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The Best Parchment Paper

Parchment is essential for keeping food from sticking to baking pans, but why are so many brands so hard to use?

Headshot of Lisa McManus
By Lisa McManus

Last Updated April 8, 2026

What You Need To Know

Parchment paper is a kitchen essential, especially for baking. All brands we tested performed similarly, keeping baked goods from sticking to pans and letting food brown evenly. However, not all were equally easy to handle. We have nearly identical co-winners, both from the same manufacturer; the only choice is whether you prefer unbleached or bleached parchment. King Arthur Baking Company Natural Half-Sheet Baking Parchment Paper is an unbleached precut sheet; it joins our longtime favorite, traditional bleached King Arthur Baking Company Half-Sheet Baking Parchment Paper.

Interested in reusable silicone baking mats, which can replace some functions of parchment paper? Check out our review of silicone baking mats.

Parchment paper is an excellent tool whose main function is to keep food from sticking to baking pans. Because it’s heat-, water-, and grease-resistant, parchment paper also handles a multitude of additional tasks. We use parchment for rolling out cookie dough, lining pie shells when using pie weights, transferring pizza or bread dough into a hot oven, catching drips when glazing and decorating food, for candymaking, and for cooking en papillote, the classic French technique in which food steams in a parchment pouch.

It also serves in roles as diverse as makeshift funnels or muffin-tin liners, as layers between frozen foods such as burger patties, or even as a way to keep an induction stove spotless while cooking—the list goes on.

In exhaustive testing, we have used every type of parchment to roll and bake glazed lemon and gingerbread cookies; bake and roll up jelly roll cake; line tart shells under pie weights while blind baking, and carry hot weights on that parchment to test its strength. We’ve also cooked pizzas on parchment-lined baking stones in 500-degree ovens, examining the parchment for burning or brittleness.

an assortment of jellyroll cakes that have been rolled using different brands of parchment paper
To test the papers’ strength and flexibility, we used them to roll jelly roll cakes into tight coils.

Our conclusion? All passed every test. We also checked the quality and performance of the multitude of new options on the market, rolling out cookies between two sheets of each parchment and baking them on parchment to compare how evenly they browned. Our results remain the same: With minor variations, every parchment performed well.

But just as we’ve always found, their ease of use was anything but equal. This made the difference between simple success and frustrating struggle.

Two Main Parchment Styles: Rolls and Sheets

Parchment is typically sold in two formats: rolls or precut sheets. You can buy parchment rolls in supermarkets, stocked alongside the foil and cling wrap. More manufacturers have begun selling parchment sheets, cut to fit standard half-sheet pans—parchment’s most common use. These are mostly available online. Increasingly we’ve also seen specialty shapes, precut for popular sizes of baking pans (see below).

A sheet of precut parchment drops neatly into a standard-size half-sheet pan.A person pulls a too-big piece of parchment from a roll over a standard-size half-sheet pan, and the edge of the sheet is curling up.

Precut sheets (left) drop neatly into standard rimmed half-sheet pans. By contrast, rolled parchment (right) typically is too big or too small to fit standard half-sheet pans and must be trimmed extensively to fit. It also tends to roll up and spring back into a cylindrical shape.

We prefer the ease of precut sheets. They need little to no trimming, saving time and preventing waste. And unlike rolled parchment, which needs to be wrestled out of its box and smoothed, our top-ranked parchment sheets store completely flat, so they also lie flat in the pan. In addition to rolls’ annoying springiness, most rolls only come in 15-inch widths, which doesn’t match either dimension of a standard half-sheet pan’s inner cooking surface of 16¼ by 11½ inches.

Do You Need Specialty Parchment Shapes?

You may come across specialty parchment shapes precut to fit cake, loaf, rectangular, and square baking pans. But do you need them?

We tested precut parchment rounds and one square precut parchment designed for lining round or square baking pans. One round and the square parchment we tested came with rectangular tabs designed to help lift baked goods out of pans.
We tested a variety of specialty precut parchment shapes to see how they performed. Some had tabs for lifting baked goods out of pans, but we didn’t find the tabs necessary. Products tested include rounds from If You Care, Regency Wraps, Juvale, and King Arthur Baking and squares from The Smart Baker.
  • Rounds: These come in multiple sizes, including 6-, 8-, 9-, 10- and 12-inch circles, some with easy-lift tabs, in bleached and unbleached parchment. We tested four typical brands in the 9-inch size, baking yellow layer cakes using our usual cake-pan prep technique. We coated the pan with nonstick cooking spray, placed and sprayed the parchment round, and then lightly floured the pan. All cake layers baked well and released easily on rounds with or without tabs, so we don’t find tabs necessary. Precut rounds are convenient and save time if you frequently bake cakes. Otherwise, you don’t need them; it’s easy to trace your pan on a piece of regular parchment and cut to fit into the pan bottom.
  • Squares: We tested an 8-inch precut parchment square with easy-lift tabs by making a batch of brownies. (Typically we’d use an aluminum foil sling for instantly lifting brownies, bar cookies, or some snack cakes out of both square and rectangular pans.) First, we had to use a butter knife to release the sides of the brownies, since unlike our foil sling, the precut square only covered the pan bottom. Then, the parchment’s tabs were flimsy and couldn’t lift the whole slab of brownies; the brownies began to rip apart on either side of the tabs. Eventually they emerged from the pan intact—but we’ll stick to the foil sling. If you’re out of foil, it’s also easy to create a sling from, you guessed it, sheets of regular parchment.
  • Loaf Pan Liners: Loaf pans vary slightly in width and length, so you have to shop carefully to ensure that precut parchment liners will fit your pan. We’ve also rarely had a problem removing loaves and quick breads from loaf pans.
  • 13 by 9-inch Baking Pan Liners: As with square baking pans, we prefer a foil sling with the heft to lift out larger baked goods intact. We also noted that many loaf and rectangular pan liners were preshaped with rounded corners, which are compatible with glass pans but do not fit well in metal bakeware that has very sharp corners.

Bleached versus Unbleached Parchment: What’s the Difference?

Parchment is made from wood pulp that’s treated with sulfuric acid to reduce it to simple cellulose, then bleached and formed into paper; it’s then coated with silicone to improve strength, heat-resistance, and nonstick qualities. Though all bleach is rinsed away, this wastewater has an environmental impact. Unbleached parchment omits the bleaching step. White, bleached parchment is traditional, but more brands now also offer brown, unbleached parchment.

Aside from color, the main difference between bleached and unbleached parchment is their oven-safe temperature rating. Manufacturers usually list about 425 degrees as the maximum for unbleached parchment, compared to about 450 degrees for bleached (manufacturers confirmed that using parchment at higher-than-recommended temperatures does not release noxious chemicals and that the paper won’t ignite). We tested to learn whether this mattered, cutting one bleached and one unbleached sheet in half and putting halves on a baking sheet in the oven at 425 degrees for 20 minutes, then another 20 minutes at 450 degrees, and 20 more minutes at 500 degrees. Both bleached and unbleached sheets darkened, but neither burned, emitted fumes, or became overly brittle after an hour at increasing temperatures. We concluded that both can safely go in 500-degree ovens. (Of course, keep parchment paper away from direct contact with heating elements or open flames.)

Strips of bleached and unbleached parchment paper are shown before and after baking at 500 degrees to compare how they work when heated to beyond the maximum oven-safe temperature. While both darkened, neither burned, emitted fumes or became overly brittle.
We tested to learn whether bleached and unbleached parchment could withstand high oven temperatures up to 500 degrees. While both darkened, neither burned, emitted fumes, or became overly brittle.

Furthermore, the sheets’ color didn’t change baking times or outcomes. We baked Easy Holiday Sugar Cookies on every bleached and unbleached parchment in our lineup. All baked evenly; cookies had the same coloring across each sheet, top and bottom, no matter whether the parchment was bleached or unbleached. We concluded that you can use bleached and unbleached parchment interchangeably. For more information, see our guide to using parchment at high temperatures.

Identical cookies baked on bleached and unbleached parchment showed no significant difference in browning.
We wondered whether brown unbleached parchment would make cookies brown more deeply than white bleached parchment, but baking tests showed no significant differences.

We also noted that it doesn’t matter which side of a sheet of parchment you use: While you can detect slight textural differences in some products from one side of the paper to the other, it doesn’t affect how the parchment performs.

Why is it called parchment paper?

The word “parchment” originally referred to high-quality, durable writing material made from animal skin (usually goat, sheep, or cow). Animal parchment has been in use since the time of the ancient Greeks for important documents, including the U.S. Constitution and Declaration of Independence. It’s also called “vellum,” a term originating in France, where it was made from the skin of young cows, or veau. Parchment paper as we know it today was invented in the 19th century. Wood pulp was immersed in water and sulfuric acid, which created a type of paper that mimicked the durability, flexibility, and water resistance of animal parchment. To this day, parchment paper made for the kitchen is often called vegetable parchment to distinguish it from the original animal type. You’ll also see it referred to as “genuine vegetable parchment,” or GVP, “baking paper,” and “culinary parchment paper.”

What to Look for

  • Precut Sheets: We prefer parchment sold precut to fit a standard half-sheet baking pan without trimming. Dispensing the right size from a roll or adjusting oversized parchment takes more patience than we have when we’re busy baking. Untrimmed parchment that’s bunched up, creased or folded, or hung over the sides of a pan mars the appearance of delicate baked goods. Oversize parchment can also get in the way when you’re handling pans.
two flawed cookies from bad parchment paper next to a perfect cookie prepared on flat, perfectly sized parchment paper
We found that parchment paper’s flatness—or lack thereof—could really leave its mark on our baked goods.
  • Easy-to-Use Packaging: Retrieving parchment from a flimsy, broken, or too-rigid package can damage the paper you need. Flat packaging that opens fully for easy dispensing makes lining a pan supersimple

What to Avoid

  • Rolls: Rolled paper usually didn’t lie flat in pans. And most rolls were far too wide to fit pans without adjustments; we would be forced to choose between orienting the paper in a way that leaves naked sections on each side of the baking sheet or trimming the paper, leaving us with scraps that are too small to use for anything else. 
An oversize roll of parchment covers a half-sheet pan beneath it.
Most parchment sold in rolls were far too wide to fit pans without adjustments; we would be forced to choose between orienting the paper in a way that leaves naked sections on each side of the baking sheet or trimming the paper, leaving us with scraps that are too small to use for anything else.
  • Flimsy, Awkward Boxes: Shoddy boxes with dull cutting edges made it impossible to dispense or cut paper to our desired length without ragged edges. One brand’s precut sheets came in a poorly designed box that bent the paper’s edges as we retrieved each sheet. Another came in a small box with folded sheets. It was easy to store, but the folds left creases in the parchment that imprinted on baked goods. This is not a deal-breaker for cookies if you’ll never see their undersides, but it’s undesirable when rolling out cookie dough between sheets of parchment or when making delicate baked goods such as tuiles, where surface texture matters.
A floppy, bendy box dispenses a wrinkly sheet of parchment.
We struggled to dispense neat sheets of parchment from boxes that were flimsy and floppy, and many had a poor cutting mechanism or lacked one altogether.

Minor Flaws

  • Slick Texture: Since silicone can be made in different formulations and applied to parchment thinly or more thickly, parchment paper’s texture and finish can vary. Some parchments had such a slippery texture that they were harder to handle. When we tried to roll dough between two sheets, our rolling pin spun in place at first instead of pushing forward.

The Tests

  • Roll cookie dough between two sheets of parchment paper 
  • Line cookie sheets, then bake cookies
  • Bake jelly roll cake on rimmed baking sheet, then roll cake using fresh sheet of parchment 
  • Transfer pizza on parchment to 500-degree oven and bake
  • Line tart shell with parchment, then fill with pie weights for blind baking 
  • Evaluate strength and durability of product packaging
  • Compare heat resistance of bleached versus unbleached parchment at 425 degrees, 450 degrees, and 500 degrees 
  • For rolls: Tear off roughly 16 by 12-inch sheets and note ease of achieving appropriate size and neat edge
  • For precut squares: Bake brownies in 8-inch square baking pan
  • For precut rounds: Bake yellow cake in 9-inch baking pan

How We Rated

  • Performance: We considered how easy it was to prepare a variety of baked goods and pizza with each parchment. We noted the quality of the food and the condition of paper after baking.
  • Size: We noted if the parchment paper fit in standard rimmed baking streets straight from the package or with minimal trimming and whether they laid flat. 
  • Handling: We considered how easy it was to manipulate the parchment and use it to line cookie sheets and rimmed baking sheets.
  • Packaging: We evaluated the design and construction of the packaging. 

FAQs

Yes. As long as the parchment itself isn’t too messy or hasn’t become brittle from being used at high heat, you can use it for at least another round in the oven. Depending on how you used it, you may even be able to repurpose it multiple times. Our guide to reusing parchment has more details.

They’re not interchangeable. While parchment is heat-safe, wax paper is coated with a thin layer of either soybean or paraffin wax, which means you can’t bake with it, because the wax will melt at high temperatures. Here’s what else you need to know.

Yes. Parchment paper does not contain PFAS, the “forever chemicals” that have been used in traditional nonstick coatings on cookware. Instead, parchment for consumer use is coated with silicone, which can withstand high temperatures, does not easily break down, and is generally recognized as safe by the FDA. Avoid restaurant or food-service products coated with chromium stearate, also known as Quilon-coated parchment paper. They may be cheaper, but the material is not approved for high heat or prolonged food contact. Chromium is a heavy metal that can become a toxic hazard when incinerated.

Everything We Tested

Good 3 Stars out of 3.
Fair 2 Stars out of 3.
Poor 1 Star out of 3.

Highly Recommended

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Best Bleached Parchment SheetsKing Arthur Baking Company Half-Sheet Baking Parchment Paper

These crisp sheets are conveniently packaged in a flat zipper-lock bag, so they lie flat and pop right into standard half-sheet pans, with just ⅝ inch extra width, which is easily flattened. They are moderately thick, with a pleasant slightly rough surface texture, which makes them feel sturdy and easy to handle. Rolling out cookie dough between two sheets was easy, since our rolling pin could move smoothly over the parchment surface without slipping. While this parchment is rated to a maximum oven temperature of 450 degrees, in our testing it darkened but remained intact and flexible even when heated to 500 degrees for 20 minutes.

Model Number: 100656

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16⅜ x 12⅛ in

Price at Time of Testing: $24.95 for 100 sheets ($0.25 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

These crisp sheets are conveniently packaged in a flat zipper-lock bag, so they lie flat and pop right into standard half-sheet pans, with just ⅝ inch extra width, which is easily flattened. They are moderately thick, with a pleasant slightly rough surface texture, which makes them feel sturdy and easy to handle. Rolling out cookie dough between two sheets was easy, since our rolling pin could move smoothly over the parchment surface without slipping. While this parchment is rated to a maximum oven temperature of 450 degrees, in our testing it darkened but remained intact and flexible even when heated to 500 degrees for 20 minutes.

Model Number: 100656

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16⅜ x 12⅛ in

Price at Time of Testing: $24.95 for 100 sheets ($0.25 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Best Unbleached Parchment SheetsKing Arthur Baking Company Natural Half-Sheet Baking Parchment Paper

This is the unbleached version of our longtime favorite parchment sheets, and it performed and handled equally well, dispensing neatly from its zipper-lock bag and lying flat and fitting neatly on a standard half-sheet pan. Though these sheets were rated to a maximum oven temperature of 425 degrees, which is 25 degrees lower than their bleached counterpart, the paper was equally sturdy and durable, remaining intact and flexible even when heated to 500 degrees. If you prefer unbleached parchment, which is made the same way as bleached parchment but not treated with chlorine to turn it white, this is an excellent choice.

Model Number: 210143

Style: Sheets

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 16⅜ x 12⅛ in

Price at Time of Testing: $24.95 for 100 sheets ($0.25 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This is the unbleached version of our longtime favorite parchment sheets, and it performed and handled equally well, dispensing neatly from its zipper-lock bag and lying flat and fitting neatly on a standard half-sheet pan. Though these sheets were rated to a maximum oven temperature of 425 degrees, which is 25 degrees lower than their bleached counterpart, the paper was equally sturdy and durable, remaining intact and flexible even when heated to 500 degrees. If you prefer unbleached parchment, which is made the same way as bleached parchment but not treated with chlorine to turn it white, this is an excellent choice.

Model Number: 210143

Style: Sheets

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 16⅜ x 12⅛ in

Price at Time of Testing: $24.95 for 100 sheets ($0.25 per sheet)

Recommended

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Best Parchment RollReynolds Kitchens Unbleached Parchment Paper

If you prefer rolls, this is the best choice. While most standard parchment rolls, including Reynolds’s traditional bleached offering, are wastefully oversized at 15 inches wide, this roll is just 12 inches wide, so it was far easier for testers to tear off sheets that fit a half-sheet pan. The company describes this parchment as “75% non-bleached and chlorine-free,” meaning that only 75 percent of the fibers are unbleached. It had a pleasant texture and stayed flatter than the standard bleached Reynolds’s parchment roll. The box was a bit flimsy, but we managed to dispense and cut sheets without much struggle.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 34

Style: Roll

Bleached: 75% non-bleached

Dimensions: 45 ft x 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $3.39 for 45 sq feet ($0.10 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

If you prefer rolls, this is the best choice. While most standard parchment rolls, including Reynolds’s traditional bleached offering, are wastefully oversized at 15 inches wide, this roll is just 12 inches wide, so it was far easier for testers to tear off sheets that fit a half-sheet pan. The company describes this parchment as “75% non-bleached and chlorine-free,” meaning that only 75 percent of the fibers are unbleached. It had a pleasant texture and stayed flatter than the standard bleached Reynolds’s parchment roll. The box was a bit flimsy, but we managed to dispense and cut sheets without much struggle.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 34

Style: Roll

Bleached: 75% non-bleached

Dimensions: 45 ft x 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $3.39 for 45 sq feet ($0.10 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

If You Care Unbleached Parchment Baking Paper

With an only slightly oversized roll, at 13 inches wide, this paper was easier to fit in sheet pans than many competitors and required less wasteful trimming. The sharp cutting edge on its box worked well most of the time, but it sometimes tore the paper a bit irregularly. The paper itself felt slightly slippery, but it lay flatter than many other rolled papers.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 49

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 65 ft x 13 in

Price at Time of Testing: $5.76 for 70 sq ft ($0.12 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

With an only slightly oversized roll, at 13 inches wide, this paper was easier to fit in sheet pans than many competitors and required less wasteful trimming. The sharp cutting edge on its box worked well most of the time, but it sometimes tore the paper a bit irregularly. The paper itself felt slightly slippery, but it lay flatter than many other rolled papers.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 49

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 65 ft x 13 in

Price at Time of Testing: $5.76 for 70 sq ft ($0.12 per sheet)

Recommended with Reservations

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Regency Wraps Parchment Paper Sheets

Packaged in a plastic bag with precut sheets bent in half rather than sharply folded, the sheets were fairly easy to handle; they fit standard half-sheet pans, sized about ⅝ inch too wide, but were easily creased to fit. The sheets mostly lay flat except for that central bend, which pushed up slightly from the pan surface. Sugar cookies baked evenly, but this paper wasn’t as grease-proof as the other parchment in our lineup. Butter soaked through the parchment onto the pan and left grease circles where the cookies had been. As a result, unlike other parchment in the lineup, we couldn’t reuse these sheets and had to wash the pan before reusing it. We repeated the test, making sure the cookie dough was fully chilled, but we got the same results. This paper may have a lighter silicone coating than other brands.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16⅜ in x 12 3/16 in

Price at Time of Testing: $5.85 for 25 sheets ($0.23 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Packaged in a plastic bag with precut sheets bent in half rather than sharply folded, the sheets were fairly easy to handle; they fit standard half-sheet pans, sized about ⅝ inch too wide, but were easily creased to fit. The sheets mostly lay flat except for that central bend, which pushed up slightly from the pan surface. Sugar cookies baked evenly, but this paper wasn’t as grease-proof as the other parchment in our lineup. Butter soaked through the parchment onto the pan and left grease circles where the cookies had been. As a result, unlike other parchment in the lineup, we couldn’t reuse these sheets and had to wash the pan before reusing it. We repeated the test, making sure the cookie dough was fully chilled, but we got the same results. This paper may have a lighter silicone coating than other brands.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16⅜ in x 12 3/16 in

Price at Time of Testing: $5.85 for 25 sheets ($0.23 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Katbite 200PCS 12x16 In Heavy Duty Flat Parchment Paper

These precut bleached sheets, one of the many unfamiliar brands sold on Amazon, are a bargain at half the price of our top-rated sheets. They come packaged in a sturdy, flat box, which makes them easy to store, but the box bent the edge of each sheet as it was dispensed if we didn’t hold it open carefully. At 16 x 12 inches, the sheets are only ½ inch too wide for standard sheet pans, so they fit fairly well and lay flat. However, the notably slick, slippery texture of these slightly flimsy (despite their name) sheets made them a bit difficult to handle, and our rolling pin slipped and rotated in place at first as we tried to roll out cookies between two sheets.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16 x 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $21.99 for 200 sheets ($0.11 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

These precut bleached sheets, one of the many unfamiliar brands sold on Amazon, are a bargain at half the price of our top-rated sheets. They come packaged in a sturdy, flat box, which makes them easy to store, but the box bent the edge of each sheet as it was dispensed if we didn’t hold it open carefully. At 16 x 12 inches, the sheets are only ½ inch too wide for standard sheet pans, so they fit fairly well and lay flat. However, the notably slick, slippery texture of these slightly flimsy (despite their name) sheets made them a bit difficult to handle, and our rolling pin slipped and rotated in place at first as we tried to roll out cookies between two sheets.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16 x 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $21.99 for 200 sheets ($0.11 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Kirkland Signature Parchment Paper

This Costco parchment is made by the French brand PaperChef and sells at a remarkably low price. The enormous roll is unwieldy. While the cutter in the box was nice and sharp, parchment pieces still emerged messy and incorrectly sized and required extensive trimming, though the paper lay mostly flat on the pan compared to most rolled parchment.

Model Number: 1323118

Sheets Per Package: About 123

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 164 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $6.50 for 205 sq ft ($0.05 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This Costco parchment is made by the French brand PaperChef and sells at a remarkably low price. The enormous roll is unwieldy. While the cutter in the box was nice and sharp, parchment pieces still emerged messy and incorrectly sized and required extensive trimming, though the paper lay mostly flat on the pan compared to most rolled parchment.

Model Number: 1323118

Sheets Per Package: About 123

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 164 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $6.50 for 205 sq ft ($0.05 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Reynolds Kitchens Parchment Paper

This is the most widely available supermarket parchment. The roll’s packaging now boasts “stay-flat dispensing” from a sturdy box with a sharp cutter, but this was only a momentary improvement over typical rolls. It came out flat and then bounced right back into a cylinder when released. It’s also far too wide at 15 inches, a size that doesn’t fit either dimension of a standard half-sheet pan’s flat cooking surface, which is 16¼ by 11½ inches. We had to trim every piece to fit, which wasted a good deal of the roll. The paper is printed with a grid to aid in even food placement, but it was hard to see on the fairly thin, flimsy paper.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 27

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 36 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $4.79 for 45 sq ft ($0.18 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This is the most widely available supermarket parchment. The roll’s packaging now boasts “stay-flat dispensing” from a sturdy box with a sharp cutter, but this was only a momentary improvement over typical rolls. It came out flat and then bounced right back into a cylinder when released. It’s also far too wide at 15 inches, a size that doesn’t fit either dimension of a standard half-sheet pan’s flat cooking surface, which is 16¼ by 11½ inches. We had to trim every piece to fit, which wasted a good deal of the roll. The paper is printed with a grid to aid in even food placement, but it was hard to see on the fairly thin, flimsy paper.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 27

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 36 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $4.79 for 45 sq ft ($0.18 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Regency Wraps Parchment Paper

This bleached parchment paper felt a bit flimsy and thin and wouldn’t lie flat in the pan. The box had a nice sharp cutter, but the ends of the box kept popping open, and eventually the whole box collapsed, making dispensing paper difficult. As they did on the precut sheets from this brand, sugar cookies baked evenly but left grease circles on the paper, which soaked through to the pan beneath, making cleanup a bit harder and the paper not reusable.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 13 sheets

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16 ft 8 in x 14⅞ in

Price at Time of Testing: $6.48 for 20.66 sq ft ($0.50 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This bleached parchment paper felt a bit flimsy and thin and wouldn’t lie flat in the pan. The box had a nice sharp cutter, but the ends of the box kept popping open, and eventually the whole box collapsed, making dispensing paper difficult. As they did on the precut sheets from this brand, sugar cookies baked evenly but left grease circles on the paper, which soaked through to the pan beneath, making cleanup a bit harder and the paper not reusable.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 13 sheets

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16 ft 8 in x 14⅞ in

Price at Time of Testing: $6.48 for 20.66 sq ft ($0.50 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Reynolds Cookie Baking Sheets

A compact box that dispensed precut sheets seemed like a great idea, and the sheets were only slightly oversize. But because they were so tightly folded, they resisted lying flat in pans, which left the impression that they didn’t fit properly. The deep creases also made it harder to roll out cookies between two sheets and left distinct creases and bends in our baked cookies unless we carefully avoided placing them over folds. A grid pattern printed on the sheets designed to help with cookie placement was a nice idea, but it didn’t help given the creasing problem.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16 in x 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $3.69 for 22 sheets ($0.17 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

A compact box that dispensed precut sheets seemed like a great idea, and the sheets were only slightly oversize. But because they were so tightly folded, they resisted lying flat in pans, which left the impression that they didn’t fit properly. The deep creases also made it harder to roll out cookies between two sheets and left distinct creases and bends in our baked cookies unless we carefully avoided placing them over folds. A grid pattern printed on the sheets designed to help with cookie placement was a nice idea, but it didn’t help given the creasing problem.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16 in x 12 in

Price at Time of Testing: $3.69 for 22 sheets ($0.17 per sheet)

Not Recommended

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

PaperChef Culinary Parchment Pre-Cut Sheets

These precut sheets were too wide for standard half-sheet pans, hanging over by 3 ½ inches, so we were forced to trim and waste quite a bit of the paper. Because the somewhat flimsy sheets were dispensed from a box in which they were rolled, they curled rather than lay flat in the pan unless we flipped them over and weighed them down with cookie dough. Otherwise the sheets performed well, and cookies baked evenly and released well.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16.5 in x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $9.99 for 24 sheets ($0.42 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

These precut sheets were too wide for standard half-sheet pans, hanging over by 3 ½ inches, so we were forced to trim and waste quite a bit of the paper. Because the somewhat flimsy sheets were dispensed from a box in which they were rolled, they curled rather than lay flat in the pan unless we flipped them over and weighed them down with cookie dough. Otherwise the sheets performed well, and cookies baked evenly and released well.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 16.5 in x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $9.99 for 24 sheets ($0.42 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

If You Care Parchment Baking Sheets

This unbleached parchment felt incredibly thin, delicate, and a bit slippery, and it was a bit difficult to handle and dispense, though cookies baked evenly. The sheets’ short ends are zigzag cut, which made them feel frail. The paper was 1½ inches too wide for a standard half-sheet baking pan. Because the sheets are dispensed from a roll, the paper springs and rolls up on the pan.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 16 in x 13 in

Price at Time of Testing: $5.99 per 24 sheets ($0.25 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This unbleached parchment felt incredibly thin, delicate, and a bit slippery, and it was a bit difficult to handle and dispense, though cookies baked evenly. The sheets’ short ends are zigzag cut, which made them feel frail. The paper was 1½ inches too wide for a standard half-sheet baking pan. Because the sheets are dispensed from a roll, the paper springs and rolls up on the pan.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 16 in x 13 in

Price at Time of Testing: $5.99 per 24 sheets ($0.25 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Regency Wraps Natural Parchment Paper

This unbleached roll of parchment had a pleasantly substantial texture but a peculiar mustard-brown color that was darker than usual, making it hard to see cookie dough as we rolled it out between two sheets. The box was extremely flimsy and lacked a cutting edge, so tearing off a sheet was awkward unless we were very slow and careful. The oversize paper needed trimming and rolled up when we laid it in the pan.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 18

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 16 ft 8 in x 14⅞ in

Price at Time of Testing: $6.59 for 20.66 sq ft ($0.37 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This unbleached roll of parchment had a pleasantly substantial texture but a peculiar mustard-brown color that was darker than usual, making it hard to see cookie dough as we rolled it out between two sheets. The box was extremely flimsy and lacked a cutting edge, so tearing off a sheet was awkward unless we were very slow and careful. The oversize paper needed trimming and rolled up when we laid it in the pan.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 18

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 16 ft 8 in x 14⅞ in

Price at Time of Testing: $6.59 for 20.66 sq ft ($0.37 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

PaperChef Culinary Parchment

Made in France from eucalyptus wood pulp, this roll is oversize at 15 inches wide, and with no sharp edge on the box, it was hard to dispense sheets of an exact desired size; the slightly flimsy paper tore unevenly. The box gradually broke down as we used it. On the plus side, the paper itself didn’t roll up as much as with some other rolls, and cookies baked evenly.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 25

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 33 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $16.99 for 41 sq ft ($0.68 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Made in France from eucalyptus wood pulp, this roll is oversize at 15 inches wide, and with no sharp edge on the box, it was hard to dispense sheets of an exact desired size; the slightly flimsy paper tore unevenly. The box gradually broke down as we used it. On the plus side, the paper itself didn’t roll up as much as with some other rolls, and cookies baked evenly.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 25

Style: Roll

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 33 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $16.99 for 41 sq ft ($0.68 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

PaperChef Culinary Unbleached Parchment

This unbleached parchment rolled up a bit more than its bleached counterpart. Its box is fragile and lacked a metal cutter, so dispensing neat pieces of parchment was difficult, and the edge of the sheet sometimes creased as it tore away. At 15 inches wide, the paper is oversize and requires trimming to fit standard half-sheet pans, though cookies baked up fine.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 36

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 33 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $9.99 for 41 sq ft ($0.28 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This unbleached parchment rolled up a bit more than its bleached counterpart. Its box is fragile and lacked a metal cutter, so dispensing neat pieces of parchment was difficult, and the edge of the sheet sometimes creased as it tore away. At 15 inches wide, the paper is oversize and requires trimming to fit standard half-sheet pans, though cookies baked up fine.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 36

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 33 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $9.99 for 41 sq ft ($0.28 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Beyond Gourmet Unbleached Parchment Paper by HIC Kitchen

This oversize roll of unbleached parchment required trimming to fit standard sheet pans, and sheets rolled up when we tried to lay it flat in the pan. The paper had a shiny, slippery texture, and cookie dough slid and spread almost too quickly as we rolled it out between two pieces of this parchment, though the cookies baked very uniformly. While the packaging claimed to have no metal cutter to “minimize environmental impact,” we found it actually had one when we opened the box.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 42

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 56.5 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $8.89 for 71 sq ft ($0.21 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

This oversize roll of unbleached parchment required trimming to fit standard sheet pans, and sheets rolled up when we tried to lay it flat in the pan. The paper had a shiny, slippery texture, and cookie dough slid and spread almost too quickly as we rolled it out between two pieces of this parchment, though the cookies baked very uniformly. While the packaging claimed to have no metal cutter to “minimize environmental impact,” we found it actually had one when we opened the box.

Model Number: n/a

Sheets Per Package: About 42

Style: Roll

Bleached: No

Dimensions: 56.5 ft x 15 in

Price at Time of Testing: $8.89 for 71 sq ft ($0.21 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Reynolds Parchment Pop-Up Sheets

Absurdly small for half-sheet pans, while being too large for quarter sheets, these pop-up parchment sheets were dispensed from a box and emerged with a deep fold down the middle and zigzag-cut edges. When we rolled out cookies between two sheets, there wasn’t an inch of room to spare. We baked the cookies by lining the pan with two overlapping sheets, which worked fine, but it felt wasteful to use two sheets each time we baked in a half-sheet pan. It’s not clear how best to use these sheets.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 13.75 in x 10.25 in

Price at Time of Testing: $4.29 for 30 sheets ($0.14 per sheet)

  • Performance
  • Size
  • Handling
  • Packaging

Absurdly small for half-sheet pans, while being too large for quarter sheets, these pop-up parchment sheets were dispensed from a box and emerged with a deep fold down the middle and zigzag-cut edges. When we rolled out cookies between two sheets, there wasn’t an inch of room to spare. We baked the cookies by lining the pan with two overlapping sheets, which worked fine, but it felt wasteful to use two sheets each time we baked in a half-sheet pan. It’s not clear how best to use these sheets.

Model Number: n/a

Style: Sheets

Bleached: Yes

Dimensions: 13.75 in x 10.25 in

Price at Time of Testing: $4.29 for 30 sheets ($0.14 per sheet)

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The mission of America’s Test Kitchen Reviews is to find the best equipment and ingredients for the home cook through rigorous, hands-on testing. We stand behind our winners so much that we even put our seal of approval on them. Have a question or suggestion? Send us an email at atkreviews@americastestkitchen.com. We appreciate your feedback!

The Expert

Author: Lisa McManus

Lisa McManus

Executive Editor, ATK Reviews

Lisa is an executive editor for ATK Reviews, cohost of Gear Heads on YouTube, and gadget expert on TV's America's Test Kitchen.

Lisa McManus is an executive editor for ATK Reviews, host of The Taste Test and cohost of Gear Heads on YouTube, and a cast member on TV's America's Test Kitchen. A passionate home cook, sometime waitress, and longtime journalist, she graduated from Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism and worked at magazines and newspapers in New York and California before returning like a homing pigeon to New England. In 2006 she got her dream job at ATK reviewing kitchen equipment and ingredients and has been pretty thrilled about it ever since. Her favorite thing is to go somewhere new and find something good to eat.

*All products reviewed by America’s Test Kitchen are independently chosen, researched, and reviewed by our editors. We buy products for testing at retail locations and do not accept unsolicited samples for testing. We list suggested sources for recommended products as a convenience to our readers but do not endorse specific retailers. When you choose to purchase our editorial recommendations from the links we provide, we may earn an affiliate commission. Prices are subject to change.

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