Soft lemon cake, juicy blueberries, and a thick layer of lemon cream cheese frosting make this sheet cake the kind of dessert people hover around until the pan is nearly empty. The crumb stays tender and light, but it still has enough structure to hold up under a generous swipe of frosting, which is exactly what you want in a cake meant for potlucks, birthdays, and any table where people help themselves twice.
The trick is keeping the blueberries from sinking and the batter from turning heavy. Tossing the berries in a little flour gives them something to grip, and alternating the dry ingredients with the buttermilk keeps the cake batter smooth instead of overworked. Lemon zest does the real heavy lifting here; it brings a bright, fragrant punch that tastes bigger than juice alone ever can.
Below, I’ve included the little details that matter most, from how to keep the frosting silky to what to do if you want to bake this in two pans instead of one. There’s also a few notes on storage, because this is one of those cakes that tastes even better after the frosting settles into the crumb.
The cake baked up so tender and the blueberries stayed evenly distributed instead of sinking to the bottom. The lemon cream cheese frosting was smooth and set up beautifully after chilling for a bit.
Save this lemon blueberry sheet cake for the days when you want a soft crumb, bright citrus, and a thick frosting that holds its shape.
The Reason the Blueberries Stay Put Instead of Sinking
Blueberries sink when the batter is too loose or the berries go in bare. This cake avoids both problems by using a thick butter cake batter and tossing the berries in flour before they hit the pan. That thin coating gives the fruit a little grip, so it suspends through the crumb instead of falling into a layer at the bottom.
The other place people run into trouble is the mixing. Once the flour goes in, the batter only needs to be mixed until it comes together. Overmixing tightens the crumb and can make the cake dense, especially in a sheet pan where you want a tender slice that still holds together cleanly.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Batter and Frosting

- Butter — This gives the cake its plush, rich crumb and helps the frosting set with body. Softened butter matters here because it traps air when beaten with sugar, which keeps the cake lighter.
- Buttermilk — It adds tang and keeps the cake soft without making it flimsy. If you need a swap, use milk with a little lemon juice, but the crumb won’t be quite as tender.
- Lemon zest — This is where the real lemon flavor lives. Juice brings acidity, but zest brings the fragrance and depth that make the cake taste like lemon instead of just sour.
- Blueberries — Fresh berries hold their shape best and bake into neat pockets of juice. If you use frozen, add them straight from the freezer and don’t thaw them, or they’ll streak the batter.
- Cream cheese — It gives the frosting that tangy, thick finish that balances the sweet cake. It needs to be softened fully or the frosting will turn lumpy before the sugar goes in.
Building the Batter and Frosting in the Right Order
Start with the Butter, Sugar, and Citrus Zest
Beat the butter and sugar until the mixture looks pale and fluffy, not greasy and dense. Add the lemon zest here so the sugar rubs against it and pulls out the oils; that step gives you a much bigger lemon aroma than stirring the zest in later. Once the eggs go in, the batter may look slightly curdled before it comes together again, and that’s normal.
Add the Dry Ingredients and Buttermilk in Alternating Turns
Mix in the flour mixture and buttermilk in batches, ending with flour. This keeps the batter smooth and prevents the gluten from tightening up too fast. If the batter starts to look heavy, stop and scrape the bowl instead of beating harder; extra mixing won’t smooth it out, it just makes the cake tougher.
Fold in the Blueberries Without Breaking Them
Use a spatula and fold gently until the berries are evenly scattered. A few streaks of flour on the berries are fine, but don’t keep stirring after they’ve gone in or the batter will tint purple and the fruit will burst. Spread the batter evenly into the pan so it bakes at the same rate from edge to center.
Beat the Frosting Until It’s Thick and Spreadable
Start with the cream cheese and butter alone until they’re completely smooth. Then add the powdered sugar, lemon juice, and zest, and beat just until fluffy. If the frosting feels loose, it usually means the cream cheese was too warm; chill it for 10 to 15 minutes before spreading it on the cooled cake.
How to Change This Cake for a Different Pan or Diet
Bake It in Two 9×13 Pans
This batter splits well between two pans if you want a layer-cake feel without stacking. The bake time will be shorter, so start checking a few minutes early. You’ll get more frosting coverage per slice, which is great if you like a sweeter finish.
Make It Gluten-Free
A good 1:1 gluten-free flour blend can work here, especially one that already includes xanthan gum. The crumb may be a touch more delicate, so let the cake cool completely before frosting and slicing. The blueberries and lemon still carry the same bright, clean flavor.
Use Frozen Blueberries When Fresh Aren’t Available
Frozen blueberries work, but they need to go in straight from the freezer. Toss them in flour while still frozen and fold them in quickly so the batter doesn’t pick up a gray-blue tint. Expect a little extra baking time if the batter chills from the frozen fruit.
Lighten the Frosting
If you want a thinner finish, cut the frosting batch by a third and spread it in a thinner layer. You’ll lose some of the tangy, rich topping, but the cake will taste less sweet and the lemon in the crumb will stand out more.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for 4 to 5 days. The frosting firms up in the fridge, but the cake stays moist.
- Freezer: Freeze unfrosted cake layers tightly wrapped for up to 2 months. Frosted slices can be frozen, but the berries on top lose their fresh look.
- Reheating: Bring slices to room temperature before serving. If you warm chilled cake, use short bursts only; too much heat softens the frosting and makes the crumb gummy.
Questions I Get Asked About This Cake

Lemon Blueberry Sheet Cake
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F, then grease a 12x18 sheet pan (or two 9x13 pans) and line with parchment. Make sure the pan edges are well covered so the cake releases cleanly.
- Beat the softened butter and granulated sugar until fluffy. Stop and scrape the bowl as needed for even creaming.
- Add the eggs, lemon zest, fresh lemon juice, and vanilla extract, then mix until smooth. The batter should look thick and bright yellow.
- Alternately mix in the flour mixture and buttermilk until just combined. Keep mixing gentle so the crumb stays tender.
- Fold in the fresh blueberries that were tossed in 1 tablespoon flour. Distribute berries evenly without overmixing.
- Spread the batter evenly in the prepared pan. Smooth the top so it bakes flat.
- Bake for 25-30 minutes at 350°F until a toothpick comes out clean. The cake should be lightly golden and spring back when touched.
- Cool the cake completely on the pan (about 30 minutes). Do not frost warm cake, or the frosting will melt.
- Beat the softened cream cheese and butter until smooth. Scrape the bowl to remove any lumps.
- Add powdered sugar, fresh lemon juice, and lemon zest, then beat until fluffy. The frosting should be thick enough to spread without running.
- Spread the frosting generously over the cooled cake. Cover the surface evenly to fully blanket the crumb.
- Scatter fresh blueberries and lemon zest curls over the frosted top before serving. Add curls sparingly across the surface for a bright lemon look.