DessertEasy

Banana Bread Calories & Nutrition Facts

Calories: 284 kcal per serving · 2,844 kcal total

Classic homemade banana bread with ripe bananas, flour, butter, and eggs for dependable slice-by-slice calorie math. It is useful when you want to compare homemade loaf calories with store-bought bakery-style banana bread.

⏱ Prep: 15 min🔥 Cook: 55 min👥 Serves: 10📊 Calories: 284/serving🥩 Protein: 4.4g

Recipe Authority

Author: Recipe Calorie Calculator Editorial Team

Published: 2026-03-16

Updated: 2026-03-26

Nutrition estimates use ingredient-level reference data aligned with USDA-style food data and are intended for practical recipe planning.

Ingredients

Use the checkboxes to explore ingredient-level calorie changes. This interactive scenario updates the section totals and tables below, but the sticky nutrition facts card stays locked to the original recipe.

Servings: 10

Interactive scenario total

2,844 kcal

284 kcal per serving at 10 servings with 8 active ingredients.

Method

Step 1

Set up the recipe

Set up the recipe by measuring the ingredients for banana bread before you start cooking. Taking one minute to organize banana, all-purpose flour, and the remaining ingredients keeps the method smoother and helps the finished yield stay close to the serving size listed on the page.

Nutrition tip: All-purpose flour drives a meaningful share of the protein or calories here, so portioning evenly keeps each serving nutritionally consistent.

Step 2

Build the base

Build the main base for the recipe with attention to texture, not just speed. Fold in the flour, baking soda, and salt without overmixing the batter and mix until the major ingredients are evenly distributed so every serving tastes similar and the nutrition stays evenly spread through the batch.

Nutrition tip: Butter drives a meaningful share of the protein or calories here, so portioning evenly keeps each serving nutritionally consistent.

Step 3

Combine the ingredients

Once the main ingredients are combined, look at the consistency before moving on. If the mixture seems dry, stiff, or uneven, adjust gently and keep stirring until salt and the rest of the recipe are incorporated without overworking the texture.

Nutrition tip: Granulated sugar contributes much of the fiber in this recipe, which helps make the serving feel more filling for its calorie level.

Step 4

Cook until set

Cook the recipe until the center, surface, and edges all match the style you want. This is the stage where most home cooks rush, but giving the dish enough time improves texture, makes portioning cleaner, and helps the finished serving size stay more predictable.

Nutrition tip: Banana contributes much of the fiber in this recipe, which helps make the serving feel more filling for its calorie level.

Step 5

Rest and portion

Rest, portion, and serve once the recipe looks done. That final pause matters because it allows the structure to settle, the juices or steam to redistribute, and each portion of banana bread to cut or scoop more cleanly for meal prep or calorie tracking.

Nutrition tip: Egg drives a meaningful share of the protein or calories here, so portioning evenly keeps each serving nutritionally consistent.

Chef's Tips

  • Measure banana carefully so the final texture stays consistent from batch to batch.
  • Let the mixture or cooked dish rest briefly before portioning so the servings hold together and the calorie math stays easier to repeat.
  • If you plan to meal prep this dessert recipe, portion it immediately after cooking so the serving size stays consistent for the week.

Complete Nutrition Facts

This section shows the original recipe nutrition per serving. The checkbox scenario above is intentionally separate so you can experiment with ingredients without losing the baseline label data.

Complete Nutrition Facts — Per Serving (1 of 10)

Macronutrients

Calories284 kcal · 14.2% DV
Total Fat10.5 g · 13%
Saturated Fat6.2 g · 31%
Unsaturated Fat4.3 g ·
Trans Fat0 g ·
Total Carbohydrate44.2 g · 16%
Dietary Fiber1.9 g · 7%
Total Sugars20.9 g ·
Added Sugars15 g · 30%
Protein4.4 g · 9%
Cholesterol62 mg · 21%

Micronutrients

Sodium259 mg · 11%
Potassium212 mg · 4.5% DV
Calcium15 mg · 1%
Iron1 mg · 7%
Vitamin D0.4 mcg · 2%
Vitamin B120.1 mcg · 4.2% DV

* % Daily Values are based on the FDA 2020 2,000-calorie reference diet.

* Values are recipe estimates built from ingredient-level nutrition data aligned to USDA-style references.

Where Do the Calories in Banana Bread Come From?

Each serving of banana bread provides about 284 calories. Most of that energy comes from 62% carbohydrate, followed by 6% protein and 33% fat. That split makes sense for a homemade dessert recipe built around banana, all-purpose flour, butter.

On the ingredient side, the biggest calorie drivers are usually the items that provide the base structure of the recipe rather than the finishing touches. That is why the ingredient table and visual chart below are useful. They show where the batch calories are actually coming from, which helps when you want to cut calories without losing the protein, fiber, or texture that makes the recipe worth eating in the first place. In practical terms, this recipe is best for people who want a balanced homemade serving rather than a very low-carb, ultra-low-fat, or highly processed convenience option.

Cooking Tips & Variants

Make it lower calorie

Reduce the most calorie-dense ingredient first, then re-check the macro balance so the recipe still feels satisfying after the change.

Make it higher protein

Increase the lean protein or cultured dairy component before adding extra sweeteners or fats if you want a stronger protein-to-calorie ratio.

Calorie Breakdown by Ingredient

Banana14.8% · 420 kcal
All-purpose flour30.7% · 874 kcal
Butter28.6% · 814 kcal
Granulated sugar20.4% · 581 kcal
Egg5.0% · 143 kcal
Baking soda0% · 0 kcal
Vanilla extract0.4% · 12 kcal
Salt0% · 0 kcal

Macro balance

Calories from protein, carbs, and fat

live

total

2,844

kcal

Protein43.5 g · 6%
Carbs442 g · 61%
Fat105.3 g · 33%

Ingredient Nutrition Breakdown

Click a column header to re-sort the table. External ingredient links open USDA FoodData Central search results.

Scenario batch: 2,844 kcal
Amount
All-purpose flour874 kcal24.7g183.1g2.4g6.5g2 cup
Butter814 kcal1g0.1g92g0g0.5 cup
Granulated sugar581 kcal0g150g0g0g0.75 cup
Banana420 kcal5.2g107.6g1.4g12.3g4 piece
Egg143 kcal12.6g0.7g9.5g0g2 piece
Vanilla extract12 kcal0g0.5g0g0g1 tsp
Salt0 kcal0g0g0g0g0.5 tsp
Baking soda0 kcal0g0g0g0g1 tsp
Total2,844 kcal43.5g442g105.3g18.8g10 servings
Per Serving284 kcal4.4g44.2g10.5g1.9g÷ 10

How Does This Recipe Compare?

MetricThis RecipeAvg DessertLighter dessert
Calories / serving284 kcal320 kcal300 kcal
Protein4.4 g4 g12 g
Carbs44.2 g40 g30 g
Fat10.5 g15 g10 g
Fiber1.9 g2 g4 g
Fiber is close to category averageLower fat than averageModerate protein for the category

Adjust Your Serving Size

1 servings
g

284 kcal

Calories

4.4g

Protein

44.2g

Carbs

10.5g

Fat

That serving is about 14% of a 2,000 calorie reference day.

Know your personal target

Diet Compatibility

Vegetarian

Contains no meat or fish.

High Protein

4.4g protein per serving.

High Fiber

1.9g fiber per serving.

Low Sodium

259mg sodium per serving.

No Added Sugar

15g added sugar per serving.

Gluten-Free

Needs a gluten-free swap for the grain or flour component.

Keto / Low-Carb

44.2g carbs per serving.

Dairy-Free

Contains dairy as written.

Vegan

Contains eggs, dairy, meat, or fish.

Is Banana Bread Healthy?

A serving of banana bread lands at 284 calories, which puts it in a practical range for people who want a filling homemade meal without pushing the day off target too early. The macro split is one of the biggest reasons it works well: each serving provides 4.4 grams of protein, 44.2 grams of carbohydrates, and 10.5 grams of fat. That balance makes it easier to fit into a normal breakfast, lunch, dinner, or snack routine without having to redesign the rest of the day around it.

From a quality standpoint, the recipe also brings more to the table than calories alone. It supplies 1.9 grams of fiber and moderate naturally occurring sugar rather than relying only on added sweeteners. The ingredient list is built around banana, all-purpose flour, butter, so the nutrition comes from recognizable foods instead of a heavily processed shortcut. On the micronutrient side, potassium is one of the stronger contributors, and the recipe also adds useful amounts of calcium, iron, and sodium control compared with many packaged alternatives. For most people, that makes banana bread a healthy option when the serving size matches the rest of the day. The main caveat is carbohydrate load: with 44.2 grams per serving, it fits balanced eating and meal prep well, but very low-carb eaters may need to modify it or reduce the portion.

If you want to compare this recipe against your own daily targets, the Macro Calculator gives you a cleaner benchmark than guessing from calories alone.

Homemade vs. Store-Bought Calories

Homemade banana bread usually compares well with store-bought versions because the ingredient list stays transparent and the serving math is easier to control. A commercial packaged version may use sweeter syrups, extra oil, more sodium, or stabilizers that push calories higher without making the serving more satisfying. By contrast, this homemade version comes in at 284 calories per serving and keeps the nutrition profile tied directly to the ingredients you can see on the page.

That transparency matters when you want to compare products honestly. With a homemade batch, you can reduce the oil, change the dairy, or scale the starch instead of accepting the packaged default. It also makes portioning simpler for meal prep because the total batch calories are known before you cut or container the recipe. If you want to compare a homemade version against another variation, use the Recipe Calorie Calculator to total both versions side by side instead of relying on guesses or label marketing claims.

To compare a homemade version against your own ingredient swaps, open the Recipe Calorie Calculator and total both versions side by side.

How to Make This Recipe Lower Calorie

The easiest way to lower the calories in banana bread is to cut energy-dense ingredients before you shrink the whole portion. If the recipe uses milk, switching to water or a lighter unsweetened alternative can save roughly 60 calories across the batch without changing the structure too dramatically. If banana or another fruit is doing most of the sweetening, trimming one portion of fruit or reducing the sweeter mix-in can save about 139 calories while still keeping the recipe recognizable.

Dairy swaps are another useful lever. Moving from a full-fat yogurt or cheese component to a leaner version can save around 40 calories across the batch while preserving some protein. You can also trim oils, buttery finishes, or heavy toppings before touching the main protein source. The key is to remove calories where they are least filling and keep the ingredients that drive satiety, texture, and meal usefulness. If you want the exact trade-off, rebuild the recipe in the Recipe Calorie Calculator and swap one ingredient at a time so you can see what each change costs in calories, protein, carbs, and fat.

For more recipe-calorie guidance, browse the nutrition blog and then apply the same method to your own version of this recipe.

Meal Prep Guide

If you are using banana bread for meal prep, portion the full batch as soon as it cools enough to handle. That step keeps the serving size close to the nutrition data on the page and prevents one oversized first serving from throwing off the rest of the batch. For most cooked recipes, airtight containers in the refrigerator work well for about 4 to 5 days, while freezer storage is better when you want a longer backup option.

Reheat gently so the texture stays close to the original batch. Baked dishes usually do best in the oven or toaster oven, while bowls, pasta, and stews are often fine in the microwave with a splash of water or broth. If you need a larger prep run, scale the ingredients in the Recipe Calorie Calculator instead of doubling by memory. That keeps the total batch calories, per-serving math, and ingredient shopping list aligned with the number of containers you actually plan to make.

If you need to scale the batch up or down before prep day, the Recipe Calorie Calculator keeps the batch totals and per-serving math aligned.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories are in Banana Bread?

Banana Bread has about 284 calories per serving based on 10 equal servings. The full recipe is about 2,844 calories, which is why serving size matters so much when you portion the finished batch.

How much protein is in Banana Bread?

Each serving provides about 4.4 grams of protein. That makes the recipe especially useful when you want something homemade that contributes real protein instead of relying only on starch, sugar, or fat for its calories.

Is Banana Bread good for weight loss?

It can fit a weight-loss plan if the serving size matches your daily calorie target. At roughly 284 calories with 4.4 grams of protein and 1.9 grams of fiber, it is more structured than many packaged alternatives, but portion control still matters.

How many carbs are in Banana Bread?

A serving contains about 44.2 grams of carbohydrates. That is reasonable for balanced eating and many training-focused meal plans, but it may be higher than what someone following a strict low-carb or keto approach wants in one sitting.

Can I make Banana Bread gluten-free?

You can often make it gluten-free by swapping the main grain or flour component for a certified gluten-free equivalent. That kind of substitution changes texture a little, but it is the most direct path if you still want the same overall style of recipe.

How do I store Banana Bread?

Store banana bread in covered containers in the refrigerator for about 4 to 5 days. Portioning it right away helps the nutrition stay consistent because each container matches the serving size used for the calorie estimate on this page.

Can I freeze Banana Bread?

Yes, most versions of banana bread freeze well in individual portions. Cool the recipe fully, wrap or container each serving, and label it so the portion size stays clear when you reheat it later.

How do I calculate calories if I change the servings?

Use the serving size calculator on this page for a quick estimate, or send the recipe into the Recipe Calorie Calculator if you want to change the ingredient list as well as the serving count. That gives you a cleaner answer than trying to estimate from memory.

Helpful Guides

Helpful Guides

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