I’m a tea lover all year round, but once the weather gets colder and things start to get cozy, chai is a staple in my tea cabinet. This spiced vanilla chai cake is that dreamy feeling of a warm chai latte in cake form – layers of soft and moist chai tea-infused cake and vanilla buttercream speckled with homemade chai spice mix. The remarkable yet perfectly balanced chai flavor makes this the ideal cake for any fall or winter gathering.


One reader, Marisa, says: “I made this cake and it was AMAZING!! I’ve been baking cakes for most of my life and this was one of the best I’ve ever made. It was so light and fluffy, with the perfect amount of spice.” ★★★★★
Why You’ll Love this Vanilla Chai Cake
Here are a few reasons why this spiced vanilla chai cake has become such a blog reader favorite over the years:
- Super soft & moist. This recipe uses a variation of my favorite vanilla cake recipe as a base, which is beautifully soft and moist from the addition of cake flour (keeps it light and fluffy) and sour cream (makes it super moist).
- Beautiful spiced chai flavor. Between steeping chai tea for the cake batter + adding tons of chai spices, I pull all the stops to create the perfect chai flavor in this recipe. It’s so cozy!
- Fun to make. The additional steps of steeping the chai tea and making homemade chai spice mix makes this recipe feel a little more complex, but in a fun way!

Perfectly Spiced Vanilla Chai Cake
There are two ways that I add chai flavor to this spiced vanilla chai cake: infusing the milk portion of the recipe with chai tea and adding a homemade spice blend to the dry ingredients and buttercream. Both of these methods add tons of spicy chai flavor, and combined with a good dose of vanilla extract, the result is perfection.
- Steeping the tea. This cake recipe begins with bringing the whole milk to a simmer in a small saucepan, then pouring it over a chai tea bag and steeping it for at least 15 minutes. After removing the tea bag, you’ll have a chai-infused milk mixture that will be added to the cake batter once it’s room temperature.
- Homemade chai spice mix. To flavor the cake and buttercream, you’ll blend together cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, allspice, and cloves. This gets added to the dry ingredients for the cake batter, and whisked into the powdered sugar that you’ll add to the buttercream.



Dreamy Vanilla Chai Buttercream
To really up the flavor, this delicious chai cake gets filled and frosted with silky smooth, beautifully speckled vanilla chai buttercream. It’s essentially my favorite vanilla buttercream recipe with homemade chai spice mix added, and oh my. The combination is Fall flavor heaven! This cake will technically pair well with all sorts of buttercreams (cream cheese, chocolate, vanilla, or anything that pairs well with chai tea), but if you want the full-on chai cake experience, this is it.

How to Decorate a Chai Layer Cake
Once you have your cake layers baked, cooled, and leveled + the buttercream made, here’s how to decorate this chai cake as pictured:
Step 1: Fill and stack. Place a swipe of buttercream on top of a cardboard cake circle and place the first chai cake layer on top. Add a layer of chai buttercream and smooth it down as the filling, then repeat the process of filling and stacking the cake until you have one layer left. Place that last layer upside down.




I like to crumb coat the cake at this point and place it in the refrigerator to firm up before moving on.
Step 2: Frost the cake. I created a smooth buttercream finish with the chai buttercream.


Step 3: Add Biscoff cookie crumbs. This part is completely optional, but I crushed up some Biscoff cookies and pressed the crumbs onto the bottom third of the cake.

Step 4: Add finishing touches. I divided the rest of the chai buttercream between two piping bags, one fitted with Wilton Tip 1M and the other fitted with Wilton Tip 4B. Then, I piped rosettes with Tip 1M in a crescent shape on top of the cake and filled in the gaps with stars that I piped with Tip 4B. I topped this crescent border with more Biscoff cookie crumbs and cinnamon sticks.



However you decorate, this cake is sure to be a hit wherever it goes! Feel free to get creative with how it looks.

Similar Cake Recipes You’ll Love
Here are some other cozy cake recipes from my blog to add to your baking list:
- Spiced Chai Cupcakes
- Spiced Chai Bundt Cake
- Chai Pumpkin Cake
- London Fog Cake
- Golden Milk Latte Cake


I hope you love this spiced vanilla chai cake as much as I do! Let me know if you make it in the comments below and feel free to tag @sugarandsparrowco on Instagram to show me if you post a photo. I love to see what you create with my recipes!

Spiced Vanilla Chai Cake
Ingredients
Chai Spice Mix
- 4 tsp ground cinnamon
- 2 tsp ground ginger
- 1 tsp ground cardamom
- 1/2 tsp ground allspice
- 1/4 tsp ground cloves
Vanilla Chai Cake
- 1 1/4 Cups (300ml) whole milk
- 1 chai tea bag
- 2 3/4 Cups (290g) sifted cake flour* DIY recipe in notes
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 4 tsp chai spice mix (recipe above)
- 1 tsp salt
- 3/4 Cup (170g) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 1 2/3 Cups (333g) granulated white sugar
- 3 large eggs, room temperature
- 1/2 Cup (120g) sour cream, room temperature
- 1 Tbsp pure vanilla extract
Vanilla Chai Buttercream
- 2 Cups (452g) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 7 Cups (840g) powdered sugar
- 1 Tbsp chai spice mix (recipe above)
- 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 2 Tbsp whole milk, room temperature
- 1/4 tsp salt
Garnish
- 5 Biscoff cookies, ground into crumbs
Instructions
Make The Chai Spice Mix
- In a small bowl, whisk together the cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, allspice, and cloves and set aside.
Make The Vanilla Chai Cake
- Place the chai tea bag into a mason jar. In a small saucepan over medium-high heat, warm the whole milk, stirring constantly, until it begins to boil. Pour the boiling milk over the chai tea bag in the mason jar and let steep for 20 minutes before removing the tea bag. Allow the mixture to cool completely to room temperature before moving on.
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (170ºC). Prepare three 6-inch or two 8-inch or 9-inch cake pans by spraying the sides with a cooking spray (Baker's Joy is my favorite) and fitting a wax or parchment paper circle to the bottom of the pan. Alternatively, you can grease and lightly flour the pans.
- Sift the cake flour and then measure by spooning and leveling it in your measuring cup. Add the cake flour, baking powder, baking soda, 4 teaspoons of the chai spice mix, and salt into a bowl and whisk to combine. Set aside.
- In the bowl of your stand mixer (a handheld mixer works fine too!), cream the butter for on high for two minutes until it's light and fluffy. Add in sugar and continue to mix on medium-high for another two minutes, scraping down the bowl and paddle as needed. Add the eggs one at a time, then add vanilla and sour cream and mix for one minute on high, scraping down the bowl and paddle once more.
- With the mixer on low speed, add in the dry ingredients and mix until just combined. Add the (room temperature!) chai milk mixture slowly and mix until just incorporated. Scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl and give it a few stirs to make sure there are no lumps (without over-mixing). The batter will be slightly thick, but pourable.
- Pour batter evenly into prepared cake pans (no more than 2/3 of the way full) and bake for 30-35 minutes. They're done when they spring back to the touch and a toothpick inserted into the middle comes out clean. Let the cakes cool in the pan for five minutes before turning them out onto a wire rack for an additional few hours of cooling. Make sure they're entirely room temperature before applying any frosting.
Make The Vanilla Chai Buttercream
- With a hand mixer or paddle attachment on your stand mixer, cream the butter on medium-high until it’s creamy and light (almost white) in color. About 7 minutes.
- Whisk 1 Tbsp of the Chai Spice Mix into the measured powdered sugar. With the mixer on low, add the powdered sugar mixture a few cups at a time, scraping down after each addition and making sure each addition is fully incorporated before adding the next one.
- Add vanilla, milk, and salt and mix on medium-low for another two minutes until fully incorporated.
Assembly
- Once the Vanilla Chai Cakes have cooled completely, fill and frost the layers with Vanilla Chai Buttercream. To create the design pictured, add crushed Biscoff cookies to the sides of the cake by placing them into the palm of your hand and gently pressing them onto the buttercream finish. Then, fit one piping bag with Wilton Tip 4B and another piping bag with Wilton Tip 1M before filling each with Vanilla Chai Buttercream. Pipe rosettes and stars onto the top of the cake in a crescent moon shape, add some cinnamon sticks, and sprinkle more crushed Biscoff cookies on top.
Notes
- The chai milk mixture can be made ahead and stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to one week. When you’re ready to use it, bring it back to room temperature before adding it to the cake batter.
- The cake layers can be made ahead and stored, wrapped in plastic wrap, at room temperature for up to two days. Alternatively, you can store the wrapped cake layers in the freezer for up to 2 months before thawing and frosting.
- The Vanilla Chai Buttercream can be made ahead and stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to two weeks. When you’re ready to use it, bring it back to room temperature and re-whip in your stand mixer to bring back to smooth buttercream consistency.





i really like the decorations because its simple but really decadent i just love it.
Thank you so much, Iggy!
Thank you for your recipe.
I tried and the flavour was really good (probably very sweet for my taste).
However, the cake was very dense in the centre; what do you think could be the problem?
Thanks,
Hi Cecilia! Sorry your cake ended up dense in the middle. It could be a few things, and since I didn’t observe your method or ingredient temps (etc) I can’t say for sure what but the most common culprits are overmixing the batter and using ingredients that are not room temp (too cold or too warm). If the cake sunk in the middle at all, here is a list of the most common reasons: https://sugarandsparrow.com/why-cakes-sink/ hope that helps!
I was looking for a recipe to make for a birthday cake and this sounds delicious. However, I prefer cream cheese frosting to buttercream as they can be too sweet sometimes. Would I still be able to mix in the Chai Spice Mix to your cream cheese buttercream frosting recipe? Or does the Chai Spice Mix cut down the sweetness of regular buttercream? Thanks for the recipe!
Hi Sarah! The chai spice does cut the sweetness of the buttercream, as does the salt added. You can certainly add it to cream cheese buttercream though, that sounds delicious!
Hi! How long would I bake the cakes in 8inch pans? Love the recipe !!
Hi Elle! It takes about 30-35 min for 8 inch pans, and this recipe yields enough for two 8-inch layers.
Hi Whitney, recipe looks great! My 6inch pans are slightly deeper so the batter fits well into 2 of my 6inch pans. Would I need to adjust cooking time? I’ve had it in for 39 minutes so far and its still not 100% cooked in centre so needs a little while longer (I have used an oven thermometer so know my oven is right temp).
Hi Anushka! I’ve never tried baking this cake in pans that deep, so I’m not sure what the full baking time will be. I would just keep checking it every so often to see how long it needs and consider how long it usually takes to bake cakes in your deeper pans. Let me know how it goes!
Amazing. Thank you so much. How much lattee powder would you put in? Making it in 2 days time!
Hi Emma! I would just add enough to make the amount you would normally add to make a latte (follow the box directions) and scale it for the amount of liquid in this recipe (1 1/4 cups). Hope that helps and excited for you to make this cake!
Can I make this recipe gluten free by replacing the cake flour with a gluten free all purpose? Have you ever made this gluten free before?
Hi Sophia! I have never tried making this recipe gluten free, but you are certainly welcome to test it with this recipe! If you do decide to try making it gluten free, it would be a 1:1 substitution for the cake flour. Let me know how it goes if you try it!
Hey! I have chai latte powder? Would this work instead of tea bag??
Hi Emma! You can totally whip up an equal amount of chai tea using the latte powder with whole milk. That should work just fine 🙂
Hi! This recipe looks great and wanting to try it. Can I substitute almond flour for the cake flour? And coconut sugar for the white sugar?
Or will that mess up the flavor profile?
Hi Maddy! I’m excited for you to try this recipe! Since I’ve never tried it with almond flour or coconut sugar before, I cannot say for sure how it will turn out. I can only recommend the recipe as-is, but if you want to experiment with substitutes feel free!
The cake is in the oven now, and smells divine. The frosting is wonderful, already made it. Thanks for the great recipe.
Yay, Jenn! Enjoy!
Have you tried making cookies from this recipe? If so what temp and how many would it make?
Hi Ashley! I have never heard of making cookies from a cake recipe before, but after looking around online it seems to be a thing! Since I’ve never tried it before I’m not sure how it works or what oven temp it requires, but feel free to experiment with this recipe and let me know how it goes.
Hi,
Can the cake be baked in one 6 inch pan instead of three seperate ones?
Hi Sara! Yes, you can certainly bake just one layer. Since this recipe yields three 6-inch layers, you can divide each ingredient by 3 to make just enough batter for one layer (aka only make 1/3 of the recipe). Hope that helps!
This recipe is so good, I tried it from a friend and it’s like a Chai heaven!
Yay, Alaa! So happy the recipe was a hit!
Hi. I cannot WAIT to try this!!! I was hoping to try it today, but I have a huge question. The instructions say to add in egg one at a time and mix thoroughly in between each, and the. To mix for a full minute after that. I just want to make sure that is correct? I’m use to instructions always saying be careful Not to overmix the egg. Your the expert though. I want to make this Today and I’m so anxious, lol. Thank you for the recipe
Hi Amanda! I can see how that phrasing might lead to over-mixing. I usually just add an egg and mix until the yolk breaks up and begins incorporating before adding the next one. I’ll make that more clear in the instructions! Hope you love this recipe!
Oh wow thank you for your quick response! I’m actually making this recipe RIGHT NOW. I can’t WAIT to eat it
I will be using this recipe for a cake. I would like to know if I can use buttermilk instead? I am not sure if it’ll boil properly? Thank you.
Hi Martha! I’ve never tried this with buttermilk, but you are welcome to try it!
Curious if you tried this and how it turned out. I cam for the same question.
I am unable to use sour cream, could you use the full-fat coconut cream (just the solids)?
Hi Amanda! I’m not sure about using the coconut cream solids in place of sour cream since I’ve never tried it, but you are welcome to give it a go! I do know that full fat greek yogurt makes a great sour cream substitute, or you could omit the sour cream completely and use full fat coconut milk in place of the whole milk in this recipe. Both options will make this cake extra moist.