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Vegan Egg Substitutes

The complete guide

Vegan Egg Substitutes: A Complete Guide with Comparison Chart

By Vegan Recipe Converter · Published June 19, 2026 · 7 min read

Eggs are the single hardest ingredient to replace when converting a recipe to vegan — and also the most common reason converted recipes fail. The problem isn't that good substitutes don't exist; it's that eggs do several different jobs in the kitchen, and a substitute that's perfect for one job will ruin a recipe that needs a different one.

This guide breaks down every major vegan egg substitute, explains exactly which job each one does best, and gives you a comparison chart you can reference at a glance. Once you understand what eggs are actually doing in your recipe, choosing the right replacement becomes straightforward.

What Eggs Actually Do in Recipes

Before picking a substitute, you need to know which function the egg performs in your specific recipe. Eggs do five different things, and most recipes rely on more than one:

A flax egg is a great binder but a terrible leavener. Aquafaba is an excellent leavener but adds no structure. Applesauce adds moisture but can't bind. Match the substitute to the job and your recipe will work.

The Vegan Egg Substitute Comparison Chart

Here's the quick-reference chart. Detailed notes on each substitute follow.

SubstituteRatio (per 1 egg)Best ForMain FunctionFlavor Impact
Flax egg1 tbsp ground flax + 3 tbsp waterMuffins, cookies, pancakes, quick breadsBindingSlight nutty
Chia egg1 tbsp ground chia + 3 tbsp waterMuffins, cookies, breadsBindingVery mild, seedy
Aquafaba3 tbsp chickpea liquidMeringues, mousses, macarons, light cakesLeavening, emulsifyingNeutral
Applesauce1/4 cup unsweetenedBrownies, cakes, muffinsMoistureSlight apple
Silken tofu1/4 cup blended smoothBrownies, dense cakes, quiches, custardsStructure, moistureNeutral
Baking soda + vinegar1 tsp + 1 tbsp vinegarCupcakes, light cakes, sconesLeaveningNeutral
Mashed banana1/4 cup (1/2 banana)Banana bread, muffins, oatmeal cookiesMoisture, bindingDistinct banana
Commercial egg replacerPer package (usually 1.5 tsp + water)Most bakingBinding, light leaveningNeutral
Pumpkin purée1/4 cupSpice cakes, muffins, browniesMoisture, bindingMild pumpkin
Ground psyllium husk1 tbsp + 3 tbsp waterVeggie burgers, meatballs, breadsBinding (strong)Neutral

Flax Eggs: The All-Purpose Binder

The flax egg is the most popular vegan egg substitute for a reason: it's cheap, shelf-stable, and reliably binds batters for cookies, muffins, pancakes, and quick breads.

How to make a flax egg

  1. Measure 1 tablespoon of ground flaxseed meal (not whole seeds — they won't gel).
  2. Add 3 tablespoons of water.
  3. Stir and let sit for 5–10 minutes until the mixture thickens to a gel-like, egg-white consistency.
  4. Use in place of one egg in your recipe.

Flax eggs add a slightly nutty flavor and a hint of speckled texture. In dark baked goods (chocolate, spice) you won't taste it at all. In very delicate vanilla cakes, the nuttiness can come through, so consider chia or aquafaba instead.

Pro tip: Buy whole flaxseeds and grind them in a blender or coffee grinder as needed. Pre-ground flaxseed meal goes rancid within a few weeks at room temperature; whole seeds last months. Store ground flax in the fridge or freezer.

Chia Eggs: The Neutral Binder

Chia eggs work identically to flax eggs — same ratio, same method — but with a milder, more neutral flavor. If you find flax eggs add too much nuttiness to a light-colored baked good, swap to chia. Chia seeds also gel more reliably than flax, so they're a safer choice if your flax meal is old.

Like flax, chia eggs are best for binding jobs: cookies, muffins, pancakes, waffles, quick breads. They don't add lift, so don't use them as the sole leavener in a cake that's supposed to be fluffy.

Aquafaba: The Egg-White Miracle

Aquafaba — the viscous liquid from a can of chickpeas — is the closest thing vegan baking has to a magic ingredient. Its protein and starch composition mimics egg whites closely enough that it whips into stiff peaks, forms meringues, and emulsifies mayonnaise. If you've ever thought vegan macarons or mousse were impossible, aquafaba is why they're not.

How to use aquafaba

To whip aquafaba for meringue: add 1/8 teaspoon cream of tartar per 2 tablespoons aquafaba, then whip with a hand mixer on high for 5–7 minutes until stiff, glossy peaks form. Add sugar gradually as you would for French meringue.

Aquafaba works in: meringues, mousses, macarons, marshmallows, mayonnaise, sponge cakes, angel food cake, and any recipe where lift and lightness matter. It's neutral in flavor once baked.

Tip: Different brands of chickpeas produce aquafaba with slightly different viscosities. If your aquafaba won't whip, reduce it on the stove by one-third to concentrate it, then cool and try again.

Applesauce: The Moisture Adder

Unsweetened applesauce is the simplest egg substitute for dense, moist baked goods. Use 1/4 cup per egg. It adds moisture and a tender crumb, and a very mild apple flavor that disappears in anything spiced or chocolate.

Best uses: brownies, chocolate cake, carrot cake, muffins, quick breads. Avoid in: anything that needs to be light and fluffy (applesauce weighs batters down), or anything where a pristine neutral flavor matters.

One caution: applesauce adds extra sugar (even unsweetened applesauce has natural sugars). Reduce other sugars by 1–2 tablespoons per 1/4 cup applesauce if your recipe is already sweet.

Silken Tofu: The Structure Builder

Silken tofu is the best egg substitute when a recipe needs both moisture and protein structure — think brownies, dense cakes, quiches, custards, and creamy desserts. Use 1/4 cup of silken tofu blended completely smooth per egg.

Because silken tofu contains protein, it sets during baking in a way that fruit-based substitutes can't. This makes it the best choice for vegan quiches, frittatas, and cheesecakes. It's neutral in flavor, so it won't affect the taste of your recipe.

Don't confuse silken tofu with regular tofu. Silken tofu is soft and unpressed, with a custard-like texture. Regular firm tofu won't blend smooth and won't work as an egg substitute.

Baking Soda + Vinegar: The Quick Leavener

When a recipe needs lift and you don't have aquafaba, the baking soda + vinegar trick works well. Use 1 teaspoon baking soda + 1 tablespoon of vinegar (white, apple cider, or white wine) per egg. The acid-base reaction releases carbon dioxide, creating bubbles in the batter.

This works best in: cupcakes, light layer cakes, scones, and pancakes. Add the mixture last, stir gently (don't knock out the bubbles), and get the batter into the oven quickly — the leavening reaction starts the moment the two ingredients meet.

This substitute adds no binding or moisture, so it's best for recipes that use 1–2 eggs. For 3+ eggs, combine it with another substitute (e.g., one flax egg for binding + one baking soda/vinegar for lift).

Mashed Banana and Pumpkin Purée

Both work like applesauce — 1/4 cup per egg — but with their own flavor. Banana is perfect for banana bread (obviously) and works in muffins, oatmeal cookies, and anything where banana flavor is welcome. Pumpkin purée adds moisture and a faint earthiness that pairs well with spice cakes, muffins, and brownies.

Both add natural sugar, so reduce other sweeteners slightly. Both add weight, so they're not for light and fluffy baked goods.

Commercial Egg Replacers

Products like Bob's Red Mill Egg Replacer, JUST Egg (for scrambles), and Follow Your Heart VeganEgg are reliable and convenient. Commercial baking replacers are typically potato starch, tapioca flour, and baking powder blends — they bind and add light leavening without any flavor. They're a good choice if you bake often and want a neutral, predictable result.

JUST Egg is designed for savory egg dishes (scrambles, omelets, quiches) rather than baking. It's made from mung bean protein and cooks remarkably like a real egg in a pan.

Matching the Substitute to the Recipe

Cookies

Flax egg or chia egg. Both bind without adding excess moisture. Chill the dough 30 minutes because vegan butter softens faster than dairy butter.

Cakes (light and fluffy)

Aquafaba or baking soda + vinegar. If the recipe uses 3+ eggs, aquafaba is more reliable. Add a touch more baking powder for insurance.

Brownies

Silken tofu or applesauce. Both add moisture and fudgy density — exactly what a brownie wants.

Muffins and quick breads

Flax egg, chia egg, or applesauce. All work well. Muffins are forgiving; pick whatever you have on hand.

Pancakes and waffles

Flax egg or chia egg. The binding matters more than lift here because the baking powder in the recipe handles leavening.

Meringues and mousses

Aquafaba only. Nothing else whips to stiff peaks. Add cream of tartar for stability.

Quiches and frittatas

Silken tofu blended with nutritional yeast, garlic powder, and turmeric (for color). It sets into a sliceable, egg-like custard.

Veggie burgers and meatballs

Flax egg or ground psyllium husk (1 tbsp + 3 tbsp water). Psyllium binds aggressively and holds up to freezing and reheating.

How Many Eggs Can You Replace?

Recipes using 1–2 eggs convert easily with any of the substitutes above. Recipes using 3+ eggs are harder because eggs contribute a larger share of the recipe's structure. In those cases:

The Shortcut

If you'd rather not memorize which substitute goes with which recipe, the Vegan Recipe Converter does this matching automatically. Snap a photo of your recipe, and the AI identifies what each egg is doing and applies the correct substitute with the right ratio. It's free for 2 recipes per month.

For more on converting entire recipes (not just eggs), see our complete vegan conversion guide and our deep dive on vegan baking without eggs.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best vegan egg substitute for baking?

It depends on what the egg does in the recipe. For binding in cookies and muffins, use a flax egg (1 tbsp ground flaxseed + 3 tbsp water). For leavening in light cakes, use 1 tsp baking soda + 1 tbsp vinegar. For moisture in brownies, use 1/4 cup applesauce or silken tofu. For meringues, use aquafaba (3 tbsp per egg).

How much aquafaba equals one egg?

3 tablespoons of aquafaba (the liquid from canned chickpeas) equals one whole egg. For just an egg white, use 2 tablespoons. Whip aquafaba with a hand mixer and 1/8 tsp cream of tartar until stiff peaks form — it works in meringues, mousses, and macarons.

How do I make a flax egg?

Mix 1 tablespoon of ground flaxseed meal with 3 tablespoons of water. Stir and let sit for 5–10 minutes until it thickens to a gel-like consistency. One flax egg replaces one chicken egg. It works best in muffins, pancakes, cookies, and quick breads. Use ground flaxseed, not whole seeds.

Can I use a chia egg instead of a flax egg?

Yes. A chia egg is made the same way: 1 tablespoon ground chia seeds + 3 tablespoons water, let sit 5–10 minutes. Chia eggs have a more neutral flavor than flax eggs and work in the same recipes — muffins, cookies, quick breads, and pancakes.

What is the best egg substitute for brownies?

Silken tofu or applesauce. Use 1/4 cup blended silken tofu per egg for fudgy, dense brownies. Use 1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce per egg for a slightly lighter, moister brownie. Both add moisture without adding lift, which is what you want in a brownie.

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