This chocolate peanut butter oatmeal is thick, creamy, and tastes almost like eating a Reeses peanut butter cup for breakfast!

Say hello to your new favorite breakfast recipe.
With rich dark chocolate and smooth peanut butter in every delicious spoonful, it’s a chocolate peanut butter lover’s dream come true.
And the entire breakfast takes less than 10 minutes to make!
Also Try This Healthy Banana Bread – No Oil Required

People often ask if I really do eat chocolate every single day.
This makes me laugh… because if you talk to me at 9 AM, I’ve probably already eaten chocolate in at least one form.
Whether it’s a piece of a dark chocolate bar while cooking breakfast, or a handful of mini chocolate chips on my vegan pancakes, or going full-out with a slice of frosted chocolate cake (because it’s 2020, and are there even rules anymore?), I waste no time in consuming chocolate in the morning.
And I probably make this chocolate peanut butter oatmeal at least once a week.
Related –> Here’s What I Eat In A Day

It’s a single serving recipe that can easily be doubled or tripled to feed a family or meal prep for the week.
Change up the flavor by using almond butter, sunbutter (for allergy friendly), cashew butter, or even coconut butter – whatever you have on hand that sounds good!
Leftover peanut butter? Make Chocolate Chip Peanut Butter Bars

Oatmeal Add-In Ideas:
Mini Chocolate Chips
Shredded Coconut
Sliced Banana or Strawberries
Chopped Peanuts or Walnuts
The recipe was adapted from this Chocolate Oatmeal Recipe.


Chocolate Peanut Butter Oatmeal
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup rolled oats
- 3/4 cup milk of choice
- 1 tbsp cocoa powder
- 1 tsp dutch or additional regular cocoa powder
- 1/8 tsp salt
- 1-2 tbsp peanut butter (or almond butter, or allergy friendly sub)
- sweetener of choice
- 1/4 tsp pure vanilla extract
- optional 1 ripe banana
- optional 1/4 cup milk of choice or creamer (I like nutpods creamer, because it’s unsweetened and dairy free)
Instructions
- In a pot, combine all ingredients except the vanilla extract and creamer. Feel free to throw in handful of chocolate chips if you wish. Bring to a boil. Once boiling, lower the heat to low, and stir until thick. Take off the heat, stir in the extract, and sweeten as desired. Pour the creamer or additional milk over top for a creamier result, and swirl it into the oatmeal with a spoon. Top with chocolate chips and melted peanut butter if desired.View Nutrition Facts
Notes
More Chocolate Breakfast Recipes






















Delicious!!! Saving to use again!
This is super weird because I kid you not about 8 years ago I combined your peanut butter banana and chocolate oatmeal recipes and made almost this exact chocolate peanut butter banana oatmeal and I’ve eaten it almost everyday for breakfast since . . .
I usually mash some banana and add it and then add more peanut butter/sliced bananas/strawberries/granola/chocolate on top and it’s sooo good!
With all those toppings, it sounds like a breakfast sundae! 😍
Chocolate peanut butter oatmeal is actually a breakfast I make frequently…before even seeing this recipe! Almost feels like you’re reading my mind! It’s one of my favorite breakfasts too.
Hi there. This was delicious, I just made it and ate it for breakfast. I do enjoy your recipes, but I have noticed your calorie counts are usually significantly off. This is noted as 264 calories, but according to my calculations, it’s way more (this is based on a VERY generous low-end calculation):
1/2 cup oats: 140
1 TBSP PB: 80
1 TBSP chocolate chips: 60
1 TBSP cocoa: 10
3/4 cup plant milk (I used unsweetened soy): 80
Total: 370
This is not counting any of the additional mix-ins (sweetener, banana, drizzle) or higher amounts noted in the recipe (i.e., 2 TBSPs of PB instead of 1). If someone followed the recipe with ALL the ingredients, it would be over 600 calories. This is the third time I’ve noticed this in your recipes. I would suggest that you provide accurate calorie counts so folks can know how much they’re actually consuming! All the best.
You added chocolate chips to the nutrition facts, why? Her recipe doesn’t call for that. Cashew milk is also lower than soy.
If you use unsweetened almond milk and no chocolate chips which I think she meant as optional, then it would be about 260. As with all recipes if there’s a ton of optional options, I’d put it in fitness pal (what I use) and get a more accurate total. Hope this helps! 🙂
You’re eating chocolate peanut butter oatmeal and complaining about calorie counts!? Can’t you see the irony in this? Take out the chocolate and pb and then you’ll be fine lol.
Just made it for breakfast, with fresh raspberries on top. Deelish!
All time favourite oatmeal. I jazz it up with some chocolate covered sunflower seeds. Divine!!!
Katie, how much sugar (or other sweetener) do you usually use? You don’t give any recommended amount or even a range. I would love to know how you make this!!
Hi, it really depends on so many factors – if you’re using a sweetened milk, adding chocolate chips, adding a banana, what kind of sweetener, your own taste buds, etc. If using unsweetened milk and no chocolate chips or banana, try one tbsp and go from there.
Thanks. Just to give feedback, I made it with unsweetened milk and no chocolate chips or banana, and tried it first with one tablespoon of sugar. It was okay but tasted too healthy (i.e., not very sweet). I tried again with 1.5 tablespoons and was happy with that amount.
This is delicious! I had it with berries on top! Such good flavor! Nice change to my usual oatmeal with cinnamon.
Even though I’m not a fan of chocolate granola, I was pretty confident that this has to be good! Just made it for the second time with half a banana as a sweetener and sliced strawberries. I also only use about 25g of oats (and replaced some of it with flaxseed and buckwheat) and therefore a little less milk. This is delicious!
I don’t really understand your calorie calculations. A half cup of oats alone is about 150 and then peanut butter just for 1 tbsp is around 80-100 which already puts you at 250 without the milk or banana or cocoa. Realistically this recipe for one serving is actually closer to 450 not 260….
Optional ingredients are not usually included in nutrition facts (in general, not just for Katie’s recipes). And Silk cashewmilk is only 25 calories for an entire cup.