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Home › Recipes › Blog

Updated on May 11, 2026 by Liz Marek · This post may contain affiliate links · 4 Comments

High Altitude Baking Hacks

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Adjustments for high altitude baking

If you're going to be doing some high altitude baking (over 3,500 ft above sea level) then you might need to make some adjustments to your favorite recipes. Especially cakes like my vanilla cake recipe. These are my tips for baking at high altitudes with success.

high altitude baking hacks

Why do things bake differently at high altitude?

Basically, there is less air pressure at higher elevations. I remember when we took our road trip to Yellowstone National Park. The elevation was around 6,000 ft. I was having a very hard time catching my breath just going up the stairs! That's because I'm from the valley, so I'm just not used to high elevation.

When you bake at a higher elevation, your cakes tend to rise more, overflow the pan or collapse in the middle.

vanilla cake recipe

How do I adjust my recipes for high altitude baking?

When making adjustments to a recipe, it's important to take notes. Something that works for one recipe, might not work for the other.

Here are a few ways you can adjust your recipes for high altitude baking. 

  1. Bake at a higher temperature. Raise your oven temperature 25ºF from what the recipe calls for. This helps the product to set quickly and reduce the chances of the cake or other baked good from raising too much. Remember, baking at higher temps mean the product is done sooner! Don't let it burn!
  2. Reduce baking powder by ⅛-1/2 of a tsp. You don't need as much leavening to get your baked goods to raise so you can reduce the baking powder a little bit so the product doesn't rise as much.
  3. Reduce the sugar by 2 Tablespoons per cup of sugar. Too much sugar makes the structure weak and can cause collapse.
  4. Increase the liquid by 2 Tablespoons per cup of liquid. Liquids evaporate quicker at higher altitudes, so you'll need to up the liquids to account for that evaporation.
  5. Don't over-mix your eggs. Normally you want to REALLY make sure you're putting a lot of air into your egg whites for a french macaron recipe or when you're creaming your butter/sugar and adding in egg whites but hold back a few seconds at higher elevations. This reduces the amount of air you're incorporating into the batter.
  6. Add more flour. At 3,500 feet, add 1 Tablespoon of flour to your recipe. For every additional 1,500 feet, add another Tablespoon. More flour helps to stabilize the structure of the product.

For example, my muffin recipe uses 3 teaspoons of baking powder plus 1 teaspoon of baking soda, both of which need adjusting at altitude (see ratios above).

Hopefully, these tips will help you troubleshoot your problems when baking at high altitudes. Leave me a comment if you have a question!

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About Liz Marek

Liz Marek is a professional cake artist, sweet and savory recipe developer, and the founder of Sugar Geek Show, where she teaches cooking, baking and cake decorating through detailed tutorials, food science explanations, and kitchen-tested recipes. She has been creating recipes and teaching baking techniques since 2008, helping bakers of all skill levels gain the confidence to make professional-quality desserts at home.

Liz is known for breaking down complex cooking and baking concepts into simple, approachable methods. Her work focuses on helping people understand not just how a recipe works, but why it works. Through Sugar Geek Show, she shares step-by-step recipes, cake decorating tutorials, and practical baking guides designed to make professional techniques accessible to everyone.

Over the years, Liz has taught thousands of students through online tutorials, classes, and educational content focused on real kitchen results. Her recipes are carefully tested and written to help people succeed the first time they make them.

When she’s not developing recipes or teaching baking techniques, Liz also hosts curated travel experiences for women through her travel brand Soul Sisters.

You can find Liz’s latest recipes, baking tutorials, and food science tips at Sugar Geek Show.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Ivona says

    June 22, 2020 at 10:59 am

    Are these for all your cake recipes. Should we make adjustments to all.

    Reply
    • Elizabeth Marek says

      June 23, 2020 at 10:42 am

      If you live at a high-altitude you will most likely have to make adjustments to all your recipes

      Reply
  2. Lori Kenzel says

    May 13, 2020 at 9:45 am

    Thank you for responding so quickly to my cake emergency. I will try thee changes for the lemon cake.

    Reply
  3. Samantha says

    December 24, 2019 at 2:20 am

    Thank you for including adjustments for those of us baking at high altitudes. I moved to Colorado 4 years ago after living at sea level for 40 years and thought my relationship with baking was over - it’s a different world completely!!

    Reply

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