Moist, fluffy and naturally sweetened with banana, these Paleo Banana Nut Muffins are studded with chopped walnuts. Most Paleo muffin recipes use almond flour—but coconut flour is the secret to these muffins light texture.

I need a little bit of cheering up today, so I’m focusing my energy on something that always makes me happy: healthier muffins! Fluffy, light, and delicious – muffins are being embraced wholeheartedly today.
I love all recipes with ripe bananas, because I know we’re all familiar with the feeling of thinking we’ll eat that bunch of bananas eventually…and then we watch them turn from golden yellow into a dark brown that has us hesitating to grab them for anything other than banana bread…or even better, these delicious banana nut muffins!

These coconut flour banana muffins were my major hit recipe of the month! I ended up making them midway through the week when I majorly needed a pick-me-up — and boy did they do the job. Thankfully, they only take a few minutes to get into the oven. The cinnamon makes everything smell so warm and comforting while these are baking.
No sugar added muffins?!
This paleo banana muffin recipe is adapted from my paleo chocolate chunk banana bread, which is one of my favorite recipes and the all-time most popular recipe on my site! It’s a winner, for good reason.
Like that bread, these banana coconut flour muffins have NO added sugar. None. All the sweetness here comes from your ripe bananas, so make sure you let them get nice and ripe. The darker and spottier, the sweeter your muffins will be!

Ingredients in these banana nut muffins:
- Ripe bananas: since these are our main source of sweetness, make sure you use very ripe bananas!
- Eggs: I wouldn’t recommend a vegan replacement here since this muffin recipe requires the structure eggs provide. Use this vegan banana muffin recipe instead!
- Coconut Oil
- Vanilla Extract
- Almond Butter: or any other nut or seed butter of your choice. Use sunflower seed butter for a nut-free options.
- Coconut Flour: you can’t sub anything else here! Coconut flour is uniquely absorbent and no other flour will match the texture you get from using coconut flour here.
- Cinnamon
- Baking Soda, Baking Powder & Salt
- Walnuts: for crunch! Any favorite nut will work, or skip, or replace with chocolate chips!
Are bananas Paleo-friendly? Yes, they are! Although most strict Paleo diets recommend only eating them in moderation due to their high starch and sugar content, they are Paleo-friendly. In this recipe, we capitalize on their sweetness by allowing them to sweeten the muffins on their own.

How to store banana nut muffins:
To store: Store these moist banana nut muffins at room temperature for 2-3 days or in the refrigerator for 5-7 days. Since these are moist muffins, I’ve found they keep better when loosely covered rather than in an airtight container when storing at room temperature.
How to freeze muffins:
To freeze: place the muffins in an airtight container or zip back, label and date, and store in the freezer for up to six months.
To reheat: microwave a muffin from frozen for about 30 seconds, thaw at room temperature for about an hour, or thaw in the refrigerator overnight. I love prepping these healthy banana nut muffins ahead of time and storing them in the freezer to have muffins-on-demand.
These banana coconut flour muffins smell amazing coming out of the oven, and they taste even better! They’re sweet enough even without the sugar, allowing the banana flavor to shine. The texture is spot-on – fluffy, tender, and the toasted walnuts add a little extra crunch and warmth. These are a real treat, whether it’s for breakfast, a snack, or welcome lunchbox addition. Happy baking!

If you like these gluten-free muffins, you’ll love these too…
- Paleo Morning Glory Muffins
- Gluten-Free Vegan Lemon Poppyseed Muffins
- Paleo Banana Blueberry Muffins
- Gluten-Free Blueberry Muffins
- Gluten-Free Vegan Carrot Cake Muffins
- The Best Double Chocolate Muffins

Paleo Banana Nut Muffins
Ingredients
- 3-4 large ripe bananas, 1⅔ cups mashed or 380 grams
- 3 eggs, room temperature
- 3 tablespoons coconut oil, melted
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ⅓ cup almond butter or other nut or seed butter of choice
- ⅓ cup 50g coconut flour
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- ¾ teaspoon baking soda
- ¾ teaspoon baking powder
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 1 cup toasted walnuts, chopped
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Line a 12 pan muffin tin with paper liners or grease with coconut oil.
- In a large bowl or mixer, combine the mashed bananas, eggs, coconut oil, vanilla extract, and ⅓ cup almond butter until fully combined.
- Add the coconut flour, cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder, and salt to the wet ingredients and mix well. Fold in the walnuts.
- Divide the batter between the prepared muffin tins.
- Bake in the preheated oven for about 16-19 minutes. A toothpick inserted into the center of a muffin should come out clean.
- Remove from oven and allow to cool on a wire rack for about 10 minutes. Flip out onto a cooling rack to finish cooling.
- Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to two days, or in the refrigerator for 5 days.
Notes
To Freeze
- Once completely cool, seal in an airtight container or zip bag, removing as much air from the bag as possible. Freeze for up to 4 months for best taste!




I was literally thinking I should make some banana muffins for breakfast this morning. Bakerita for the win!!
Wow these are good! Fluffy and crunch with just the right amount of sweetness from the bananas. I will definitely be making these on a regular basis! I had to bake mine for a bit longer than the 19 minutes stated in the recipe – it was more like 22-24 minutes for me before the toothpick came out clean. But I have a finicky oven, so I’m not surprised.
Thanks for sharing this!
Hi Jenn – so happy to hear that! Ovens can definitely be finicky, so I’m glad you figured out the amount of time that worked for you. Thanks for sharing your success with me! :)
Just made these to try as I will be doing a 6-week fitness challenge which will also be following a Paleo diet. Only thing I did differently was to sprinkle 4-5 chocolate chips on each muffin and omit the nuts. Sixteen minutes and they were perfect! Will definitely do a mix of nuts and chocolate chips next time as I think I would have enjoyed the crunch of the nuts. Question for you…do you think I can substitute liquid egg whites for all or part of the eggs?
Hi Lara. So glad you enjoyed the muffins! I haven’t tried substituting liquid egg whites so I can’t say how it would turn out. If you do try it though, I’d love if you could report back with the results :)
Yumm, these babies just came out of the oven! How long do these stay fresh? Have you tried freezing them? I would like to take them to work for breakfast.
Hi Claire! They freeze really well. I’d stay they keep fresh for about 2 days stored at room temperature, and they’ll keep in the fridge for about 5 days. Hope this helps!
Do you have any nutrition specs on these? I’m trying the whole paleo thing and made these yesterday…they’re amazing! Thanks for sharing your recipes, can’t wait to try more :)
So glad you’re loving them Kathryn! I haven’t calculated the nutritional info for these, but you can do so here by inputting the ingredients: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/recipe/calculator. Enjoy!
This is literally the first coconut flour paleo recipe that I’ve made that I have not thrown in the trash can! These are seriously so good thank you! I will definitely be looking and making your other recipes!
I’m so happy to hear that, Jen!! :) I hope you love all the recipes that you try.
First attempt at baking without”flour” … was worried it would be strong coconut flavour – was sooo wrong! I actually followed recipe (except no walnuts – only cause I didn’t have any in my cupboard!).
These were absolutely fabulous and will make again but with the walnuts!
I’m pretty excited to try more of your recipes!!!
Thank you!
So glad to hear you enjoyed these Angie! Thanks so much for your feedback, hope you love every recipe you try :)
Hi Rachel- great recipe, thank you! I was wondering if you had the calorie count to it, just curious!
Hi Samantha – you can calculate the calorie count here: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/recipe/calculator
Hi
i want know that can use wheat flour؟؟؟
Hi Malihe. Unfortunately coconut flour is much more absorbent than wheat flour is so it would require a lot more wheat flour to make up for the coconut flour. Since I haven’t tested it this way, I’m not sure how much it would take. Sorry!
Hey these look amazing!! I’m just wondering if you can freeze them?
Hi Ashlee – yup, they freeze really well! Just make sure they’re tightly wrapped to avoid freezer burn.