Allspice is one of those spices that sounds like a blend but isn't. It's actually a single spice made from the dried berries of the Pimenta dioica tree, native to Central America and the Caribbean. The name comes from the fact that it tastes like a combination of cinnamon, nutmeg, and cloves all at once. That's a lot of flavor packed into one little berry.
It shows up in everything from Jamaican jerk seasoning to pumpkin pie to Swedish meatballs. So when a recipe calls for it and you don't have any, it can feel like a tough one to replace.
The good news is that because allspice already tastes like a mix of other warm spices, recreating something close is pretty straightforward. You probably have what you need in your cabinet right now.
This article walks through the best allspice substitutes depending on what you're making, how to mix your own at home, and how allspice compares to the spices people most often confuse it with. Let's get into it.
Homemade allspice substitute

The easiest way to replace allspice is to make your own version at home. Since allspice naturally tastes like a blend of warm spices, combining a few of them gets you surprisingly close to the real thing.
The most common ratio is:
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½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
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¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
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¼ teaspoon ground cloves
That gives you roughly 1 teaspoon of allspice substitute. Scale it up or down depending on what your recipe needs.
This combination works because it hits the same flavor notes. Cinnamon brings the warmth, nutmeg adds that slightly sweet earthiness, and cloves deliver the sharp, peppery bite that makes allspice so distinct. Together, they cover most of what allspice does in a dish.
Some people like to add a tiny pinch of black pepper to the mix as well. Allspice has a subtle peppery quality that the three-spice version doesn't fully capture. It's not essential, but if you're making something savory like jerk chicken or a spiced meat rub, that little bit of pepper helps close the gap.
One thing to keep in mind is freshness. If your ground cinnamon, nutmeg, or cloves have been sitting in the back of the cabinet for a couple of years, the blend won't taste like much. Older spices lose potency fast. Give them a sniff before you start mixing. If the aroma is faint, you may need to use a bit more than the recipe calls for to get the same impact.
This homemade version won't be identical to real allspice. But in most recipes, the difference is small enough that no one will notice.
Replace allspice based on what kind of dish you are preparing

The homemade blend works well as a general substitute, but the best swap really depends on what you're cooking. Different dishes lean on different aspects of allspice's flavor, so tailoring your substitute makes a noticeable difference.
For baked goods like pies, cookies, and cakes, cinnamon and nutmeg do most of the heavy lifting. Allspice in desserts is mainly there for warmth and sweetness, so you can skip the cloves entirely if you want a softer flavor. Use equal parts cinnamon and nutmeg to replace the allspice amount, and the result will feel right at home in pumpkin bread, apple pie, or spice cookies.
For savory meat dishes, cloves and black pepper matter more. Jerk chicken, meatballs, sausage seasoning, and stews all rely on that deeper, sharper side of allspice. In these cases, lean heavier on the cloves and add a good pinch of black pepper. Go easy on the cinnamon though. Too much sweetness in a savory dish can throw things off quickly.
For pickling and preserving, whole cloves are your best friend. A lot of pickle brines and chutneys call for whole allspice berries, and whole cloves are the closest match in both flavor and function. Use them at roughly the same quantity. You can toss in a small piece of cinnamon stick too if the recipe needs that extra warmth.
For drinks and warm beverages, like mulled wine or chai, a combination of cinnamon stick, a couple of whole cloves, and a small grating of fresh nutmeg covers the allspice role nicely. The whole spices steep well and give you that layered warmth without any one flavor dominating.
The key takeaway is simple. Think about what role allspice is playing in the dish, then choose your substitute accordingly. Matching the function matters more than matching the exact flavor.
Allspice vs. other common spices
Allspice gets confused with other spices all the time. Part of it is the name. Part of it is that it shares flavor notes with several other warm spices. Here's how it actually compares to the ones people mix it up with most.
Allspice vs. five-spice powder
Five-spice is a Chinese blend that typically includes cinnamon, cloves, star anise, fennel, and Sichuan peppercorn. There's some overlap with allspice in the cinnamon and clove department, but the star anise and fennel give five-spice a licorice-like quality that allspice doesn't have. You can use five-spice as a substitute in savory dishes, but use about half the amount. It's more intense and the anise flavor can take over fast.
Allspice vs. mixed spice
Mixed spice is a British blend commonly used in baking. It usually contains cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice itself, and sometimes ginger or coriander. Because allspice is already part of the mix, this one works as a substitute in desserts and baked goods without much adjustment. Use it at a 1:1 ratio and you'll be close.
Allspice vs. cloves
Cloves are the closest single-spice match to allspice. They share that sharp, warm, slightly peppery bite. But cloves are significantly stronger. If you're using ground cloves as a straight substitute, cut the amount in half or even to a third. A little goes a long way, and too much clove can make a dish taste medicinal.
Allspice vs. cinnamon
Cinnamon captures the warm, sweet side of allspice but misses the peppery depth entirely. It works fine as a substitute in sweet recipes where allspice plays a supporting role. In savory dishes, cinnamon alone won't cut it. You'd need to pair it with cloves or black pepper to get closer.
The bottom line is that none of these are perfect replacements on their own. But knowing where they overlap with allspice helps you make smarter swaps when you're working with what you've got.
You don't need allspice to cook like you have it
Allspice is a great spice to have around, but running out of it doesn't have to stall your cooking. Between the homemade blend and the dish-specific swaps, you can get close enough that most people won't know the difference. The trick is understanding what allspice actually brings to a recipe and matching that with what's already in your kitchen.
That said, if you find yourself reaching for substitutes often, it might be worth just grabbing a jar next time you're at the store. It's inexpensive, lasts a long time, and nothing quite replaces the real thing.
FAQs
Does allspice substitute work in recipes that call for whole allspice berries?
It depends. If the recipe uses whole berries for steeping or infusing, like in a brine or mulled wine, whole cloves combined with a cinnamon stick are your best bet. Ground spice blends don't work well here because they dissolve into the liquid and can make it gritty or cloudy. Stick with whole spices when replacing whole berries.
Can you substitute allspice in a jerk marinade and still get an authentic flavor?
You'll get close but not all the way there. Allspice is the backbone of jerk seasoning, so replacing it changes the profile more than it would in a pie or cookie. A heavier mix of cloves, black pepper, and a touch of cinnamon will get you in the right neighborhood. If you can find whole cloves and toast them before grinding, that helps bridge the gap further.
Is there a single spice that can replace allspice without blending anything?
Ground cloves are the closest option. They share the most flavor overlap with allspice, especially that warm, sharp bite. Just use less than the recipe calls for since cloves are more concentrated.