Vegan Baking Without Eggs: Techniques That Actually Work
Baking is the part of vegan cooking where people get most nervous — and for good reason. In stovetop cooking, a substitution that's slightly off usually just means a less-than-perfect dish. In baking, the chemistry is less forgiving: the wrong egg replacement means a cake that sinks, cookies that spread into a puddle, or bread that won't rise.
This guide takes the mystery out of egg-free baking by focusing on the one principle that makes it predictable: eggs do different jobs in different recipes, and you have to replace the job, not the egg. Once you can identify whether an egg is binding, leavening, adding moisture, or building structure, choosing the right vegan replacement becomes straightforward — and your results will be as good as the original.
The Core Principle: Replace the Function, Not the Ingredient
This is the single most important concept in vegan baking. Eggs are not just "eggs" — they're a multi-function ingredient that happens to do several things at once. In any given recipe, one of those functions is usually dominant, and that's the one you need to replace.
Here's what eggs do, and which substitute handles each:
| Egg Function | What It Means | Best Vegan Replacement |
|---|---|---|
| Binding | Holds ingredients together | Flax egg, chia egg, psyllium husk |
| Leavening | Creates lift and air | Aquafaba, baking soda + vinegar |
| Moisture | Adds liquid to the batter | Applesauce, mashed banana, plant milk |
| Structure | Protein that sets during baking | Silken tofu, aquafaba |
| Emulsifying | Holds fat and water together | Aquafaba, mustard, soy lecithin |
In a cookie recipe, the egg is mostly binding. In a sponge cake, it's mostly leavening and structure. In a brownie, it's mostly moisture and richness. Identify the dominant function and pick the substitute that does that job best.
Baking Cakes Without Eggs
Cakes are where eggs do the most work — they provide lift, structure, and moisture all at once. This is why vegan cakes can be tricky, but they're absolutely doable once you match the substitute to the cake type.
Light and fluffy cakes (vanilla, sponge, angel food)
These rely on eggs for leavening and structure, so you need a substitute that adds both. Aquafaba is the best choice: 3 tablespoons per egg, whipped until frothy before folding in. It mimics egg whites' ability to trap air and set during baking.
For a simpler option, use 1 teaspoon baking soda + 1 tablespoon vinegar per egg. The acid-base reaction creates lift. Add it last and bake immediately. This works well in cupcakes and layer cakes.
Dense and moist cakes (chocolate, carrot, pound cake)
These rely on eggs more for moisture than for lift, so use 1/4 cup applesauce, 1/4 cup silken tofu, or 1/4 cup mashed banana per egg. All three add moisture and a tender crumb. The slight flavor of applesauce and banana disappears in chocolate and spice cakes; use silken tofu if you need complete neutrality.
Key cake-baking adjustments
- Check for doneness early. Egg-free cakes set faster because there's less protein to coagulate. Start checking 5–7 minutes before the recipe's stated time.
- Increase leavening slightly. If a converted cake comes out dense, add 25% more baking powder or baking soda next time. Vegan batters have less built-in lift.
- Don't open the oven. Egg-free cakes are more fragile during baking. Opening the oven door can cause them to collapse before they've set.
- Use cake strips. Damp fabric strips around the cake pan help vegan cakes bake evenly without doming or cracking.
Baking Cookies Without Eggs
Cookies are the easiest baked good to make vegan because eggs in cookies are almost always there for binding, not leavening. A flax egg or chia egg (1 tablespoon ground seed + 3 tablespoons water, gelled) is the perfect replacement.
The cookie-specific problem: spread
Vegan butter has a lower melting point than dairy butter in many brands, which means vegan cookie dough spreads more in the oven. To prevent flat, puddle-like cookies:
- Chill the dough for 30 minutes before baking. This firms the fat so it holds the cookie's shape longer in the oven.
- Use vegan butter sticks, not tub spread. Tub spreads have higher water content and cause more spreading.
- Swap half the vegan butter for coconut oil. Coconut oil is solid at room temperature and provides more structural support.
- Add 1–2 tablespoons extra flour if your dough seems too soft.
Best egg substitutes for cookies by type
- Chocolate chip, oatmeal, sugar cookies: flax egg or chia egg
- Peanut butter cookies: often work with no egg substitute at all — peanut butter binds on its own
- Shortbread: no egg needed; just vegan butter, flour, and sugar
- Meringue cookies: aquafaba only (whip 2 tbsp per egg white with cream of tartar)
Baking Brownies Without Eggs
Brownies are forgiving because they're supposed to be dense and fudgy — the very texture that egg-free baking naturally produces. This is one case where removing eggs can actually improve the result.
Best substitutes for brownies
- Silken tofu (1/4 cup blended per egg): creates the fudgiest, densest brownie. Completely neutral in flavor.
- Applesauce (1/4 cup per egg): slightly lighter and moister, with a tender crumb. The apple flavor disappears under chocolate.
- Avocado (1/4 cup mashed per egg): adds richness and a brownie-like density. Works best in dark chocolate brownies.
Baking Bread Without Eggs
Most yeast breads don't contain eggs in the first place — think baguettes, sourdough, ciabatta, and sandwich bread. These are naturally vegan. The breads that do use eggs are enriched breads like brioche, challah, and some soft dinner rolls.
Replacing eggs in enriched breads
In brioche and challah, eggs provide richness, color, and softness. Replace each egg with:
- 1/4 cup unsweetened plant milk + 1 teaspoon olive oil or melted vegan butter — adds the richness and fat the egg would have contributed
- 1 tablespoon aquafaba for the egg wash (brush on before baking for a golden crust)
For the golden color that eggs give to challah and brioche crust, brush the loaf with aquafaba or plant milk mixed with a pinch of turmeric before baking. The turmeric adds color without flavor at that small quantity.
Quick breads (banana bread, zucchini bread, muffins)
Quick breads are easy to make vegan because they rely on baking powder or baking soda for lift, not eggs. Use a flax egg, chia egg, or 1/4 cup applesauce per egg. If the recipe has a strong flavor (banana, pumpkin, chocolate), applesauce or mashed banana won't be detectable.
Baking Meringues and Mousses Without Eggs
This is where aquafaba changes everything. Before aquafaba, vegan meringue was essentially impossible. Now it's straightforward.
Aquafaba meringue
- Measure 2 tablespoons of aquafaba (the liquid from canned chickpeas) per egg white.
- Add 1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar (stabilizes the foam).
- Whip with a hand mixer on high speed for 5–7 minutes until stiff, glossy peaks form.
- Add sugar gradually (about 1/4 cup per egg white) while continuing to whip, just like French meringue.
- Pipe onto a parchment-lined tray and bake at 200°F / 95°C for 90 minutes until dry and crisp.
The result is indistinguishable from egg-white meringue — crispy shell, marshmallow interior. The same whipped aquafaba base works for mousses (fold into melted chocolate), macarons, and marshmallows.
Baking Pancakes and Waffles Without Eggs
Pancakes and waffles are among the easiest things to make vegan. Eggs in these recipes provide a little binding and a little richness, but the baking powder does the real leavening work. You can often just omit the egg and add 1–2 extra tablespoons of plant milk.
Best approach
- Use a flax egg or chia egg for binding
- Add 1 tablespoon extra plant milk to replace the liquid the egg would have contributed
- Add 1 tablespoon melted vegan butter or oil for the richness the yolk would have provided
For buttermilk pancakes, use soy milk + 1 tablespoon lemon juice per cup (let sit 5 minutes) and add 1/4 teaspoon extra baking soda to react with the acid.
The Multi-Egg Problem: Recipes with 3+ Eggs
Recipes that use 1–2 eggs convert easily. Recipes with 3 or more eggs are harder because eggs contribute a larger share of the recipe's structure and moisture. Strategies:
- For cakes: use aquafaba, which most closely mimics egg volume and protein. 3 tablespoons per egg means 9+ tablespoons — that's a significant portion of the batter, so it behaves more like the original.
- For breads and quick breads: combine substitutes — one flax egg for binding, one baking soda + vinegar for lift, and add 1–2 tablespoons extra flour to compensate for extra liquid.
- For custards and cheesecakes: use a higher ratio of silken tofu and add 1 tablespoon cornstarch per egg replaced for setting power.
- Avoid fruit-based substitutes (applesauce, banana) for 3+ egg recipes — they add too much moisture and not enough structure, resulting in a gummy texture.
General Vegan Baking Tips
- Measure flour by weight. Vegan baking is less forgiving than egg-based baking, so precision matters. A kitchen scale makes a big difference.
- Don't overmix. Without egg proteins to tenderize the gluten, overmixing makes vegan baked goods tough. Mix until just combined.
- Let batters rest. Resting batter for 10–15 minutes lets starches hydrate and improves texture, especially in pancakes, waffles, and muffins.
- Use fresh baking powder and baking soda. Vegan baking leans more on chemical leavening. Test baking powder by adding a teaspoon to hot water — it should fizz vigorously.
- Rotate pans halfway through baking. Vegan cakes brown unevenly more often than egg-based ones. A mid-bake rotation helps.
- Cool completely before cutting. Egg-free baked goods are more fragile when warm. They firm up as they cool.
A Quick-Reference Baking Substitution Chart
| Baked Good | Best Egg Substitute | Ratio | Key Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cookies | Flax egg or chia egg | 1 tbsp seed + 3 tbsp water | Chill dough 30 min |
| Light cake | Aquafaba | 3 tbsp per egg | Check doneness 5 min early |
| Dense cake | Applesauce or silken tofu | 1/4 cup per egg | Add 25% more baking powder |
| Brownies | Silken tofu | 1/4 cup blended per egg | Add 1 tbsp cornstarch |
| Quick bread / muffin | Flax egg or applesauce | 1 tbsp flax + 3 tbsp water, or 1/4 cup | Rest batter 10 min |
| Yeast bread | Plant milk + oil | 1/4 cup milk + 1 tsp oil | Aquafaba for egg wash |
| Meringue | Aquafaba | 2 tbsp per egg white | Add cream of tartar |
| Pancakes / waffles | Flax egg + extra milk | 1 flax egg + 1 tbsp milk | Use buttermilk (soy + lemon) |
The Shortcut
If all this sounds like a lot to remember, the Vegan Recipe Converter handles it automatically. Snap a photo of any baking recipe and the AI identifies what each egg is doing — binding, leavening, adding moisture — and applies the correct substitute with the right ratio. It also adjusts for vegan butter's lower melting point and flags recipes that need extra leavening. Free for 2 recipes per month.
For the full egg substitute reference (with the complete comparison chart), see our vegan egg substitutes guide. For the broader conversion framework, see our complete vegan conversion guide.