Baking trials: How to soften butter quickly
Does the best method involve your microwave?

You need softened butter — and you need it now. Do you risk it all and microwave it? Do you rearrange your schedule and wait hours for it to come to room temperature on the counter? Or do you try another hack: a hot water bath or a DIY butter sauna or more?
Countless tips, tricks, and techniques abound to soften butter fast. Some are worth it, and some aren’t. We tested them all to find the best way to soften butter quickly. But first …
The best way to tell if butter is perfectly soft is by pressing your finger into it. It should feel like clay — you’re easily able to press an indent, but it has some resistance. The butter should not be greasy, and your finger shouldn’t be able to press all the way through the butter to the surface underneath — if that’s the case, it’s too hot.
Butter typically needs to be soft when creaming with sugar. During this step, sugar is whipped into the butter, creating little pockets of air from the sugar crystals that lighten and aerate the butter. This translates to pockets of air in the final baked good, which results in fluffier, taller bakes.
If the butter is too cold while creaming, the sugar won’t be able to create air pockets effectively and baked goods will be more dense; if the butter is too hot (and thus too soft), it will not hold its shape and be able to support a network of air pockets from the sugar, again making the baked good dense.
Butter also needs to be soft for other baking steps, like coating flour in a cake made using the reverse-creaming method. If the butter is too hard, it won’t be able to blend into the flour; too soft and it will make the flour mixture greasy. Similar principles apply to making buttercreams or enriched breads, in which you need to beat soft butter into a mixture. It has to hold its shape but blend easily and emulsify into the mixture.
All tests were done using Land O Lakes unsalted butter in a 73°F kitchen. Note that different temperatures and butters with different water content will result in slightly varied time ranges for each of these methods.
First, the classic method, used here as a control:
To speed up softening on the countertop, some bakers recommend slicing your butter to expose more surface area and bring it to room temperature more quickly:
Other bakers laud different hacks that create a warm environment to soften butter quickly. We tried those out:
And then there’s the microwave. Everyone says you shouldn’t microwave your butter to soften it, but are they just being dramatic?
That’s right: After testing, our favorite method involves microwaving butter, but in a very specific way. It has to be placed vertically, which exposes more surface area and results in even softening, without patches of hot and cold spots. And it all takes less than 20 seconds, so you can pick a recipe and start baking within minutes.
Note: All microwaves are different, so play around with a few seconds more or less to determine the perfect setting for your butter. These tests were conducted in a 1000-watt microwave.
If you don’t have access to a microwave, we recommend slicing butter and leaving it on the counter. You can use the 30 minutes or so it takes to soften to prepare your mise en place and get organized to bake.
And remember, if you accidentally go too far with any of these methods and end up with butter that’s halfway to melting, we have several recipes that call for melted butter. Try Melted Butter Pie Crust, Crumpets, or Rye Chocolate Chip Cookies. And if your plans change and you’re wondering if you can put softened butter back in the fridge — we’ve got the answer here.
Cover photo by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne.
October 9, 2023 at 12:11am
I store my butter in the freezer...keeping one stick in a self-sealing plastic bag in the deli drawer of my fridge. Two days ago, I (spur of the moment) decided to make Sourdough (discard) Cinnamon Crumb Cake. It called for 14 tbs of butter (oops...only 8 in the fridge) and room temp eggs. My kitchen island has a marble top, so normally I place the frozen butter sticks on their side on the marble. As I'm gathering things together, I periodically rotate the stick to another side. However, this time, since I had to warm the eggs, I placed warm tap water (~1 cup) in a rectangular container and placed the eggs in the water. I then nestled the butter sticks next to two sides of the container with the eggs. I did rotate the sticks periodically...whilst gathering the other ingredients, utensils, and prepping as much stuff as possible before having to use them. This works especially well if you are doing many things "simultaneously"...like laundry, answering the phone, helping spouse, etc.
I will add the vertical microwave instructions to my "helpful hints and tips" computer file in case I ever need it faster....
October 8, 2023 at 9:07pm
I almost never get the butter set out in time to soften it per recipe requirements. I have a very small saucepan (about 2 cup size) and slice the butter into this. Then, heat on low temp until I think it's ready to use for creaming with sugar.
October 8, 2023 at 7:12pm
I have a soft butter setting on my microwave. Works pretty good
October 8, 2023 at 3:56pm
I'm gonna try this! My "mostly foolproof" method for spur-of-the-moment baking: nuke 30 seconds at 40% power. Usually works. Thanks!
October 9, 2023 at 10:10am
In reply to I'm gonna try this! My … by Nancy Lain (not verified)
I usually do 30% power and do in 15 second increments, turning it over in between. Also works great.
October 8, 2023 at 3:52pm
Why does the picture for a vertical butter stick show a horizontal one? I’m confused
October 10, 2023 at 11:54am
In reply to Why does the picture for a… by Vj (not verified)
Hi Vj, great question! I think in order to press a finger into the butter, it needed to be placed horizontally, but the "vertical" label is to indicate that this was the process followed to achieve this result.
October 12, 2023 at 9:13pm
In reply to Hi Vj, great question! I… by balpern
I think the photo is VERY confusing. I understand your explanation but a photo should speak for itself. Maybe show vertical method and result side by side.
October 14, 2023 at 1:35pm
In reply to I think the photo is VERY… by Anne (not verified)
Hi Anne, thanks for the suggestion! I will pass it along to our blog editors.
October 15, 2023 at 10:38am
In reply to I think the photo is VERY… by Anne (not verified)
I agree. The photo was very confusing.
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