Cookies generally contain gluten because they are made from wheat flour obtained from wheat, while there are groups that are intolerant of gluten. Patients with gluten intolerance also tend not to be able to consume casein and lactose intolerance. So, one of the innovations that can be done to make cookies gluten, casein, and lactose-free is to replace wheat flour with corn and almond flour. Corn-almond cookies produced still have a low nutritional value of protein so that supplementation is done with mung bean flour. This research aimed to find out: 1) the effect of mung bean flour supplementation on the quality of corn-almond cookies; 2) the effect of fat types on the quality of corn-almond cookies; 3) the right treatment combination between supplementation of mung bean flour and the type of fat that produces the best quality of corn-almond-based cookies. The design used in this study was Randomized Group Design (RGD). Factors studied included supplementation of mung bean flour (level of 10, 20, and 30%) and sources of fat (margarine, Virgin Coconut Oil (VCO), and combination of margarine and VCO). Based on these factors, nine treatment combinations were obtained, which were repeated three times. Data were analyzed using variance analysis with a level of 5% and further tests of Duncan's Multiple Range Test with a 5% level. The best treatment was chosen by using the effectiveness index test. The results showed that supplementation of mung bean flour increased water content and reduced fat content. While the type of fat increases fat content and dissolved protein levels, and decreases the development volume. The best combination of treatments is cookies with mung bean supplementation of 10% with 100% VCO fat. Physicochemical characteristics of corn-almond cookies produced from the best treatment's combination are having a value of dissolved protein content of 2.35%, fat content of 28.10%, reducing sugar content of 0.21%, moisture content of 2%, ash content of 0.27%, and volume development of 73.23%.