20 Gingerbread House Ideas for Design Lovers (2024)

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Look around and you can find gingerbread house ideas just about anywhere online and offline. Sure, you could follow whatever directions are included in a gingerbread house making kit, but you’re already good withhome improvement tools and maybe even crafted a DIY centerpiece, so why not think outside the box? This year, consider taking a more elevated approach to the traditional Christmas village house by adding extra detailing with icing to thefront door or implementing innovative candy accessories for decadent landscaping. You might even find decorating inspiration from precious childhood memories or perhaps a classicholiday film. Dare we suggest recreating an existing house in yummy gingerbread form?

“Instead of thinking in the context of a gingerbread house, start at zero and think of your dream home to spend the holidays with your family or friends,” suggests interior designerKelly Wearstler. “This may begin with a specific design style or time period that you’d like to replicate. Then, you can consider different shapes, rooms, and features that you can start layering in—it is all about the fantasy.”

As with any DIY project, creating a gingerbread house takes some serious planning. You’ll likely need to do some sketches and crunch some numbers before the baking stage begins. This craft is not one to do hastily, cookie masonry will definitely take up a few hours, but the eye-catching results will pay off in the end, even if you have a minimental breakdown halfway through the construction.

Whether you’re looking for something to base your next gingerbread house on or just need some inspo for this year’s construction, peruse these 20 gingerbread house ideas as you build out your own sugar fantasy this holiday season.

1. Checkerboard all the way

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For Kelly Wearstler, gingerbread houses are a holiday staple. When conceptualizing her California-inspired gingerbread house last year, she created something that melded the Christmas tradition with her SoCal roots. “Individuality is key,” she emphasizes, encouraging people to break away from the typical mold. “I say create something that is personal to you and where you’ll be celebrating your holiday!”

2. Embrace the Eames house

Midcentury-modern architecture at its sweetest, a gingerbread house by Mary Figueroa.

Photo: Mary Figueroa

BeforeMary Figueroa started working as a curator of history at the Indiana State Museum, she made gingerbread houses competitively throughout high school. “Part of it was, I love architecturally beautiful houses,” Figueroa explains. “Being able to create little minis makes it a lot more accessible.” Which is why, when the opportunity to recreate an Eames house while working as an assistant archivist forHerman Miller presented itself, it was a natural choice to say yes.

One stipulation in the national gingerbread house competitive building contest is that all parts are entirely edible. For Figueroa, this meant relying primarily on gingerbread and icing for her midcentury model. When it came to the windows, she used the age-old gingerbread building trick for making them: a mixture of sugar and water. It’s taken Figueroa quite a bit of trial and error over the years to hone her approach, but here’s what she finds works for her. She mixes two cups of water, 3 ½ cups of granulated sugar, and one cup of corn syrup in a medium-large pot on medium/high heat. She’ll constantly stir the mixture as it comes to a boil, then she’ll submerge a candy thermometer in the pot and wait until the heat reaches 300 degrees Fahrenheit. Figueroa then immediately removes the pot from heat. With her already baked gingerbread pieces on a very flat surface covered in wax paper or aluminum foil, she pours the syrup-like mixture in the window holes. The sugar typically hardens within 10 or 15 minutes, so Figueroa recommends moving quickly so your mixture doesn’t harden before you’ve filled all of the windows.

This was especially a challenge when making the curvy window-enclosed patio at the back of the house. It wasn’t part of the original house, but Figueroa thought it was a cool detail she needed to include. “I kind of created this little mold out of Styrofoam and then tin foil,” Figueroa says. “Then I just poured the sugar on that, [and] let it sit. I also made a mold for the two sides, and then attached all of those sugar pieces together using icing.”

3. Colorful midcentury-modern house

An Epicurious gingerbread house by Judy Kim that the Brady Bunch would love.

Photo: Judy Kim

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Did you know that you don’t haveto stick with regular gingerbread dough when making a gingerbread house? Other doughs can provide a different color or tone to your house, like this cardamom cookie dough that food stylist and recipe developer Judy Kim made for Epicurious in 2020. “The cookie provides a bright background for the decor, which skips the classic candy overload, and focuses instead on cool-toned shimmer and shine,” Kim told Epicurious.

Even if you’re a gingerbread house-making novice and feel more comfortable with a precut kit, this midcentury-modern house fromWorld Marketis simple to put together. Like with your average house, embrace all architectural styles. Build off the modern structure and have fun with abstract stones made with multicolored candies.

4. Mossy fairy cottage

Even the moss is edible on this @lanibakes gingerbread wonder.

Photo: Elana Berusch

WhenElana Berusch of@lanibakes on Instagram made her fairy cottage-inspired gingerbread house, she pulled from the whimsical fantasies and imaginations she had as a kid. “My best friend and I were obsessed with making fairy houses—with bark and moss and all of that. So this was very much my adult tribute to the fairy houses of my childhood.”

To achieve this, Berusch replicated some bark and moss details with intricate chocolate icing curls and painted the gingerbread roof with black cocoa to give it that “aged tar look.” She even made edible moss to top it all off, finding the recipe from@funkybatter on Instagram. Mix together an egg, superfine sugar, and corn syrup along with flour and baking powder. Add in a leaf green gel color, then microwave it in a shallow dish for 90 to 120 seconds. Keep the dish upside down on a wire rack and, once cooled, put it between two pieces of parchment paper and press down.

5. A-frame house

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Keep your architectural design minimal with an A-frame. Made by@constellationinspiration on Instagram for Cherry Bombe’s holiday issue last year, it’s a little easier than other more intricate houses and comes together in a few hours.

6. Stately precision

Asbjørg Nesje used real floor plans to create is enormous cookie construction.

Photo: Asbjørg Nesje

“Go big or go home” might as well be the motto of Asbjørg Nesje, whose family gingerbread house-making tradition is grand, to say the least. The construction is similar to building an actual house from scratch. Having access to floor and building plans to get your measurements just right is of the greatest importance, along with ensuring that everything is reinforced. A bit of sanding might even be necessary to get your edges as precise as possible, Nesje suggests, especially when it comes to thisrecreation of the Norwegian Parliament building.

7. A castle with flourish

Meringues make this castle a top contender.

Photo: Luke Hayes/The Museum of Architecture’s The Gingerbread City, London

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Each year, the Museum of Architecture in London hosts aGingerbread City featuring a menagerie of architectural confections full of inspiration for your next gingerbread house. Though the base of this Crumble Castle stays pretty simple—with mostly white icing detailing—it has colored meringues on the top of its towers to make for a colorful and playful recreation of tower spires.

8. Pocky sticks for the win

A Victorian take on gingerbread for Elanne Boake.

Photo: Elanne Boake

Sometimes giving a gingerbread house a paint job doesn’t mean pulling out the icing or making a whole new kind of cookie dough. Rather, all it takes is some candies or, for Boake and her pink Victorian house, pink strawberry Pocky snacks that she found at an Asian mall to create rosy wood slating.

9. Cookie on cookie

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Have extra gingerbread dough you want to make use of (or don’t want to eat)? Make a star cookie or other extra shapes to affix to the top of your house in lieu of a chimney.

10.Sugar cookie house

Winter wonderland by @zoebakes.

Photo: Zoë François

Like we said, you don’t need to use gingerbread for your house and, in fact, using other types of cookie dough can bring a new hue to your construction. Take this sugar cookie house made by Zoë François (@zoebakes), for example. The moment François saw this house, she knew (A) she wanted to live in it and (B) she wanted to recreate it using sugar cookies. “The ornate details of the columns, cornices, and corbels all looked like something you’d find on a wedding cake,” François tellsAD over email. The cream color of the sugar cookie more closely resembles the original house and adds a more eye-catching White Christmas vibe, while all the architectural detailing looks positively decadent when rendered with icing.

11. Employ icing all over

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A vibrant cardamom house by @spabettie on Instagram ditches the sugar glass windows in favor of the easier approach: outlining one with sprinkles and icing. Whimsical detailing comes from multicolored sprinkles that double as a confection-forward alternative to replicating stone or wood.

12. Candy cane columns

This gingerbread house gets an A+ for creativity.

Photo: Luke Hayes/The Museum of Architecture’s The Gingerbread City, London

School is going to be out for holiday break, but surely students wouldn’t mind sticking around this sugar-forward school. Not only does it deviate from the typical “house structure,” the gingerbread university uses jumbo candy canes as support columns, which would be a dream to walk through on the way to class.

13. Shop the candy isle

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Kinda Loughran found inspiration for her gingerbread house in an actual house that her architect mother, Bana Choura ofChoura Architecture, had designed. Though the style of the house itself is relatively simple, Loughran and her mother implemented common grocery goodies that double as real life objects. “Okay, what are materials that we can use to build things?” Loughran says she asked herself. “Our goal is very much to have it look more like a house than a gingerbread house that has a lot of bright colored candies or something as decorations.” The final touches: shaved almonds as shingles, chocolates to replicate stone detailing, and raspberry-shaped candies dusted in icing sugar made for lovely snow-covered bushes.

14. Use cocoa in a new way

A new take on cocoa and construction by Baked by Melissa.

Photo: Baked by Melissa

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This inspo list has shown you you can make a gingerbread house using regular old gingerbread, sugar cookie dough, cardamom, and now hot cocoa. Melissa Ben-Ishay, founder of Baked by Melissa,explains you can make something inspired by everyone’s favorite warm holiday drink by simply adding a cup of store-bought cocoa mix and one tablespoon of unsweetened cocoa powder to royal icing, the standard icing used for gingerbread house. Another pro tip: If you aren’t planning on eating your house and want to add even more structural integrity, Ben-Ishay recommends cardboard boxes as a base to build on.

15. Work in cereal

Snap! Crackle! and Pop! for Rice Krispies chimneys.

Photo: Luke Hayes/The Museum of Architecture’s The Gingerbread City, London

This gingerbread farm from the Museum of Architecture’s Gingerbread City does an exceptional job of incorporating other sweet treats to capture the details of real life objects, mainly with the windmills sculpted out of Rice Krispies Treats. They’re topped with gingerbread-and-sprinkle encrusted spokes and colored candy to add an extra bit of fun.

16. Find new uses for marshmallows

This gingerbread factory happens to have Art Deco vibes.

Photo: Luke O'Donovan/The Museum of Architecture’s The Gingerbread City, London

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Gingerbread houses are about combining imaginary with reality by recreating real life items in whimsical ways using something sweet. All of the gingerbread houses on this list exemplify that, especially this Gingerbread Factory that’s giving extremeWilly Wonka vibes and doesn’t shy away from capturing every single detail of the factory, right down to the steam coming out of the exhausts pipes—which was actually made using strung together marshmallows.

17. Opt for frosted details

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Interior designer Kari Anne Kaldon (@kariannekaldon) has always made Christmas cakes for the holiday season, but this year she decided to give gingerbread house building a try. “I have a client up in Delaware and Ilove their home. It was built in 1927 and I really wanted to recreate it,” she says. “I also loved the idea of a stone chimney, but then decided to do an all stucco look based on a photo a friend sent me. My thought was to do somethingless challenging for my first attempt.”

While she used a store-bought gingerbread frame to help save time making the traditional house, Kaldon addedlightweight wafer cookies covered in halved raw almonds to replicate a chimney and its stonework. For a snow-dusted roof, she used halved frosted Mini Wheats, and skinny black licorice for clean-cut window panes.Shaved coconut makes for fine snow too

18. Scroll with icing

Simple white icing creates an elaborate display.

Photo: Olga Chetvergova

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Piping white sugar icing is a simple and inexpensive way to decorate. Look to lace for gingerbread house ideas that will stand out from the rest.

19. Stained glass windows

Elanne Boake made stained glass windows as she baked the gingerbread.

Photo: Elanne Boake

Though a lot of people will make windows for the gingerbread houses by boiling sugar and water, Boake opted instead to make stained glass windows for her modern cabin by melting down different coloredJolly Ranchers in the window holes of the house when she baked her cookie. “It’s so much easier than doing the whole ‘make your own melted sugar,’” Boake adds.

20. Think small and have fun

Petite and pretty.

Photo: Verdina Anna

Embarking on a gingerbread house can seem intimidating, but it doesn’t have to be if you start small. A basic shape with colorful icing is all you need to get this holiday tradition going

20 Gingerbread House Ideas for Design Lovers (2024)

FAQs

How to make a successful gingerbread house what are 3 tips that you think sound helpful? ›

Gingerbread House Making Tips
  1. Think outside of the house. ...
  2. Use a construction-grade gingerbread dough. ...
  3. Use foam board for a template for your gingerbread house. ...
  4. Use a good gingerbread house glue to hold it together. ...
  5. Get the four walls or the base of the gingerbread house up first.
Dec 13, 2023

What are the best gingerbread decorations? ›

One of our favorite aspects about making gingerbread cookies from scratch is being able to decorate them after they cool. Sprinkles, icing, gum drops, mints, chocolates—you can use all these edible items and more to give your cookies their own unique personalities.

How do you jazz up a gingerbread house? ›

Make your house lighter and brighter by swapping gingerbread dough with a firm funfetti cookie dough and decorating with pastel treats like butter mints. If you're sticking with traditional gingerbread dough, pastel icing and candy still add a sweet and cheery touch.

How do you make the strongest gingerbread house? ›

So to make sure our walls could stand strong, we sandwiched melted marshmallow cement between two graham crackers. The marshmallow adds weight, which helps stabilize the structure. It also acts as a sealant, ensuring that the cracker won't crumble.

How to make your gingerbread house look better? ›

If you feel like your gingerbread house still needs a little something special, go wild and add some additional sprinkles and candy. Add ornaments to your icing trees, add lights to your holiday garland or create a cute walkway out of jumbo sprinkles. If only decorating our real house for the holidays was that easy!

What keeps a gingerbread house together? ›

Fit Everything Together with Melted Sugar or Royal Icing

The second way is to use burnt sugar as your glue. Just melt C&H® Pure Granulated Cane Sugar in a pan on the stove, dip the gingerbread parts in and hold them together for a few seconds. Then, presto! You've created a solid house.

How do you make a gingerbread house without falling apart? ›

Just melt the sugar in a pan over low heat. You want to allow it to turn brown, but make sure not to burn it (otherwise it won't taste so great). Then take your gingerbread house pieces, dip the edges in melted sugar and hold them together for a few seconds. That's it!

What are rules for gingerbread house? ›

All Gingerbread Houses must be made of gingerbread, 100% edible candy/embellishments/materials except the base board. Non-‐edible support structure material other than the baseboard may not be used. 7. Non-‐edible decorations, like paint, ribbon, figurines, etc.

What story made gingerbread houses more popular? ›

In the 16th century, Germans began making cookie-walled houses around the same time “Hansel and Gretel” was published, PBS said. The story, written by the Brothers Grimm, concerned two young children get lost in a forest before finding a witch with a house made of gingerbread.

Why are gingerbread houses so hard to make? ›

Any big spaces between gingerbread cookies make the assembly process harder—and longer—since the icing has to span a greater distance to adhere the pieces together. To minimize the icing (and the drying time) needed, you can carefully cut your cookies with a sharp knife to make sure the edges are square and straight.

Why do we decorate gingerbread houses? ›

Gingerbread houses in Germany originated from bakers interpreting the description of a house from the story Hansel and Gretel. The story is about two siblings who encounter a witch living in a gingerbread, cake, and candy house. Bakers would apply and try to craft their versions of this house.

Why do people decorate gingerbread houses for Christmas? ›

The tradition of decorated gingerbread houses began in Germany in the early 1800s, supposedly popularised after the not-so-Christmassy fairytale of Hansel and Gretel was published in 1812.

What are the features of a gingerbread house? ›

Key features of a gingerbread home

Instead, the hallmarks of the gingerbread style—think fancy millwork, scroll designs, steeply pitched rooflines, and lacelike cutouts and patterns—are most often seen grafted onto other architectural styles, notably Victorian-era homes.

Do you decorate the gingerbread house first? ›

The biggest tip for a professional-looking gingerbread house is to decorate the pieces before you build the house. This lets you make everything perfectly even, and prevents awkward slipping of icing down the sides. One caveat: You want the decorations to dry completely before you build the house.

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