Classic Lemon Meringue Pie

This is the perfect lemon meringue pie! With a delicious homemade pie crust, tart and smooth lemon filling, and a fluffy toasted meringue topping, it’s impossible to resist.

Lemon meringue pie slice on a silver plate

Let’s welcome a fresh new season with a fresh new pie—the pie I’ve been taunting you with for weeks!! The beautiful, the timeless, the Classic Lemon Meringue Pie.

overhead image of lemon meringue pie

My lemon meringue pie recipe has a billowy and toasty meringue topping, a balanced sweet/tart lemon filling, and an extra thick and flaky pie crust. I worked on this recipe for a long time, making at least a dozen meringue pies in the past few months. Both my kitchen and head were exploding lemons. Whenever we had friends or family stop by, I’d force lemon meringue pie on them. “PLEASE TELL ME YOUR THOUGHTS” I begged while barely blinking.

lemon meringue pie in a glass pie dish

How to Make Lemon Meringue Pie

Over the years and especially the past few months, I learned that lemon meringue pie can be a daunting process but it doesn’t have to be. Let me make this recipe easy for you by giving you a tested (and praised!!!) recipe, lots of helpful recipe notes, and a video so you can watch it come to life. Perhaps you’re looking for Easter dessert recipes? Celebrating a birthday? Or just want to enjoy a beautiful lemon-y pie? No matter your reason, I’ve got you 🙂

  1. Blind bake pie crust
  2. Prepare lemon meringue pie filling
  3. Whip meringue topping
  4. Spread meringue on top of filling
  5. Bake pie until toasty brown on top

Now that you have a general idea of the process, let’s learn why this lemon meringue pie recipe works and what mistakes to avoid.

Lemon meringue pie in a glass pie dish

Here’s Why This Recipe Works

There are 3 main roadblocks when making lemon meringue pie: a soggy pie crust, a watery lemon filling, and/or a weeping meringue. Let’s work through each.

  1. Let’s avoid a soggy pie crust: Start by reviewing how we blind bake pie crust. You want to partially blind bake the crust because it will continue to bake when you bake the assembled lemon meringue pie. Watch me blind bake the crust I use for this lemon meringue pie in my separate post on how to blind bake pie crust. Lots of tips and tricks there. And to get those pretty decorative edges, see my how to crimp and flute pie crust tutorial.
  2. Let’s avoid a watery lemon filling: This is where I always had the most trouble. Lemon meringue pie filling is basically a thinner version of lemon curd. You’ll temper egg yolks. And before you run away screaming, watch me do this in the video below. Promise it’s not scary. While lemon meringue pie filling should be blissfully creamy, we also want it to be stable enough to slice somewhat neatly. (Think: a slightly firmer version of pudding, but not as firm as jello.) There was a lot of back and forth with the water vs lemon juice vs cornstarch vs sugar amounts. Follow my lemon meringue pie filling below. It’s not too tart, not too sweet, and has the silkiest, yet not-too-watery texture.
  3. Let’s avoid a weeping meringue: There are many different types of meringue topping, but let’s use a French meringue. Beat egg whites into soft peaks, add sugar, then beat into stiff peaks. Unless you want to waste a bunch of egg whites in failed meringue attempts, read these tips: Make sure you begin with just egg whites. Not even a drip of egg yolks. Make sure the bowl you’re using is completely wiped clean. No oil or water residue. Make sure you add cream of tartar. This will stabilize your meringue. Make sure you add the sugar *after* soft peaks are formed. If added before that, the egg whites could stretch too much which prevents a stiff peak altogether. (These tips apply for my chocolate swirled meringue cookies, too.) Make sure you spread the meringue topping so it touches the pie crust. This seals the lemon filling underneath and allows the crust to grip onto the meringue so the two do not separate. And, finally, don’t make lemon meringue pie on a humid day.
meringue topping for lemon meringue pie in a glass stand mixer bowl

How to Make Lemon Meringue Pie Topping

The meringue toasts in the oven. A lot of recipes call for putting the whole pie under the broiler, but I prefer to bake it so that the egg whites have a chance to cook through. Also, see the end of step 6 in the recipe below. Make sure you spread the meringue topping on while the filling is still warm. The warm filling helps seal the two layers together, preventing separation.

  • Did you know? (1) Room temperature egg whites whip faster than cold egg whites. And (2) room temperature egg whites whip into a greater volume than cold egg whites. So make sure your egg whites are at room temperature before starting the meringue.
  • Time saving tip: You need 5 egg yolks for the lemon filling and 5 egg whites for the meringue topping. Separate the 5 eggs while they are cold. (Cold eggs separate easier! Remember NO egg yolks in the meringue, not even a smidge.) Leave the egg whites out on the counter. Blind bake the pie crust and prepare the lemon filling. By the time you’re ready to start the meringue, the egg whites will be room temperature.

Meringue can be tricky, but you’re a baker and you can absolutely handle this.

Lemon meringue pie slice on a silver plate

Craving something smaller? Here is my lemon bars recipe. Or, if you’re a lemon dessert lover, check out our top favorites in the The Lemon Dessert Collection.

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Lemon meringue pie slice on a silver plate

Classic Lemon Meringue Pie

4.9 from 448 reviews
  • Author: Sally McKenney
  • Prep Time: 6 hours
  • Cook Time: 1 hour, 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 7 hours, 10 minutes
  • Yield: one 9-inch pie
  • Category: Pie
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: American
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Description

This is the perfect lemon meringue pie! With a delicious homemade pie crust, tart and smooth lemon filling, and a fluffy toasted meringue topping, it’s impossible to resist.


Ingredients

  • Homemade Pie Crust*
  • 5 large egg yolks (use the whites in the meringue below)
  • 1 and 1/3 cups (320ml) water
  • 1 cup (200g) granulated sugar
  • 1/3 cup (38g) cornstarch
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup (120ml) fresh lemon juice
  • 1 Tablespoon lemon zest
  • 2 Tablespoons (28g) unsalted butter, softened to room temperature

Meringue

  • 5 large egg whites, at room temperature
  • 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 1/2 cup (100g) granulated sugar
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt


Instructions

  1. Pie crust: I like to make sure my pie dough is prepared before I begin making lemon meringue pie. I always make pie dough the night before because it needs to chill in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours before rolling out and blind baking (next step).
  2. Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C) and adjust your oven rack to the lowest position. Partially blind bake pie crust in a 9-inch pie dish. (Follow blind baking instructions through step 9. Be sure to crimp or flute the pie crust edges, too.) Tip: You can get started on the lemon meringue pie filling steps while your crust is blind baking. But making the filling is time sensitive because you will temper the egg yolks, so if multi-tasking isn’t your thing, just wait until your crust is done blind baking before beginning the filling.
  3. Reduce oven temperature to 350°F (177°C).
  4. Watch the video below to see how I work through each of the following steps.
  5. Make the filling: Whisk the egg yolks together in a medium bowl or liquid measuring cup. Set aside. Whisk the water, granulated sugar, cornstarch, salt, lemon juice, and lemon zest together in a medium saucepan over medium heat. The mixture will be thin and cloudy, then eventually begin thickening and bubbling after about 6 minutes. Once thickened, give it a whisk and reduce heat to low.
  6. Temper the egg yolks: Very slowly stream a few large spoonfuls of warm lemon mixture into the beaten egg yolks. Then, also in a very slow stream, whisk the egg yolk mixture into the saucepan. Turn heat back up to medium. Cook until the mixture is thick and big bubbles begin bursting at the surface. Remove the pan from heat and whisk in the butter. Spread filling into the warm partially baked crust. Set aside as you prepare the meringue. (Don’t let the filling cool down too much as you want a warm filling when you top with the meringue in step 7. The warm filling helps seal the two layers together, preventing separation.)
  7. Make the meringue: With a handheld mixer or a stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, beat the egg whites and cream of tartar together on medium speed for 1 minute, then increase to high speed until soft peaks form, about 4 more minutes. Add the sugar and salt, then continue beating on high speed until glossy stiff peaks form, about 2 more minutes. Spread meringue on top of filling. (I like to make decorative peaks with the back of a large spoon.) Make sure you spread the meringue all the way to the edges so that it touches the crust. This helps prevent the meringue from weeping.
  8. Bake pie on the lowest oven rack for 20-25 minutes. (If the meringue is browning too quickly, tent a piece of foil over it as best you can without the foil touching the meringue.) When pie is done, remove from the oven, place on a wire rack, and allow to cool at room temperature for 1 hour before placing in the refrigerator to chill. Chill for 4 hours before slicing and serving.
  9. Cover any leftovers and store in the refrigerator. Lemon meringue pie tastes best on day 1 because it doesn’t keep very well. No matter how hard you try to prevent it, the meringue will wilt and separate over time. Best to enjoy right away.

Notes

  1. Make Ahead Instructions: The pie crust can be prepared ahead of time and stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months. You can also blind bake the crust ahead of time, see how to blind bake pie crust for details. Lemon meringue pie is not the best pie to freeze. The filling and meringue’s texture are never quite the same.
  2. Special Tools (affiliate links): Electric Mixer (Handheld or Stand) | 9-inch Pie Dish | Rolling Pin | Pie Weights | Glass Mixing Bowls | Citrus ZesterSaucepan | Whisk | Cooling Rack
  3. Pie Crust: My homemade pie crust recipe makes 2 pie crusts. If you use my “dough strip” method explained in my how to blind bake pie crust tutorial, you will need 1 and 1/2 pie crusts. Or you can skip that little trick and just use 1 pie crust.
  4. Prepare Ahead of Time: Prep all of your ingredients before you begin, including grating the lemon zest and separating the eggs. Don’t multitask unless you’re confident! The filling is time sensitive and you want to make sure everything is ready when you need to add it. Prep all of the meringue ingredients as well. You want them on hand, especially the sugar and salt, the very moment you need them. Don’t walk away from the bowl of egg whites as they whip. Meringue can beat into stiff peaks quite quickly.
sally mckenney headshot purple shirt.
About the Author

Sally McKenney

Sally McKenney is a baker, food photographer, and New York Times best-selling author. Her kitchen-tested recipes and step-by-step tutorials have given millions of readers the knowledge and confidence to bake from scratch. Sally’s work has been featured on TODAY, Good Morning America, Taste of Home, People, and more.

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Reader Comments and Reviews

  1. Nan says:
    April 16, 2024

    Thank you so much, this was so helpful! I am so proud of myself! This was my first time making pie or meringue from scratch and it came out wonderfully. This was a great treat for my husband’s birthday plus all four kids had nice things to say (ages 4-12). Your recipes and instructions were perfect for me, thank you!

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      April 16, 2024

      So happy to read this, Nan!

  2. Denise says:
    April 13, 2024

    Your instructions didn’t include the butter from the ingredient list. I didn’t realize it until my meringue was on top of the filling.

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      April 13, 2024

      Hi Denise! You add the butter in the middle of step 6.

  3. J Stordahl says:
    April 8, 2024

    Sally, I made this today. Thanks for doing all the hard work on the recipe. It was humid today so had some issue with the meringue. I made a puff pastry which worked quite well but I do believe flaky pie dough is better. Your tips are invaluable and I appreciate you and your team.


  4. Gayle Griffith says:
    April 7, 2024

    May I make this pie with a graham cracker crust instead of traditional pie crust? Also, what do you think about making it without meringue, using whipped cream as a topping, just before serving?

    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      April 8, 2024

      Hi Gayle, the pie won’t be as sturdy (slicing will be a little tough!) but you can absolutely try a graham cracker crust instead. We recommend this graham cracker crust recipe. Bake it at 350°F (177°C) for about 15 minutes before adding the filling. You could bake the pie filling without adding the meringue. Or, you might enjoy this lemon pie recipe instead.

  5. Hilary says:
    April 1, 2024

    This got raves. The BEST Lemon Meringue Pie I have ever tasted. Well worth the time and effort.Thank you

  6. Lou-Ann says:
    April 1, 2024

    I made this pie yesterday morning for Easter dinner and it came out beautifully! I had a last minute panic when I went to get out cream of tarter and didn’t have any…aah! Then I read the lemon juice substitute and 1tsp fresh lemon juice worked perfectly. My meringue was high and fluffy.

  7. Susan says:
    April 1, 2024

    This came out perfect. Every one loved it.
    Only mistake I made was that my pie dish was bigger than 9 inch and the pie wasn’t as high

  8. Maria says:
    March 31, 2024

    Perfect recipe amazing results. I followed the recipe exactly except I ran out of cream of tartar, instead I used 1 tsp. of apple cider vinegar. I like the results even better than using cream of tartar. I used very good large free ranged eggs and big organic lemons which made a perfect pie with tons of meringue to bring to Easter Sunday dinner.

  9. Barb Dembek says:
    March 31, 2024

    My pie was beautiful after I took it out of the oven. This morning it’s flat. What went wrong?

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 31, 2024

      Hi Barb! Lemon meringue pie is best enjoyed on day 1, because meringue doesn’t keep very well and has a tendency to wilt and lose volume over time.

  10. Yolanda says:
    March 31, 2024

    I just finished baking the lemon meringue pie and I have to say your instructions were so easy to follow. I especially appreciated the video; it clarified the steps in my head. :^) The pie came out beautifully–the filling was lemony and not overly sweet and the meringue was fluffy and perfectly browned. I used a store bought crust, but the next time I make this dessert I’m definitely going to try my hand at making a Yoladna crust using your recipe. Thanks for sharing!

  11. Audrey says:
    March 30, 2024

    Followed to the letter and my pie filling didn’t thicken anywhere near enough. Tasted ok but was just way too runny to be a pie filling. I’ll be going back to my old recipe.

    1. Melissa says:
      April 10, 2024

      Same here. My filling didn’t set and was so runny. I don’t know what I did wrong.

  12. Barbara Turgeon says:
    March 30, 2024

    Your instructins were perfect! I always have trouble with miringue but your step by step instructions made it so simple.

  13. Susan says:
    March 30, 2024

    I made the lemon meringue pie last year with your tips and recipe and it was perfect! Thank you!

  14. Violette says:
    March 29, 2024

    Hi,

    Maybe there’s the answer somewhere but I haven’t found it. Sorry to post here. But I’m French and try to understand the difference between pie and tart!

    For what I have gathered, a pie is to be served in the dish it is cooked and would have more filling.

    But why is it a lemon meringue pie and not a lemon meringue tart (I generally make lemon meringue tart, is there a difference?).

    Thanks for the help!

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 29, 2024

      Hi Violette! The difference is usually in the pan used. At least in the US, a tart pan is much more shallow, often with a removable bottom, and a pie dish is thicker, usually glass or ceramic.

  15. claire says:
    March 29, 2024

    its a 9” pie pan right

    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 29, 2024

      Correct—a 9-inch pie dish.

  16. Mary says:
    March 28, 2024

    Can I make the pie the day before and put the meringue on the following day and brown it then?

    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 28, 2024

      Hi Mary, We don’t recommend making the pie filling ahead of time because you want the filling to still be warm when you add the meringue to properly seal together. See recipe notes for other make ahead options.

  17. Dee says:
    March 26, 2024

    I do LOVE this recipe so much! HOWEVER, I had a problem I’ve never encountered before. The first cuts of the pie were so wonderful but then there was moisture in the bottom of the pie between the filling and the crust. What did I do wrong?

  18. Ab says:
    March 25, 2024

    How would I make this with a graham cracker crust?

    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 26, 2024

      Hi Ab, the pie won’t be as sturdy (slicing will be a little tough!) but you can absolutely try a graham cracker crust instead. We recommend this graham cracker crust recipe. Bake it at 350°F (177°C) for about 15 minutes before adding the filling.

  19. Lily says:
    March 23, 2024

    Can I drag a spoon in a spiral pattern on the meringue instead of the swoops?

  20. Janie Robins says:
    March 20, 2024

    Can I use myer lemons. Thank you

    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 20, 2024

      Hi Janie, Meyer lemons would also work for a slightly sweeter pie.

  21. Miranda Watson says:
    March 15, 2024

    Hi there, when does the butter go in? After the egg yolks are incorporated back in?

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 15, 2024

      Hi Miranda! See the middle of step 6.

  22. Arlene says:
    March 14, 2024

    Include me in

  23. Kim I says:
    March 14, 2024

    This is a GREAT recipe!!!

  24. Sophie says:
    March 12, 2024

    If you wanted to make a mango meringue pie, could you substitute the same measurements for of the lemon but with mango?

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 12, 2024

      Hi Sophie, We haven’t tried this recipe with mangoes, so we can’t give you a confident answer on whether it would set up properly. Let us know if you give anything a try!

  25. Shaela says:
    March 8, 2024

    Hey ! Can I use baking powder as a substitute for cream of tartar?

    1. Stephanie @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 8, 2024

      Hi Shaela, We haven’t tested it so we can’t say for certain how much to use. Usually substituting 1 teaspoon of lemon juice for 1/2 teaspoon of cream of tartar can do the trick for meringue. Let us know if you give it a try!

  26. Rich says:
    March 8, 2024

    First time making meringue, I thought I followed instructions carefully. Meringue came out flat. Any idea on what I did wrong?

    1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 12, 2024

      Hi Rich, The common culprit behind meringue deflating/becoming flat is beating the egg whites too quickly (or at too high of a speed). In this instance, the whites form unstable air bubbles which collapse when heated in the oven. What might help is starting the egg whites on a lower speed at first, then gradually increasing to a higher speed. Also, see the “Let’s avoid a weeping meringue” section in the blog post above. Hope these tips help for next time!

    2. Rich says:
      March 12, 2024

      Lexi thanks for the reply. I used an old fashioned handmixer. The blades are sharp. When I switched mixers it came out beautifully.

  27. Leanne says:
    March 5, 2024

    Hi! I’m wondering if I could substitute tapioca starch for the cornstarch successfully? I have a corn allergy and obviously need to avoid cornstarch! Thank you

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 5, 2024

      Hi Leanne, we have not tested this recipe with tapioca starch, but would love to hear how it goes if you do!

      1. Leanne says:
        March 13, 2024

        So, I gave the recipe a shot with tapioca starch. The flavour was still on point, but replacing it 1:1 for the corn starch didn’t give quite the right texture. It was runny, so next time I might try 1/2 cup instead!

  28. Alexa Carter says:
    March 3, 2024

    Hello! I was just wondering if this recipe could be used for mini meringue pies?

    1. Beth @ Sally's Baking says:
      March 3, 2024

      Hi Alexa, you can use this recipe for mini pies but we’re unsure of the exact bake time. You may need to make a few batches, depending on how many mini pies you’d like to make. Let us know if you give it a try!

  29. Pearl says:
    February 29, 2024

    Hi, i was wondering if i could make this recipe in a 9” x9” tart pan?

    1. Trina @ Sally's Baking says:
      February 29, 2024

      Hi Pearl! We haven’t tested it, it may be too much filling, but you could make some mini pies with the extra. Let us know if you try!

  30. Pam Shaver says:
    February 28, 2024

    I made this pie yesterday using a store bought pie crust. It turned out beautifully. Very yummy!