Keto Brownies

4.99 from 4976 votes
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The best and easiest low carb keto brownies. Even people who aren’t on a keto diet will love these unbelievably fudgy chocolate brownies!

The Best Keto Brownies

8 Ingredients

Low Carb

Flourless

Gluten Free

Better Than Boxed Brownies

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How To Make Keto Brownies (1g Net Carbs)

The Best Keto Brownies – They MELT In Your Mouth!

These impossibly fudgy chocolate brownies are almost guaranteed to win you over.

It’s one of those must-try recipes, because you really need to try them at least once in your life to discover how shockingly good they are!

The simple recipe is so rich and delicious, you might never go back to boxed brownies again.

P.S. —> NO coconut flour, and less than 1 net carb per brownie.

Also Try This Keto Cookie Dough Dip

Keto Chocolate Frosting

Almond Flour Brownie Variations

Feel free to stir a handful of chopped pecans, almonds, or walnuts into the batter.

Or throw in some shredded coconut, cacao nibs, or chocolate chips.

The brownies are perfectly sweet enough to serve on their own, but if you want keto brownies with frosting, I love this Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting Recipe.

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Easy Low Carb Brownies

To come up with this recipe, I simply adapted my keto chocolate cake into brownies.

Since I know brownies have more fat, less flour, and less leavening than cake, I changed the ingredient proportions accordingly.

The first try wasn’t perfect, but recipe experiments are seldom perfect on the first try, and I quite enjoyed eating the fall-apart-gooey flourless homemade brownie rejects.

*For a brownie in a mug, use the Keto Mug Cake Recipe

Low Carb Keto Chocolate Brownies

Flourless Brownie Ice Cream Sundae = top them with a scoop of Keto Ice Cream.

Keto Brownie Ingredients

Instead of regular flour, these brownies use fine almond meal or almond flour (ground-up almonds), making them both flourless and gluten free.

If you can find dutch cocoa powder, I highly recommend using it here when called for, because that’s the type of cocoa typically used in boxed brownie mixes, so it’s what will make these taste the most authentic.

Most regular grocery stores should sell it – look for the words “processed with alkali” on the ingredient list, and that’s the type to use. (Regular unsweetened cocoa powder should be used for the initial 1/4 cup in the recipe.)

The moist chocolate brownies can be made with either regular sugar (for non keto) or granulated erythritol. If making them keto, be sure to buy granulated erythritol, not powdered. Or for paleo brownies, you can also use coconut sugar.

While I haven’t tried the recipe with allulose or stevia, feel free to experiment with a granulated stevia blend if you wish, and be sure to report back for other readers if you do.

Trending Right Now: Avocado Smoothie Keto Friendly

Above – watch the video of how to make keto brownies!

The Best Low Carb Keto Brownie Recipe
4.99 from 4976 votes

Keto Brownies

How to make easy low carb keto brownies with almond flour.
Cook Time: 17 minutes
Total Time: 17 minutes
Yield: 15 – 25 brownies
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Ingredients

  • 1 cup fine almond flour
  • 1/4 cup cocoa powder
  • 2 tbsp dutch cocoa or additional regular
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/3 cup melted coconut oil or butter
  • 3 tbsp water or additional oil
  • 2 eggs, or 2 flax eggs
  • 2/3 cup granulated erythritol or regular sugar
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract

Instructions 

  • *If you're a visual learner, feel free to watch the keto brownie recipe video posted above!
    Preheat the oven to 350 F. Grease an 8-inch pan, or line with parchment. Mix all ingredients well. Spread evenly into the pan. Smooth down, using a second sheet of parchment if needed. Bake 20 minutes on the center rack, then let cool completely and they will continue to firm up. They also firm up even more if you refrigerate very loosely covered overnight. The brownies are delicious with or without frosting (for the photos, I used the keto chocolate frosting recipe linked above in this post). If you try the brownies, don’t forget to leave a comment or rate the recipe below!
    View Nutrition Facts

Video

Notes

The recipe was adapted from this chocolate Keto Cake.
 
Like this recipe? Leave a comment below!

More Chocolate Keto Recipes:

Brownie Batter Bars

Brownie Batter Bars

The Best Easy Keto Chocolate Cookies

Keto Chocolate Cookies

Fat Bombs

Fat Bombs

Sugar Free Chocolate Chip Keto Cookies

Keto Cookies

Chocolate Avocado Mousse

Avocado Chocolate Mousse

peanut butter bars

Chocolate Chip Peanut Butter Bars

Keto Low Carb Muffins With Almond Flour

Keto Muffins – 6 Ingredients

Low Carb Keto Chocolate Coconut Fudge Bars Recipe

Chocolate Coconut Fudge Bars

For more healthy brownie recipes, also check out these recipes for Sweet Potato Brownies, Vegan Brownies, or the popular Black Bean Brownies.

Meet Katie

Chocolate Covered Katie is one of the top 25 food websites in America, and Katie has been featured on The Today Show, CNN, Fox, The Huffington Post, and ABC’s 5 O’clock News. Her favorite food is chocolate, and she believes in eating dessert every single day.

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Recipe Rating




962 Comments

  1. Courtney says:

    Hello! I don’t really know anything about baking, but I know I did something wrong here just not sure what. These were so dry it was hard to swallow. There was no moisture to it even before baking. The mixture pre-baking was like a breadcrumb mixture basically. I didn’t read the comments before, but I keep seeing confirmation there are no eggs in the recipe. That’s confusing because they are definitely listed in the ingredients list (so I used them). Doubt that would be why I messed up, just confusing for someone with no baking knowledge. Below is what I did, hoping you can help me figure out where I went wrong and why:

    1 cup fine almond flour (I used coconut)
    1/4 cup cocoa powder
    2 tbsp dutch cocoa or additional regular
    1 tsp baking powder (used baking soda)
    1/2 tsp salt
    1/3 cup melted coconut oil or butter (measure out 1/3 cup and then melted, not sure if I ended up with not enough oil maybe?)
    3 tbsp water or additional oil
    2 eggs, or 2 flax eggs (here are the eggs)
    2/3 cup granulated erythritol or regular sugar (used 1/3 cup honey)
    1 tsp pure vanilla extract

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      Hi Courtney, unfortunately coconut flour is NOT a substitute for almond flour. These must use almond flour. And in general, coconut flour cannot be subbed for other flours in a recipe without changing the liquid ratio because it soaks up liquid like a sponge.

      1. Courtney says:

        Thank you! I will have to try these again with almond flour.

    2. Amy says:

      It states not to use coconut flour. Also when using coconut flour (which I hate) you use about a fourth compared to almond and have to still add more egg/oil/water or something liquid.

      It also says flax eggs if not regular eggs. Do you know what those are? They are not actual eggs.

      You subbed soda for powder and it’s not as simple as just switching one for the other.

      When a recipe calls for a certain amount of liquid you should measure the liquid form.

      You might need to pay attention to following recipes and making sure you know how to make acceptable substitutions instead of winging it. You’ll waste less time and money 🙂

    3. Caryn says:

      Baking soda and baking powder or two very different things. Don’t switch them out. If a recipe calls for baking powder, use it.

    4. Fed Up says:

      I’m sorry, is this a joke post?
      “All I did was swap out all these ingredients for things that aren’t even close to being the same and the recipe didn’t work, so I defintely think your recipe is wrong!”

  2. J Mason says:

    Wow! Very good. Rich & Fudgy. Ended up cooking mine for 25 minutes. At 20, they looked a bit undone. Trying to let them sit to firm up, but it’s hard to wait! Even the 10-year old picky eater likes these ‘keto’ brownies. Darn, I have to share! Thank you for the recipe. I’m glad I stumbled upon your site!

  3. Bibi says:

    How are these suppose to be when taken out of the oven at 20 minutes? I followed the ingredients and directions exactly but there was still a lot of jiggle at the 20 minute mark so I tested with a knife and it came out with a lot of batter on it. I put it back in for 10 more minutes but the results were a drier brownie that had the tendency to fall apart when cut—definitely not fudgy. They did, however, have a rich chocolate taste. Next time, since the recipe states they will continue to firm up as they cool, should I take them while still jiggly at 20 minutes or try 25 minutes? BTW, I used Kirkland Blanched Almond Flour, Navitas Cacao Powder, Rumford bp, salt, Swerve, water, large eggs and vanilla extract.

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      Yup, take them out when still soft! 🙂
      They will firm up, as the recipe says. And if they’re still too soft for your liking, you can stick them in the fridge overnight after they cool, and they firm up even more by the next day.
      Jason

    2. debi says:

      Definitely no more then 20 minutes in the oven!

      1. Tam says:

        I can’t wait for them to firm up!! I’m craving them NOW!! LOL But I’ll trust the process!!

  4. Geri Lynn Habstritt says:

    Am I missing something? Many are inquiring about yogurt, Yet I don’t see yogurt in the ingredients.

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      Hi sorry for the confusion – the recipe has been updated/improved and no longer needs yogurt 🙂
      Jason (media relations)

  5. Drew Johnson says:

    Is it possible to use 1 cup of regular white flour instead of almond flour? I don’t have any almond flour currently and would love to make these brownies.

  6. Donna says:

    Can these be frozen?

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      They can!

  7. Andy says:

    Hi, I would like to make the frosting as well – do I spread it on top of the brownie mix before it goes in the oven? Or do I bake the brownies separately and then put the frosting on? Thanks!

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      Frosting on top after it cools is easiest 🙂

  8. Kay says:

    These brownies are to die for! I used salted organic butter and added pecans. Surprisingly, I resisted the urge to bake longer; perfection!!

  9. Brittani says:

    Where in the recipe does it call for yogurt?

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      No yogurt needed for this one. It has been updated/improved 🙂
      Jason

  10. Eva says:

    These are very…. chocolatey and sweet. I would use less chocolate and erthritol. And frosting would be OVERKILL on sweet.