Lemon bars are the dessert that tastes like April: bright, clean, a little punchy, and impossible to eat just one square of. A buttery shortbread base, a silky lemon curd that sets to spoonable tart-sweet, and a dust of powdered sugar make these bars the definitive citrus dessert. They're ideal make-ahead — actually better the next day — and they slice like a dream once chilled. Make them for Easter, a spring party, Mother's Day brunch, or any weekend when four lemons and an hour of patience turn into sixteen bakery-level squares.
Classic lemon bars
A buttery shortbread crust topped with a silky-tart lemon curd filling and a dusting of powdered sugar — the bright dessert that defines spring.

- Prep
- 20 min
- Cook
- 50 min
- Total
- 3h 10m
- Serves
- 16
Classic lemon bars
Makes 16 squares (9x9-inch pan)
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (11)
Shortbread crust
Lemon filling
To finish
You'll need
- 9×9-inch (or 8×8) baking pan
- Parchment paper
- Food processor (optional, for crust)
- Large mixing bowl
- Whisk
- Microplane (for zest)
- Fine mesh strainer (for straining curd and dusting)
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 squareWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Meyer lemon — sweeter, more floral, especially wonderful in lemon bars
- Eureka — classic grocery lemon; bright and sharp
- Lisbon — similar to Eureka; excellent substitute
- Bearss — seedless and very juicy
- Variegated pink lemon — beautiful zest, slightly sweeter; fun specialty option
Ripeness
Lemons should feel heavy for their size with taut, shiny skin. A firm but yielding squeeze indicates plenty of juice. Dull, wrinkled skin = old, drier fruit.
Imperfections are fine
Minor surface scars or slight russeting is fine — often indicates tree-ripening. Skip any with mold at the stem or soft spots.
Good substitutions
- Lime bars — swap lemon juice for lime juice (and zest); slightly different but delicious
- Meyer lemon bars — for a softer, more floral version
- Orange bars — blood orange in particular; gorgeous color
- Half lemon, half lime — key lime meets classic lemon bar
In season
US lemon season peaks December through May. California Meyer lemons are especially wonderful in spring. This is a peak-winter-into-spring dessert.
How much to buy
4 to 5 lemons for 1 cup juice + 2 tablespoons zest.
Find your lemon grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season December – May
- For this recipe 4 to 5 lemons
- Freshness Picked within this week
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Farm eggs · Local butter · Fresh berries (for topping) · Vanilla beans or good extract
At the market
4 to 5 lemons for 1 cup juice + 2 tablespoons zest.
Best varieties
- Meyer lemon sweeter, more floral, especially wonderful in lemon bars
- Eureka classic grocery lemon; bright and sharp
- Lisbon similar to Eureka; excellent substitute
Good to know
Tips
- Zest before juicing. A whole lemon is much easier to zest than a half-squeezed shell. Zest into a pile and juice right after.
- Roll lemons hard on the counter before juicing. This breaks cell walls and releases 30% more juice.
- Chill the bars overnight if possible. They slice cleanest and taste best the next day.
- For bakery-perfect edges, trim 1/4 inch off all sides before slicing into squares. Snack on the trimmings.
- Dust powdered sugar right before serving — sugar dissolves into the filling within an hour of contact.
- A fine-mesh strainer gives the most even powdered sugar coverage. Shake into it over the bars.
- The zest is non-negotiable. Filling made with juice alone tastes flat; zest adds aromatic oil that's irreplaceable.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 5 days in an airtight container (layer between parchment).
- Freezer: 3 months (without powdered sugar); thaw overnight in the fridge.
- Room temperature: 4 hours, for serving a party — but they're set best when chilled.
Reheating
- Not applicable — served chilled or cool.
Make ahead
- Bake 1 to 2 days ahead; refrigerate in the pan.
- Store fully covered to prevent the filling from absorbing fridge odors.
- Freeze up to 3 months; dust with powdered sugar after thawing.
- Make the crust dough up to 3 days ahead and refrigerate before pressing and baking.
Variations
- Meyer lemon bars: use Meyer lemons exclusively — softer, more floral flavor.
- Key lime bars: swap lemon juice for Key lime juice (and zest).
- Blood orange bars: use 1/2 cup blood orange juice + 1/2 cup lemon juice — stunning color.
- Lemon-blueberry bars: fold 3/4 cup fresh blueberries into the filling before pouring.
- Coconut crust: add 1/2 cup shredded coconut to the crust.
- Lavender lemon bars: add 1 teaspoon culinary lavender to the crust dough.
- Raspberry ripple: swirl 1/4 cup raspberry jam into the filling before baking.
- Almond crust: swap 1/2 cup flour for 1/2 cup almond flour in the crust.
- Olive oil lemon bars: swap butter for 3/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil — surprisingly wonderful.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: use a 1:1 GF flour blend for both crust and filling.
- Dairy-free: swap butter for vegan butter in the crust.
- Vegan: more complex — requires a full egg-free lemon curd (arrowroot + coconut cream based).
- Lower-sugar: reduce granulated sugar to 1 3/4 cups; the filling will be notably more tart.
- No lemons: use Meyer lemons, key limes, or a mix of lime and grapefruit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are my lemon bars cracked on top?
How do I get clean slices?
Can I use bottled lemon juice?
What's the difference between Meyer lemons and regular lemons?
Why did my filling sink into the crust?
Can I make lemon bars ahead?
Can I freeze them?
Why do you sift the flour into the filling?
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