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An easy pancake recipe made without flour or bananas, or flour that takes on the flavor of the protein powder you like. Simple, satisfying, and packed with protein.

Flourless Protein Pancakes
I love that these flourless protein pancakes provide 40g of protein at breakfast, which is significantly more than the 25g my protein pancakes (with flour) give. Although they’re not as fluffy as traditional homemade pancakes, they still taste like the real deal. Here, you’ll find notes from my tests and a video to help yours turn out great.
Best Protein Powder for Pancakes
I prefer using whey protein powder for making pancakes because it mixes smoothly with milk and gives the batter a better (non-chalky) texture. Vanilla flavored is the most universally liked because it adds sweetness. Plant-based protein works too, but it tends to yield a thicker batter, so I add 1-2 tablespoons of additional milk.
What does this pancake batter look like?
This flourless protein powder batter is slightly thinner (runnier) than traditional pancake batter. I recommend cooking one pancake first and then adjusting the batter by adding a little more liquid or protein powder if necessary. This will vary depending on the type of protein used.

Can you substitute protein powder for flour in pancakes?
I can confidently say that protein powder is not a direct substitute for flour in pancakes, meaning you cannot simply swap the flour for protein powder in a recipe without adjusting the other ingredients.
Ingredients
Four ingredients are all you need to make these. Eggs bind the batter and can’t be swapped; the vanilla whey protein powder adds flavor and texture. A little baking powder ensures they’re a little fluffy, not flat discs, and milk, dairy, or non-dairy, brings the batter together.
Protein Powder Pancakes Without Oats
This recipe doesn’t have them, and it proves that they’re not needed. The key is to combine the whisked eggs with the protein powder first and then add the milk slowly.
How to Make Protein Powder Pancakes
- Make the pancake batter in a large bowl by whisking the eggs well, then adding the protein powder and baking powder. Add some of the milk first, and slowly add the rest until the pancake batter is smooth. Add more if using plant-protein.
- Cook the pancakes over medium heat by greasing the non-stick pan well and pouring no more than ¼ cup of batter per pancake. Each side will take about 2 minutes.
- Serve them warm, topped with toppings, or go all out with my 10-minute strawberry pancake syrup or blueberry syrup. Store leftovers in the fridge for up to 3 days or freeze them for up to a month.
Protein Powder Pancakes Texture
These are nearly identical to the ones you find in the freezer aisle at the grocery store; plus, they’re made with 4 simple ingredients, not a long list. They’re on the thinner side with a soft, spongy texture that soaks up pancake syrup perfectly.
More Ways to Make High-Protein Pancakes
I love a good stack with benefits. Here are more protein-rich pancakes to try, including how much protein is in each serving.
- Flourless banana oatmeal pancakes: 10g
- Chocolate protein pancakes: 22g
- Cottage cheese pancakes: 12g
- Fluffy Greek yogurt pancakes: 11g
- Protein pancakes with pancake mix: 16g
Flourless Protein Powder Pancakes (no Banana)

Watch how it’s made:
Ingredients
- 2 eggs
- ¾ cup whey protein powder, vanilla recommended
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- ⅓ cup milk, any
Instructions
Make the batter:
- In a medium bowl, whisk the eggs. Add the protein powder and baking powder and whisk until no lumps are visible. This will be thick.
- Add ¼ cup of the milk and whisk until the batter is smooth, adding the rest of the milk if necessary. This will depend on the brand of protein powder. If using plant-based protein, add an extra tablespoon or two.
Cook the Pancakes:
- Heat a non-stick pan over medium heat. Once hot, grease it with butter or oil. Immediately, pour or scoop ¼ cup of batter for each pancake. Cook the first side for 2 minutes, and once bubbles form and the edges are defined, flip them over and cook the other side for 2 more minutes. Remove them from the pan and cook the remaining batter.
Storage:
- Uncooked pancake batter can be refrigerated overnight in a covered bowl. Bring it to room temperature on the counter before cooking, whisk it, and add a tablespoon of liquid, if necessary. Cooked pancakes can be stored in the fridge in an airtight container for up to 3 days and frozen for up to a month. To reheat, microwave for 30 seconds to 1 minute or toast them.











Kate says
Wanted to like these but they are dry as the desert. I read the reviews about how to prevent that but they were still like sawdust.
Laura Fuentes says
I am sorry these did not turn out for you, protein powders can be very finicky.
Kat says
About many grams is ¾ cup protein powder? I want to use Isopure unflavored with 1 tsp vanilla.
Laura Fuentes says
Isopure is a very light and airy whey protein (compared to other proteins). I recommend you use a food scale and weigh 3/4 cup.
Chris says
Just an fyi that your greek yogurt pancake link actually links to yoru overnight oats with yogurt recipe.
On a crazy side note, I made a half batch of these using Fairlife milk and combined them with a small batch of Trader Joe’s Ube Mochi pancakes. Why? Because I love those purple pancakes, but their macros are aweful.
Anyway, they combined nicely into a batch of 6 pancakes with high protein and decent Ube flavor.
Laura Fuentes says
I’m glad these turned out great for you -and who doesn’t love those purple pancakes?? I mean….. Thank you for flagging that, I’ll fix it!
Kelly says
Made this today and were good. But I’m confused. In the beginning you say it makes 9-10 pancakes, which it did. Then you say a serving size is half the batter. But when I go down to the nutrition facts, it says a serving size is 2 pancakes. Is this a typo or did I misunderstand?
Laura Fuentes says
I can see how this might be confusing. What this means is that the recipe yields 9-10 pancakes and each serving is 4-5 each (everyone measures slightly different). Regardless, if you made 6 big pancakes, the serving is for 1/2 of the total batter.
Caroline says
Flavour 10 – added a pinch of salt to the mix, swapped regular milk for oat milk and lightly sprinkled cinnamon sugar over the pancakes as they were coming out.
Texture 2 – Now I know why all the other recipes call for banana or Greek yoghurt! No amount of butter – and fact, I used an astonishing quantity of butter to keep these babies moist as I was cooking up the batch – could keep them from wet cardboard territory. Just how it is, protein needs fat or it cooks into a curlier molecule!
Thanks for the experiment! And fwiw I still ate 3/4 of my serve lol.
Laura Fuentes says
I’m glad this was a good experiment for you, Caroline!