectangular pieces of orange and white swirled candy bark topped with mini pretzels, candy corn, and colorful sprinkles on a marble surface.
Halloween Candy Bark. Photo credit: Upstate Ramblings.

Melted chocolate swirled with colored candy melts and topped with Halloween-themed candy. Once set, it breaks into shards with lots of color and crunch. It’s a great way to use up leftover candy or create themed treats with minimal effort. No baking required and easy to customize.
Get the Recipe: Halloween Candy Bark

Halloween Cauldron Pops

A chocolate-covered cookie pop decorated with candy eyes and green icing to resemble a monster face, held up on a wooden stick. More decorated pops are visible in the background.
Halloween Cauldron Pops. Photo credit: One Hot Oven.

Cake pops or chocolates shaped and decorated to look like bubbling witch cauldrons. They often have green icing and candy bubbles spilling over the top. They’re mounted on sticks for easy eating. These look especially cute when grouped together in a display.
Get the Recipe: Halloween Cauldron Pops

Halloween Cake Mix Donuts

Chocolate Cake Mix Donuts decorated for halloween with frosting and sprinkles.
Halloween Cake Mix Donuts. Photo credit: Upstate Ramblings.

Made from boxed cake mix, these donuts are quick to whip up and easy to decorate. Add bright icing, festive sprinkles, or monster faces to fit the Halloween theme. They’re soft and fluffy with lots of color. Use a donut pan to keep the shape just right.
Get the Recipe: Halloween Cake Mix Donuts

Dirt and Worm Cookies

Dirt and Worm Cookies . Photo credit: Semi Homemade Kitchen.

Cookies topped with crushed cookies and a few gummy worms for that signature creepy-crawly look. They usually use a chocolate or peanut butter base. The messy topping adds crunch and color. Great for Halloween cookie trays or party treats.
Get the Recipe: Dirt and Worm Cookies

Halloween Chocolate Covered Oreos

A plate with four Halloween-themed cookies decorated as a green monster, a ghost, a purple monster, and a pumpkin, on an orange polka dot tablecloth.
Halloween Chocolate Covered Oreos. Photo credit: Trop Rockin.

These Oreos get dipped in colored chocolate and dressed up like pumpkins, mummies, or monsters. They’re no-bake, quick to make, and always get attention. Add sprinkles or candy eyes for extra flair. A great snack to hand out or bring to a party.
Get the Recipe: Halloween Chocolate Covered Oreos

Dirt and Worms Brownies

Dirt and Worms Brownies . Photo credit: Semi Homemade Kitchen.

Brownies topped with crushed cookies and gummy worms for a gooey, creepy twist. The soft, fudgy base pairs well with the crunch and chew of the toppings. A few swirls of green icing add some Halloween color. They’re messy, fun, and full of texture.
Get the Recipe: Dirt and Worms Brownies

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