Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole

Servings: 6 Total Time: 9 hrs Difficulty: Beginner

Even writing this makes me think of the smell of cinnamon early in the morning.

My favourite part about this recipe is that it gives you the kind of breakfast that feels special without turning the whole morning into a project. It’s quieter than that!

Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole (Make-Ahead Breakfast)
Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole (Make-Ahead Breakfast)

Most of the work happens the night before, when the house is calm, and you’re layering bread, cinnamon sugar, and custard into a dish that still looks deceptively simple at that point. Then it goes into the fridge overnight, soaking everything in while the day ends and everyone goes to sleep.

The next morning, all that’s left is baking it. Slowly, the kitchen fills with the warm smell of cinnamon and vanilla, and by the time it comes out of the oven, the top is golden while the middle stays soft enough to almost feel like custard.

It’s the kind of breakfast that makes people linger around the kitchen a little longer than usual.

Ingredients for My Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole

This one comes down to simple things doing exactly what they’re supposed to do.

Bread to soak everything up, cinnamon for warmth, and just enough vanilla to soften the whole thing around the edges.

This is what goes into it:

Ingredients for My Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole
Ingredients for My Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole
  • 6 tbsp melted butter (90 g) – Creates that rich layer underneath and helps the edges caramelize slightly as it bakes.
  • 1 loaf bread (10–14 oz | 300–400 g) – Slightly stale bread works best here because it absorbs more without falling apart.
  • ½ cup whole cane sugar or brown sugar (100 g) – Adds sweetness and helps create a golden top.
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon (5 g) – Brings warmth into the whole dish.
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract (5 g) – Softens everything and rounds out the flavour.
  • 4 medium eggs – The base that turns everything soft and custardy overnight.
  • 1½ cups milk (360 ml) – Helps soak through the bread and keeps the texture light.

This makes enough for about 6 servings, depending on whether you’re serving it as breakfast, brunch, or the excuse to have dessert in the morning.

How To Make It

I start with the butter. Melted straight into the baking dish, so it coats the bottom before anything else goes in.

Then the cinnamon and sugar get mixed together in a small bowl, because once things start layering, it moves quickly.

Melt the butter.
Melt the butter.
Mix the cinnamon and sugar.
Mix the cinnamon and sugar.

In another bowl, I whisk the eggs, milk, and vanilla until everything smooths out completely.

The bread gets sliced thick, not too thin or it disappears overnight. One layer goes into the dish first.

Mix the eggs, milk and vanilla together.
Mix the eggs, milk and vanilla together.
Cut thick slices of bread and place them in the dish to create the first layer.
Cut thick slices of bread and place them in the dish to create the first layer.

After the bread comes half of the cinnamon sugar mixture. Then another layer of bread...

The egg mixture gets poured slowly over the top so every piece has time to soak it in properly.

Top the first layer of bread with half of the cinnamon and sugar mixture.
Top the first layer of bread with half of the cinnamon and sugar mixture.
Add a second layer of bread and then the egg mixture.
Add a second layer of bread and then the egg mixture.

The rest of the cinnamon sugar finishes everything off.

And then you stop.

Into the fridge it goes overnight while everything settles into itself.

Top with the remaining half of the sugar and cinnamon mixture.
Top with the remaining half of the sugar and cinnamon mixture.

The next morning is easy. Into the oven, covered first so the middle stays soft, then uncovered at the end so the top turns golden and slightly crisp around the edges.

And once it rests for a few minutes, it’s ready to eat. Warm, soft in the middle, crisp at the top, and smelling like the kind of morning people actually want to wake up for.

Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole

If You Want to Make It Your Own

This one changes easily depending on what kind of morning you want it to be.

  • More cinnamon makes it warmer and deeper. Less sugar keeps it closer to a classic breakfast instead of something dessert-like.
  • You can add sliced bananas between the layers, fresh berries, or even a handful of chocolate chips if you want it to lean fully into comfort food territory.
  • The bread changes things too. Brioche makes it softer and richer, while a sturdier loaf gives it more texture once baked.

And if breakfast recipes that sit somewhere between comforting and indulgent are your thing, my Orange Creamsicle Cake somehow makes sense there too, just later in the day.

Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole

Making It Ahead & Freezing It

This actually freezes surprisingly well.

I like doing it in smaller portions sometimes instead of one big dish, especially if I know I’ll want something easy a few days later without having to make breakfast from scratch again.

Once assembled, you can also freeze it before baking, which honestly works best for this kind of recipe. Just cover it well and freeze the whole dish or smaller individual portions after the overnight soak.

When you want it, let it thaw overnight in the fridge, then bake as usual the next morning. The texture stays much closer to freshly made, the top still turns golden, and the middle keeps that soft, custardy feel.

You can freeze it after baking too. A few minutes in the oven brings it back surprisingly well, enough that it still feels like breakfast and not just reheated leftovers.

And honestly, there’s something nice about remembering you have one sitting in the freezer when you don’t feel like thinking too much about breakfast the next day. And on the mornings you don’t, my Banana Pancakes (Egg-Free) are usually the quicker option.

Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole

Easy Overnight French Toast Casserole

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 45 mins Rest Time 8 hrs Total Time 9 hrs
Cooking Temp: 350  F Servings: 6
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

An easy overnight French toast casserole made with layers of bread, cinnamon sugar, and custard. Soft in the middle, golden on top, and perfect for slow mornings or make-ahead breakfasts.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Prepare the baking dish

    Pour the melted butter into the bottom of the baking dish.

  2. Mix the cinnamon sugar

    Combine the sugar and cinnamon in a small bowl.

  3. Make the custard

    Whisk together the eggs, milk, and vanilla until smooth.

  4. Layer the bread

    Arrange one layer of bread in the dish and sprinkle over half the cinnamon sugar.

  5. Finish assembling

    Add the second layer of bread, pour over the custard mixture, and finish with the remaining cinnamon sugar.

  6. Chill overnight

    Cover and refrigerate overnight so the bread fully absorbs the custard.

  7. Bake

    Bake covered at 400°F (200°C) for 30 minutes, then uncover and bake another 15 minutes until golden on top.

  8. Rest & serve

    Let it sit for about 10 minutes before serving. Serve warm on its own or with maple syrup.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 6


Amount Per Serving
Calories 390kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 20g31%
Saturated Fat 11g56%
Cholesterol 145mg49%
Sodium 290mg13%
Potassium 180mg6%
Total Carbohydrate 42g15%
Dietary Fiber 2g8%
Sugars 18g
Protein 10g20%

Calcium 120 mg
Iron 2 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I prepare it the same morning instead of overnight?

You can, but the texture won’t be quite the same. Overnight gives the bread time to fully absorb the custard, which is what makes the middle so soft once baked.

Why is the middle still soft after baking?

That’s actually what you want. The top should be golden while the center stays soft and slightly custardy.

Can I use sliced sandwich bread?

You can, but sturdier bread works better. Sandwich bread softens much faster and can become too dense in the middle.

What’s the best bread for French toast casserole?

Brioche, challah, or slightly stale bakery-style bread work best because they absorb the custard without falling apart.

Can I add fruit to it?

Absolutely. Bananas, blueberries, raspberries, or sliced apples all work really well layered between the bread.

Can I make it dairy-free?

Yes. Plant-based milk and butter substitutes work well here, though the final texture may be slightly less rich.

How do I know it’s fully baked?

The top should be golden and the center should look set but still soft. It shouldn’t feel liquid when gently shaken.

Can I serve it cold?

You can, but it’s much better warm. The texture softens and the cinnamon flavour comes through more once heated.

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