No bake cheesecake is the dessert I hand to anyone who tells me they are scared of making cheesecake. There is no water bath, no cracked top, and no praying at the oven door. You mix, you chill, and it sets into clean creamy slices.

I make these because they fit how I actually entertain. I get the cheesecake done the night before, it sits in the fridge while I deal with everything else, and it is ready when people walk in. That make-ahead window is the whole reason no bake cheesecake earned a permanent spot in my rotation.

I have built this collection over years of testing, from full sliceable cheesecakes to bite-sized versions you can grab off a tray. The one I send people to first is my Woolworth cheesecake recipe, the light and lemony vintage one, and for parties I reach for my no bake cheesecake balls.

These no bake cheesecakes are one corner of my full no bake desserts collection.

photo of Jen

Note From Jenn

What I’ve Learned About No Bake Cheesecakes

No bake cheesecake is forgiving in some ways and unforgiving in others. The oven is not there to catch a mistake, so two things carry the whole recipe.

  • Cream cheese temperature decides everything. It has to be softened all the way through, not warm and not cold. Cold cream cheese leaves lumps you cannot beat out. Warm cream cheese loses its body and the filling never firms up. I pull mine out about an hour ahead and leave it on the counter.
  • Chill time is part of the recipe, not a suggestion. A no bake cheesecake that looks too soft after an hour will slice clean after a full overnight in the fridge. Pulling it early is the number one reason these fall apart on the plate.
  • The crust is glued together with butter. Too little and it crumbles the second a fork hits it. Too much and it turns greasy and slick. Press it firm and even, then chill it before the filling goes in.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Why won’t my no bake cheesecake set?

Almost always one of two things: the cream cheese was too warm when you mixed it, or the chill time was cut short. Give it a full overnight in the fridge before you decide it failed.

Do you need gelatin for a no bake cheesecake?

Not for mine. I rely on the cream cheese, the whipped topping, and a long chill to firm things up. Gelatin makes a stiffer set, but it also changes the texture, and I would rather keep it creamy.

How long do no bake cheesecakes last in the fridge?

Most hold well for 3 to 4 days covered. The bites and balls actually travel better than full cheesecakes because there is no slice to fall apart.

Can you freeze no bake cheesecake?

Yes, most freeze well for up to 2 to 3 months. Wrap it tight and thaw it in the refrigerator overnight before serving so the texture stays smooth.

More No Bake Recipes