This homemade Zucchini Bread is soft, moist, and lightly sweet with a hint of cinnamon. It’s one of my favorite ways to use up fresh zucchini, and it makes two loaves, so you can enjoy one now and save one for later.

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Zucchini Bread Video
If you love my famous Banana Bread, I think you’ll love this zucchini bread just as much. It has that same soft, tender crumb, but with fresh-grated zucchini folded into the batter. P.S. Try a warm slice with our whipped Honey Butter. Wow, it’s good.
Helpful Reader Review
“Wow, I was so excited to not have to wring out the zucchini juices haha. A very easy recipe! And I happened to have people to share with, so 2 loaves came in handy! Thank you! Very delicious!” – Viktoriya ★★★★★
Best Zucchini Bread Recipe
When our garden is producing loads of zucchini, this is one of the first recipes I make. It uses a full pound of zucchini, but you don’t really taste the zucchini—it just makes the bread wonderfully moist.
No need to squeeze the zucchini dry for this recipe. I’ve tested this both ways, and leaving the zucchini as-is gives the bread the best soft, moist crumb.
This recipe makes two loaves, which is so handy. Keep one on the counter for breakfast and snacking, then share or freeze the second loaf for later. You can also bake the batter into Zucchini Muffins.

Ingredients for Zucchini Bread
The ingredients for zucchini bread are pantry staples and grated zucchini, because the natural moisture in the zucchini keeps this bread moist for days! So easy!
- Dry ingredients – all-purpose flour (or gluten-free), baking powder, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon for a hint of spice.
- Wet ingredients – room temperature eggs, oil (canola, vegetable, or extra light olive oil would work), sugar, and Vanilla Extract.
- Grated zucchini – Use 2 small to medium zucchini. No need to peel them. If using a very large garden zucchini, scoop out the seedy center before grating.
Pro Tip: Use Room Temperature Zucchini
If your zucchini is very cold from the refrigerator, set it on the counter to bring it to room temperature while you measure out the remaining ingredients. You’ll get a better rise in your bread.

Zucchini Bread Variations
Make this basic Zucchini Bread recipe your own by adding in 1 cup of add-ins before baking. Try:
- Chopped walnuts or pecans
- Semi-sweet chocolate chips (reduce the sugar slightly if desired)
- Raisins or golden raisins
- Dried cranberries or currents
- Orange zest
- Shredded coconut
How to Grate Zucchini
I prefer small to medium zucchini because the texture is finer and the peel disappears into the bread. Trim the ends from the zucchini and grate it on the large holes of a box grater. Measure the shredded zucchini loosely—don’t pack it into the measuring cup. There’s no need to peel or squeeze the zucchini for this recipe.
You can also use the grating attachment on a food processor if you’re making a large batch.
Pro Tip:
If you have extra zucchini, grate it and freeze it for later. Thaw before using and add the zucchini with its liquid unless your recipe says to drain it.

How to Make Zucchini Bread
Once the zucchini is grated, this homemade zucchini bread recipe comes together in no time!
- Prepare your pans – Butter two 8×4-inch loaf pans and line them with parchment paper. Preheat the oven to 350˚F.
- Dry Ingredients – In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon.
- Wet Ingredients – In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, oil, sugar, and vanilla until well blended.
- Combine – Add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients and stir just until combined. Don’t overmix.
- Fold in zucchini – Grate the zucchini in the large holes of a box grater and measure the zucchini loosely (do not pack). Add zucchini to the batter along with any add-ins you are using, folding just until evenly incorporated. The batter will look thick at first, but it loosens as the zucchini is folded in.

- Bake – Divide the batter between the prepared pans and bake at 350˚F for about 50 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Let the bread cool in the pans for 15 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack.
How to Tell When Zucchini Bread is Done
Zucchini bread is done when the top is domed and set, and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs. If you see wet batter sticking to the toothpick, bake it a few minutes longer.

Make-Ahead and Storage
Let the zucchini bread cool completely before storing, so condensation doesn’t make it sticky.
- Room temperature: Store covered at room temperature for 2 to 3 days.
- Refrigerator: Refrigerate for up to 1 week.
- Freezer: Wrap the cooled loaf or slices in plastic wrap, then place in a freezer bag and freeze for up to 3 months.
- To thaw: Thaw at room temperature, or warm individual slices in the microwave.

This zucchini bread is simple, cozy, and such a delicious way to use extra zucchini. We love it warm with honey butter, and the second loaf never goes to waste since it freezes so well.
Zucchini Bread

Ingredients
- 3 cups all-purpose flour, or use gluten-free flour
- 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp fine sea salt
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 3 large eggs, room temperature
- 1 cup extra light olive oil, or canola or vegetable oil
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 Tbsp vanilla extract
- 3 cups grated zucchini*, from 1 lb or 2 medium zucchini
- 1 cup chopped walnuts or pecans, optional**
Instructions
- Prepare the pans – Preheat the oven to 350°F. Butter two 8×4-inch metal loaf pans and line with parchment paper for easier lifting.
- Dry ingredients – In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon.
- Wet ingredients – In a separate large mixing bowl, add eggs, oil, sugar, and vanilla. Whisk until very well blended. Add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients and whisk until well combined and smooth.
- Grate the zucchini using the large holes of a box grater. Add zucchini to the batter along with nuts (if using) and fold until well incorporated.
- Bake – Pour the batter into your prepared pans and bake in a preheated oven at 350˚F for 50-60 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Cool in the pans for 10-15 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack and cool completely to room temperature.
Notes
**Nutrition label does not include nuts or optional add-ins. Storage: Let Zucchini Bread cool completely before storing. Cover and keep at room temperature for 2 to 3 days, or refrigerate for up to 1 week. To freeze, wrap the cooled loaf or individual slices tightly and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature or warm slices briefly in the microwave.
Nutrition Per Serving
Filed Under
More Easy Zucchini Recipes
If you love zucchini and are looking for more ways to use your summer bounty, then you won’t want to miss these other tempting zucchini recipes.
- Easy Zucchini Fritters
- Pasta Primavera
- Grilled Moroccan Vegetable Skewers
- Fried Zucchini Bites with Dipping Sauce
- Cheesy Zucchini Casserole
- Zucchini Muffins
- Zucchini Lasagna
- Zucchini Casserole



I made your banana bread with chocolate chips, a plain banana bread, 2 zuccinhi loaves and the cranberry loaf today. I host a cookie walk for my family (about 20 people) for Christmas. I bake and make candy and treats and they bring their containers and take what they want. Still have 6 more loaves to do so will be checking out other recipes tomorrow. This old great grandma is tired tonight
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That’s nice! Rest well and thanks for this review. I’m sure your family will enjoy the bread the you made for them.
Can’t wait to try this recipe. Wondering if I can sub out part or all of the granulated sugar fir brown sugar, please?
Hi Lisa! I think it could work but it would likely affect the texture and be more dense, darker in color and alter the taste a little bit too.
I wasn’t expecting too much from this loaf but it turned out perfectly and my family and I enjoyed it a lot.
That’s wonderful, Linda! I’m so glad to hear that.
Looks so good. I do not have the smaller baking pans. Do you think I can make it in a 9×5 pan and just adjust the time? I would like to use up the abundance of zucchini I have now.
Hi Patricia. I haven’t tested other size pans to know how to adjust the recipe or baking time exactly. It can work, you’ll just have to experiment with it. You don’t want to overwhelm the pan with too much batter though, as it can take very long to bake and may even be raw in the middle.
Well I’m using the 9×5 pan, making sure not to overfill it. The rest of the batter are going to be made into a jumbo muffin tin. I’m crossing my fingers.😊 The batter tasted pretty good.
This bread is amazing! I have made it twice exactly as written. I would like to try and add bananas. If I do, should I reduce the amount of zucchini? Thank you! Love watching your videos/tutorials.
Hi Annette, I haven’t tried that in this recipe, but I bet it could work. Here’s what one of my readers wrote: “I just put a modified recipe in the oven – I used the two cups of zucchini and also mashed up three large ripe bananas, and then doubled almost all other ingredients except I quadrupled the cranberries to two cups. The batter tastes wonderful – hopefully it will be just as good out of the oven!
What a nightmare! This recipe doesn’t work. I wish I read the comments before starting the recipe. I had the exact same results I couldn’t mix and had to add milk.
Hi Nori! The batter would be too thick if there is too much flour or your ratios are off. We’ve had great results with this, and many others have tried the recipe. I recommend watching my tutorial on how to measure ingredients. Also- do not strain the juices from the zucchini. It’s needed for moisture.
Tried this recipe twice didn’t turned out well, fellowed the exact recipe batter is not moist it’s too thick I had to add milk to be able to mix it.
Hi Rita. It sounds like your ratios are off. It shouldn’t be that thick. Be sure to use the liquid from the zucchini (don’t drain it), and do not measure your flour by scoping it out of the container with the measuring cup or you’ll get up to 25% more flour then needed. I’ve attached my tutorial on How to measure ingredients to help.
Miam ,j’ai même pas eu le temps de le mettre au frigo lol vraiment délicieux Merci pour tes magnifiques recettes .T’es ma meilleur
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us, Johanne!
I added chopped dates it was amazing!! So moist and easy to make I make it for my kids and grands they love it! And it mailed beautifully and arrived in tact lol. I will make again and again.
That’s wonderful, Cathy! I’m glad it was a hit.
Hi Natasha. This bread is amazing!!!!!! I have been making it on repeat. Everyone has to try it. I have a quick question. How long does it stay good after baking?
Thanks, Sophia. You may check this part in the written recipe “How to Store Zucchini Bread” for your question.
Absolutely delicious as are all your recipes. Had a slice of this bread with cream cheese and honey goes well with it too. Every one of your recipes I have made – and I have made dozens of them – has been a winner. Thank you.
I’m so happy to hear that, Vivienne! Thank you for your lovely comment & review!
Ok I tried this recipe today and used gluten free flour and Splenda and my batter wasn’t batter it was crumbly. Any idea what I did wrong? I made this last year no problem. Thoroughly confused. Thanks for any help
Hi Sharon. My thought would be that you possibly used too much flour. I’ve attached my tutorial on How to measure ingredients . Also, do not strain the zucchini juice. I hope that helps.
Thank you so much for your help. I did try again and I cut the flour in half to 1 1/2 cups. Maybe it’s different for the gluten free I am using. Waiting with 🤞keep the recipes coming we love them!!
We’d love to know how it goes!
I’m trying this again, I used your guide on measuring and did every measurement exact. It was a pretty thick batter and when I added the zucchini I had to mix by hand. It made it a little more workable but still thick that I had to spoon it in to the pans. It wasn’t portable. In the oven now. I will not quit haha thank you for your advice
This recipe was so easy to follow and so delicious! We immediately enjoyed one warm loaf and I froze the other loaf to enjoy later! Love your video too! Thank you Natasha!
Hi Kathy! You’re very welcome. I’m glad you enjoyed the recipe. Thank you for the feedback.
Yum!! I used one of those “oops I didn’t see it and it was a mini baseball bat before I picked it” zucchinis, and scooped the seeds out as suggested. I know my oven runs hot so I took it out at 50 minutes and it was perfect. Definitely a recipe I’ll make again!
Hi Kim! I’m glad you loved the recipe!
Hey, this looks terrific! some this weekend, and then I will rate it. Meanwhile, I have a great use for grated zucchini. Add it in with a creamy pasta sauce, like your chicken pesto alfredo. Put the zucchini in in place of asparagus, right before you add the pasta so the zucchini doesn’t shed too much water.
Also, for the reader who asked for a sugar substitute, why not try Monkfruit Erythritol? It has less of that annoying cooling mouth effect than the other sugar substitutes.
Slava Ukraini!
Hi there-
What can I use to substitute for granulated sugar? I don’t want to use Stevia. Can I just use bananas, Monkfruit sugar, dark molasses?
Thank you
Anita
Hi Anita, the sugar adds the perfect amount of sweetness to complement the vegetable and spice ingredients, it will definitely be missed in this recipe. One of my readers mentioned they used splenda in place of sugar. Here’s what they said: “Being a diabetic I substituted the sugar for Splenda. Turned out great. My granddaughter who is picked loves it minus the nuts.” I hope this helps.
I have a diabetic in the house so I use Splenda Magic Baker Sugar Substitute. It’s way better than the normal Splenda because it doesn’t have the aftertaste and bakes up beautifully. I love it and keep it on hand!
I recommend monkfruit erythritol, as it doesn’t have the annoying, cooling mouthfeel that Stevia has.
It substitutes 1:1 for sugar, and behaves similarly in recipes.
Can I make this zucchini bread in a 9 cup bundt pan? I am making it for a benefit for my nephew who has cancer for a bake sale this weekend.
Hi Linda, I think this could work in a bundt pan, but haven’t tested it myself to advise on baking time adjustments. Let us know how it turns out.
I’m looking for the scales that you used. I don’t see it in your notes.
Hi Tina! You can find it here in my Amazon Affiliate Shop with all my other favorite tools.
I made this the other day and have gotten so many compliments. I now have made this 3 more times. Being a diabetic I substituted the sugar for Splenda. Turned out great. My granddaughter who is picked loves it minus the nuts.
That’s great to know, Mia! Thank you for sharing your experience with the recipe.
Hi Natasha,
First of all, I’d like to say I’ve made at least 15 recipes from your website to date, and all of them have turned out perfectly, which is why I’m still going to give this one 5 stars and assume I did something wrong this time. My youngest son complained that the bread was both sour and salty, and it turns out he was right. My assumption is that either my baking soda or baking power (or both) were too old, even though neither were expired. Have you ever run into this issue when baking? I’m determined to get this recipe right, so I’m probably going to try it again this weekend. Thanks!
Hi Kevin! I have not had that issue before. I wonder if possibly something was measured incorrectly. The leaving agents can affect the taste, so using fresh may help but be sure to watch my tutorial on how to measure your ingredients correctly. I hope you have better results the next time.
Ok! So I seem to remember the batter being a bit thicker than in your video. I may have measured one or two of the cups of flour incorrectly, and a thicker batter made it much harder to mix the ingredients well, to include the leavening agents. Thank you, and I’ll let you know how it turns out the next time.
You’re welcome, Kevin!
The flavor profile was delicious….however the texture and density was not. But that is entirely my fault for not reading all the directions clearly. Amd not the fault of the recipe. I’m admitting this so no one else makes my mistake. Though they probably wouldn’t. Two things yall, do not over mix your batter! And do not remove the water from the zucchini. I did these things and my loaf was dense and dry. Dont be like me.
Hi Brie. Thank you for sharing that. I hope you get to make this again and hope you have great results.