Vegan Banana Muffins — These easy banana muffins are extra fluffy and moist thanks to the combination of coconut oil and ripe bananas in the batter. This is a quick and easy muffin recipe you’re bound to love!
Easy Vegan Banana Muffins
These moist banana muffins embody everything I was trying to achieve. No butter, no eggs, and no mixer needed. These vegan muffins are fluffy, soft, light, and moist. And they remind me of mini donuts, a huge bonus.
I have many vegan banana muffin recipes on my blog from circa 2009, but they’re anything but light and fluffy. They’re made with almond meal to keep them gluten-free and are much heavier.
I have more recent banana recipes, to the tune of, oh about 35+ banana bread recipes. You can never have too many, right? But they’re not vegan. Although some use oil rather than butter, they all use eggs.
Because I loved the Pineapple Coconut Oil Banana Bread I made a while ago, I figured muffins and mini muffins would be fun, and I kept them vegan. I’m not vegan, but many of my readers are, and some readers watch their egg consumption for health reasons. Plus, sometimes it’s nice to be able to bake vegan if you run out of eggs. Whoops.
These easy banana muffins are surprisingly light and fluffy for an egg-free muffin, which are often more like dense, lead balloons. They’re not too light, though. Banana bread is and should be somewhat dense, and these have just the right amount of substance.
They’re so soft and moist, thanks to the coconut oil and bananas. The smell in your house while they bake is heaven-sent. Bread baking with bananas, vanilla, and coconut oil is beyond scrumptious.
I popped them in one after the next. Just one more. And one more. The ones we didn’t immediately scarf actually got softer on the second and third days, and the flavors intensified.
Vegan Banana Muffins Ingredients
For these eggless banana muffins, you’ll need:
- Mashed ripe bananas
- All-purpose flour
- Baking powder
- Cinnamon
- Nutmeg
- Salt
- Granulated sugar
- Melted coconut oil
- Non-dairy milk (I used unsweetened vanilla almond milk)
- Light brown sugar
- Vanilla extract
I used Kelapo Coconut Oil Pre-Measured Baking Sticks. They’re pre-measured into half-cup portions and scored the way butter is, which is so handy for baking. Of course, using coconut oil from a jar is just fine too.
How to Make Vegan Banana Muffins
It’s incredibly easy to make banana muffins with no eggs or dairy products in it. Simply whisk together the dry ingredients in one bowl and the wet in another. Stir the wet ingredients into the dry and mix until just combined.
Divide the batter between regular-sized muffin cups or mini muffin cups — either works! Then, bake until done. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs, but no batter. Tops will be domed, springy to the touch, and will be on the paler side rather than golden.
I dipped the tops in cinnamon-sugar. Everything is better coated in cinnamon-sugar. I didn’t even need to brush on melted coconut oil (or vegan butter) for the coating to adhere. The sugar granules add lovely texture and remind me of eating mini donuts. Except baked and vegan, nice.
Do I Have to Use Coconut Oil?
As I’ve discussed before when baking with coconut oil, it doesn’t impart much flavor. There’s barely a hint of detectable coconut flavor in these muffins, perfect for those who aren’t as fond of coconut. Normally when people object to coconut, it’s usually shredded or flaked coconut, which are very distinct and powerful, far stronger than coconut oil.
If you’re out of coconut oil or still hung up about trying it, I’m sure you could substitute canola oil, although I haven’t tried it with this recipe and highly recommend coconut oil.
The flavor the coconut oil lends to the muffins is of the can’t-put-your-finger-on-it type. Combined with the sweet bananas, vanilla almond milk, and heavy dose of vanilla in the batter, I was in fluffy, fragrant muffin heaven.
How to Store Eggless Banana Muffins
These vegan banana muffins will keep airtight at room temperature for up to 5 days or can be frozen for up to 3 months. They get softer and the flavor intensifies on the second and third day.
Tips for Making Vegan Banana Muffins
I baked 24 mini banana muffins using a rounded tablespoon of batter. Spray your tablespoon with cooking spray, repeating as necessary, so the batter glides right off into the pan because filling up mini muffin pans can be messy. After two pans of minis, I made 7 regular-sized muffins in a standard muffin pan and used a one-quarter cup measure.
A few words of advice: fill both the mini and regular pans to between two-thirds and three-quarters full. You’ll be surprised how much this batter rises, and the ones that were filled more than 3/4-full ended up turning into overgrown mushrooms. I have a knack for that. I want muffin top, not mushroom top.
Note that these vegan banana muffins bake in quite a hot oven to ensure the high heat gives these egg-less wonders as much rise and doming as possible. Watch them closely in the last few minutes of baking so they don’t burn.
Baking times will vary based on what size pans you’re using. I baked the mini banana muffins for about 9 minutes and the full size for 15 minutes. Bake until they’re done. Watch your muffins, not the clock. They’re done when a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs and they’re domed and springy to the touch (they’ll be more pale than golden).
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Fluffy Vegan Banana Muffins
Ingredients
- 1 to 1 ¼ cups mashed ripe bananas, about 3 small/medium or 2 large
- 1 ¾ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon nutmeg
- pinch salt, optional and to taste
- 1 ¼ cups granulated sugar
- ½ cup coconut oil, melted (canola or vegetable oil could be substituted but I prefer coconut oil)
- ½ cup milk, slightly warmed (coconut, almond, soy, rice, cow’s; I used unsweetened vanilla almond milk)
- ¼ cup light brown sugar, packed
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- about 1/3 cup granulated sugar, for dipping
- about 1 tablespoon cinnamon, for dipping
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400F. Spray non-stick muffin pans with floured cooking spray, or grease and flour the pans. (I prefer cosmetically to not use liners, and also the muffins could stick) I made 24 mini muffins and 7 regular muffins. I estimate the recipe will make 30 to 36 mini, or 16 to 18 regular-sized muffins. Set pans aside.
- In a small bowl, mash the bananas; set aside.
- In a large bowl, combine flour, baking powder, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, nutmeg, optional salt, and stir to incorporate; set aside.
- In a medium bowl, combine 1 1/4 cups granulated sugar, melted coconut oil (about 1 minute in the microwave), slightly warmed milk (about 20 seconds in the microwave – this prevents the cold milk from re-solidfying the coconut oil on contact), brown sugar, vanilla, and whisk to combine. Fold in the bananas.
- Pour wet mixture over the dry, stirring until just incorporated. Make sure to get all the dry bits from the bottom of the bowl, but don’t overmix or muffins will be tough. Batter is quite thick and if yours is seemingly too thick, add a splash of milk to thin it.
- Using a cooking sprayed one-tablespoon measure for a mini muffin pan or a sprayed one-quarter cup measure for a regular sized pan (or what is appropriate for your pan size). Fill the cavities between 2/3 and 3/4 full; don’t exceed 3/4 full.
- Bake until done. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean or with a few moist crumbs, but no batter. Tops will be domed, springy to the touch, and will be on the paler side rather than golden. Done for me was about 9 minutes for mini, 15 minutes for regular sized. Baking times will vary widely based on size of pans used, how many pans you have in the oven at once, how moist your bananas were, and how many times you open the oven door to rotate pans. Watch your muffins, not the clock.
- Allow muffins to cool in pan for about 10 minutes before carefully turning out onto wire racks to cool completely.
- If desired, after they’re cool enough to handle, stir together about 1/3 cup granulated sugar and 1 tablespoon cinnamon, and dip the tops (or entire muffin) into it. I didn’t need to brush with melted coconut oil or (vegan) butter in order for the cinnamon-sugar to adhere.
Notes
- Muffins will keep airtight at room temperature for up to 5 days or can be frozen for up to 3 months. They get softer and the flavor intensifies on the second and third day.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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More Vegan Muffin Recipes:
Vegan Chocolate Chip Mini Muffins — The muffins are soft, springy, bouncy like little trampolines, and they’re vegan. They’re ridiculously moist, tender, delicate and light, without being airy, and as good as any traditional muffin with eggs and butter.
Vegan Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Trail Mix Muffins — They’re hearty, sweet enough without being too sweet, and full of tons of chewy texture in every bite from the raisins and oats.
Skinny Vegan Chocolate Chip Muffins — Fast, EASY, one bowl, no mixer muffins that are on the SKINNIER side!! Loaded with CHOCOLATE in every bite! Soft, fluffy, and deliciously decadent tasting!!
Vegan Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Muffins — Soft, fluffy, full of PEANUT BUTTER flavor, and LOADED with CHOCOLATE in every bite!
Vegan Carrot Cake Muffins — If you’re looking for a healthier carrot cake recipe that tastes AMAZING, make these muffins immediately!
Vegan Blueberry Muffins — These are the BEST blueberry muffins I’ve ever had, vegan or otherwise. An avocado replaces the butter (and much of the oil) you’d typically add to muffin batter. These are fluffy, moist, and so easy to make!
Vegan Apple Cinnamon Muffins— These apple cinnamon muffins are studded with BIG chunks of apple! They’re so easy to make and are perfect for a quick snack or breakfast to-go.
What is the other vegan muffin recipe??
If you go to the top of my site, under BROWSE RECIPES there is a way to access all my recipes with a drop down menu
OR on the right hand side bar in ‘recent posts’ – the recipe is listed there as well.
Are these super sweet? Seems like a lot of sugar for muffins.
No they’re not ‘super sweet’. They are of normal sweetness, but if you want, dial it back some.
Made these last night! I used less sugar and they still turned out delicious.. Light, fluffy with a gorgeous banana taste. The sugar/cinnamon dusting on top is a must. Will definitely be using this recipe again. Thank you!
Thanks for LMK you tried them with great success! Stay tuned tomorrow I have another vegan muffin recipe coming! And so glad you liked these – I am always amazed every time I make them how light & fluffy they turn out – without eggs!
hello
i have a doubt about coconut oil..
i have this solid jar of pure coconut oil from mexico i thing..that someone gave me as a gift.
but i dont know if that is the one that i can use to bake.
its seems pretty neutral.
can u tell me if there’s any special virtue that the one its used in baking has?
thanks a lot, im totally gona bake tons of your recipes (:
I just made these and the whole house smells like cinnamon, bananas, and coconut. Who knew that vegan muffins could be so moist? Thanks so much for posting, Averie Sunshine!
Thanks for LMK you tried them and I too was pleasantly surprised just how soft, fluffy & moist they came out!
I made a batch of these last night – yum! I absolutely love them, and will definitely make them again (when I happen to be out of eggs or butter). I used canola oil instead of coconut and they turned out just fine. Using a 1/4 cup measure, I got 15 full size muffins out of this recipe, and I baked them about 18 min. Next time, I will probably reduce the sugar a bit – I found the natural sweetness of the bananas to be enough, and when combined with the sugar called for in the recipe, the muffins tasted more like dessert than breakfast. Also, my muffins didn’t dome quite as much as the ones in the picture; they rose perfectly fine, but they just didn’t have a nice rounded muffintop. One thing worth mentioning: when I first pulled them out of the oven, I was worried because the tops were actually a bit hard and crunchy, probably due to the high oven temperature. But after leaving them to sit overnight, the tops softened and became wonderfully chewy. I’m assuming that it’s because of the brown sugar.
Thank you for the wonderful recipe, Averie, I love your blog and I’m looking forward to getting your cookbook!
My bananas weren’t of the super sweet/very ripe variety and so yes, just adjust sugar to taste. If you didn’t get domed muffin tops, I would try filling your cups just a little fuller, maybe another teaspoon or two of batter. That should do the trick. And of course, bake until they’re done but no longer to avoid any hardened tops. Also, if you dip the top in melted coconut oil or melted butter or butter substitute and then dip in cinnamon-sugar, that will also take care of any slightly firm tops. Or, just put in a ziplock til the next day and that does the trick, too, as you found out. Thanks for trying and LMK if you try again with any variations!
Averie, I had to come back to this post and let you know how much of a success these muffins were! I made them over the weekend and brought them to a brunch with friends- luckily I saved some for my husband and I because they were kind of irresistible :) So moist, and definitely doughnut-like! Thank you so much, I now have a new favorite muffin!
So glad you made them for a brunch and everyone seemed to like them – and glad you saved a few back for your and your hubs to enjoy :) I am thrilled to hear this is your new favorite muffin. Thanks for LMK!!
I made these this weekend Averie and they are SO good! I haven’t had as much success with recipes from anywhere more than your blog – thanks for another hit! These were easy, used all ingredients that I had on hand, and so delicious. The perfect muffin texture, soft and springy and perfectly dense. I could definitely taste the coconut – it wasn’t really strong but it’s there. That’s a good thing for me since I love coconut and since my boyfriend / family don’t that means I get them all! :)
Thanks for making these and coming back to LMK! I am so glad they were a hit and yes, vegan baking can be tricky and many recipes call for some very interesting ingredients or things the avg person just doesn’t keep on hand. Glad to know these (and my other recipes) were a success for you! :)
These look delicious! Do you mind if I share the photo on my tumblr recipe blog?
Oh wow, these look delightful :) banana and coconut oil sounds perfect!
These look like little bites of heaven! Love the cinnamon sugar topping.
OH HECK YES! Did you say…mini doughnuts?? SIGN ME UP GIRLFRIEND! :) xx