Healthy oatmeal chocolate chip cookies that will be your new favorite! Loaded with extra chocolate chunks and perfectly crispy edges and chewy texture. These cookies are made with coconut flour, and they’re vegan, gluten-free, and refined sugar-free!

Nothing compares to a classic oatmeal chocolate chip cookie in my eyes. Rich melty chocolate chunks, thick rolled oats, flaky sea salt, and crisp outer edges. Straight from the oven too so they’re nice and warm…pure heaven!
I whipped up these oatmeal cookies for my best friend Paige while she was visiting and we both went nuts for them! They’re a spin-off from my paleo coconut flour chocolate chip cookies but these may be my new favorite! It’s only an added bonus that they’re 100% vegan, gluten-free, and lightly sweetened with coconut sugar. Making them refined-sugar free and acceptable for a healthy breakfast!

Ingredients in gluten-free oatmeal chocolate chip cookies
The best part of this recipe is how easy the cookies come together, no refrigeration required! Plus the ingredient list is super simple, full of nourishing pantry staple items 🙂 Here’s what you’ll need:
- Virgin coconut oil: make sure it’s at room temperature and not too hot!
- Almond butter: feel free to substitute your favorite nut butter or tahini to keep these nut-free. I love using nut butter as a base to add extra softness to the cookies.
- Coconut sugar: coconut sugar keeps these cookies refined-sugar free!
- Flax eggs: see below for the breakdown on how to make flax eggs. This keeps the recipe vegan.
- Vanilla extract: a baking essential to make these cookies extra delicious!
- Baking soda
- Sea salt
- Coconut flour: I love using coconut flour to help bind the dough! I feel this flour helps hold the batter together best. However, it is super absorbent so we don’t need a lot – this means its a lot more difficult to substitute another flour for it.
- Gluten-free rolled oats: Make sure to use a gluten-free variety to keep this allergy-friendly! Oats also help add that delicious chewy texture we all love.
- Dark chocolate: I like to use 80% dark chocolate since I prefer that richer, pure chocolate flavor but feel free to use your favorite!
- Flaky sea salt

How to make a vegan flax egg
- To make 1 flax egg first, mix together 1 TBSP flaxseed meal with 3 TBSP water.
- Allow the mixture to sit for 5 minutes until a gel-like consistency is made.
- Use the mixture in the recipe just as you would a regular egg! For these oatmeal cookies you’ll need two eggs, so 2 TBSP of flaxseed meal and 6 TBSP of water total.
Tips for the best oatmeal chocolate chip cookies
Less Sugar: Prefer a less sweet cookie? You can use a little less than the recommended 2/3 cup coconut sugar if you prefer. I also suggest using a darker chocolate variety, 70% or higher, to keep these less sweet.
Nut-free options: To make these cookies nut-free, you can substitute the almond butter for a seed-based butter like tahini or sunflower seed butter. If using sun butter, make sure to use 1/4 tsp. of baking soda instead of 1/2 tsp. to ensure the cookies don’t turn green.

More healthy cookies you’ll love
Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies with Coconut Flour (Vegan)
These chocolate chip cookies are made with coconut flour and ready in just 20 minutes. The cookies emerge from the oven SO gooey, thick, and delicious. A favorite vegan cookie, they’re also Paleo-friendly and nut-free, too.
Paleo Chocolate Chip Cookies (with a Vegan Option)
This recipe for Paleo Chocolate Chip Cookies is my go-to cookie recipe! My taste testers had no idea these cookies were gluten-free, grain-free, paleo, and refined sugar-free! This is one of my most popular recipes. You can easily make the cookies vegan.
Gluten-Free Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Skillet Cookie
This Gluten-Free & Vegan Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Skillet Cookie is the ultimate thick, gooey oatmeal cookie! This gluten-free skillet cookie is loaded with gooey chocolate and perfect for sharing. Ready in 30 minutes!
I hope you love these cookies as much as me and Paige did! If you love them, please leave a review in the comments below and let me know what you thought. xoxo!

Gluten-Free Vegan Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- ¼ cup virgin coconut oil, room temperature
- ⅓ cup almond butter, sub any nut butter of choice, or tahini for a nut-free option, see Notes
- ⅔ cup coconut sugar
- 2 flax eggs, see Notes
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ⅓ cup coconut flour
- ½ cup gluten-free rolled oats
- ⅔ cup 4 oz. chopped dark chocolate, make your own chocolate to keep 100% Paleo
- Flaky sea salt, optional for sprinkling on top
Equipment
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF and line a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
- In a bowl or stand mixer, beat together the coconut oil, nut butter, and coconut sugar until smooth. Add the flax eggs and vanilla and mix until smooth.
- Add the baking soda, salt, coconut flour, and rolled oats to the wet ingredients. Mix until well incorporated. Fold in the chopped dark chocolate.
- Use a cookie scoop to form cookies and place 2” apart on the prepared baking sheet. Press down slightly to flatten – note that the cookies won’t spread very much, so press them down to the thickness you prefer. Sprinkle with a bit of flaky sea salt if desired. Bake for 10 minutes or golden brown around the edges.
- Let cool completely on the cookie sheet. Enjoy!
Notes



Omg these cookies, I need them in my life! Can they be more perfect?!
Thank you so much Lili!
These cookies are so gooey and amazing!!!! ahhhhh!
I made these tonight for a dinner party and everyone loved it. They thought serving in one large skillet was fun! I did have to bake it about 5 minutes longer when I used a 10 inch cast iron skillet. I also used salted almond butter.
So glad it was a hit, Corey! Thanks for your feedback.
WOW. I just made these and they are inCREDIBLE. I made a couple changes: I used real eggs instead of flax as I’m not vegan, and substituted tahini for the almond butter. The tahini does add a touch of nuttiness/its own tahini mojo but it isn’t overpowering. Use good dark chocolate and don’t skip the 1/2 teaspoon of salt – it really puts this recipe over the top. The cookies browned up so beautifully in the oven, and they are phenomenal eaten warm.
Thanks for such a great recipe, I will definitely be making these again!
So thrilled you’re loving the cookies, Claire! Thanks for much for sharing your changes and feedback. Enjoy!
These cookies are amazing! I recently made the switch to gluten free and dairy free for health reasons, and the hardest part was walking away from all the baking I used to do. I’ve tried a few different recipes for chocolate chip cookies that are gf/df and these are by far the best I’ve made! Thank you for all the recipe selections!!
So thrilled you’re enjoying them Laura!! :) hope you find many recipes that you love to satisfy all your gluten-free and dairy-free baking needs!
I made these today and something went wrong. They spread out completely, almost paper thin. I used peanut butter instead of almond butter and real eggs instead of flax. I used an almond and coconut flour blend. I even added twice the amount of flour called for because i thought the dough looked wet. Still pancake flat. Any suggestions? They WERE tasty though!
Hi Laura, this recipe was developed to be made as written, so when many of the ingredients are changed, the same result can’t be guaranteed. Sorry you had trouble!
I’ve made this recipe twice now and I AM HOOKED. Thank you for a GF alternative that rivals the cookies I’ve been making for years. I have no need for the other recipes now! (As a side note, the first time I made them with almond butter and the second time with peanut butter. Both were excellent!)
So thrilled you’re loving them Cass, and that they’re able to satisfy your oatmeal cookie cravings :) thanks so much for your feedback!
Hi ! the taste is so good but mine didn’t hold together well. I’m thinking it’s because the coconut oil was too melted? I also used chia eggs instead of flax.
Thank you!
Hi Sarah – yes the coconut oil should be a texture similar to softened butter, not melted, so that definitely could’ve been the case. I haven’t used chia eggs so not sure how that would’ve affected things.
Do you have to use flax eggs, or can you use real eggs?
I’ve only tested with flax eggs but real eggs should be fine!
I’m super excited to try these! Have a dozen baking in the oven right now and counting down the minutes!!!
Amazing!! Hope you’re loving them, Gwen.