Super fluffy, protein-packed oatmeal blender pancakes made without bananas or protein powder. Just whole-food ingredients like oat flour, Greek yogurt, and eggs, with no added sugar and about 11g of protein per serving. Great for meal prep or hot off the skillet for a healthy breakfast.

Protein Oatmeal Blender Pancakes At A Glance
- ✅ Recipe Name: Protein Oatmeal Blender Pancakes (No Bananas!)
- 🕒 Ready In: 5 min prep, 10 min cook
- 👪 Serves: 4 (about 12 pancakes)
- 🍽 Calories: ~239 per serving
- 💪 Protein: 11g per serving
- 🥣 Main Ingredients: Rolled oats, Greek yogurt, eggs, almond milk, maple syrup
- 📖 Dietary Info: High-protein, gluten-free, no added sugar, no banana, no protein powder
- ⭐ Why You'll Love It: Most oatmeal pancakes lean on banana or protein powder; these get their protein from Greek yogurt and eggs, so they're naturally sweetened and powder-free.
SUMMARIZE & SAVE THIS CONTENT ON
These are my go-to weekday and weekend pancakes. After testing many oat versions that turned gummy or fell apart, this one holds together and stays fluffy. They get real protein from Greek yogurt and eggs instead of powder, the same as my single-serve protein baked oats.
The best part is what's not in them. No protein powder, no added sugar, and no banana, just a little maple syrup for sweetness. The protein comes from real food, which means no chalky powder taste.
They're made for busy mornings, too. Everything blends in one jar, cleanup is almost nothing, and they freeze well, so a weekend batch covers breakfast all week, just like my flourless oatmeal waffles and high-protein pancake bowl.
Jump to:
- Protein Oatmeal Blender Pancakes At A Glance
- Are These Protein Pancakes Actually Healthy?
- How Much Protein Is in These Oatmeal Pancakes?
- Ingredients for Protein Oat Pancakes
- Easy Ingredient Substitutions
- How to Make Oatmeal Protein Pancakes in a Blender (Step-by-Step)
- Video Tutorial (Step-by-Step)
- Tips for the Fluffiest Oatmeal Pancakes
- Mix-Ins & Variations
- How to Store, Freeze & Meal Prep
- Protein Oatmeal Pancakes FAQ
- More Easy Pancake Recipes You'll Love
- 📖 Recipe
- 💬 Comments
Are These Protein Pancakes Actually Healthy?
Yes. They're made with whole-food ingredients and skip the empty extras.
- 11g protein per serving, from Greek yogurt and eggs
- 4g fiber from rolled oats
- No refined sugar, just a little maple syrup
- No flour, just blended oats, so they're gluten-free
- No bananas in the batter
How Much Protein Is in These Oatmeal Pancakes?
These oatmeal pancakes have about 11g of protein per serving. The protein comes from Greek yogurt and eggs, with no protein powder. Want more? Swap the Greek yogurt for cottage cheese, or add a scoop of protein powder and drop the oats to 1¾ cups.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
My go-to breakfast! You will not be disappointed! These pancakes are fluffy, healthy, and easy to make without protein powder (doesn't sit well with my stomach)!
- Maxi
Ingredients for Protein Oat Pancakes

- Rolled oats: blended right in the blender, they become oat flour, so there's no separate flour to measure out beforehand. Use certified gluten-free oats if you need them to be.
- Greek yogurt: the main reason these are protein-packed. It also makes them tender and fluffy. Plain or vanilla both work. It's the same trick I use in my protein pumpkin pancakes if you want a fall spin.
- Eggs: they bind everything and add structure, plus a second protein source, which is how these hit about 11g per serving without any protein powder.
- Almond milk: thins the batter to a pourable, blendable consistency. Any milk works.
- Maple syrup: just enough natural sweetness, so there's no refined sugar. Honey or agave swap in fine.
- Vanilla and cinnamon: small amounts, big flavor.
- Baking powder: the lift that keeps them fluffy instead of dense.
Scroll to recipe card for quantities!
Easy Ingredient Substitutions
- Rolled oats: Quick oats work fine. Skip steel-cut, they won't blend down.
- Greek yogurt: Use cottage cheese instead. It blends in smoothly and pushes the protein even higher.
- Make them dairy-free: Use a dairy-free yogurt, such as coconut or almond milk yogurt.
- Almond milk: Any milk works, dairy or plant.
- Maple syrup: Honey or agave, swap in one for one.
- Cinnamon: Pumpkin spice is a cozy swap for warm fall flavor.
How to Make Oatmeal Protein Pancakes in a Blender (Step-by-Step)

- Step 1: Add everything to the blender. Oats, eggs, Greek yogurt, milk, maple syrup, vanilla, baking powder, and cinnamon all go in at once. No need to make oat flour first; the blender does that for you as it runs.

- Step 2: Blend and rest. Blend until smooth, about 20 to 40 seconds, until the batter is pourable with no chunks of oats left. Let it sit for 8 minutes. This is the step people skip, and it matters, the oats soak up the liquid and the batter thickens, which is what gives you fluffy pancakes instead of flat ones.

- Step 3: Pour and cook. Heat a buttered pan over medium-low heat and pour about ¼ to ⅓ cup batter per pancake. Cook 2 to 3 minutes, until the edges look set and the surface turns from glossy to matte. Keep the heat on the lower side; too hot and the outside browns before the inside cooks through.

- Step 4: Flip and finish. Flip once and cook for about 1 more minute, until both sides are golden and the center springs back when you press it lightly. Serve warm, or keep them in a 200°F oven while you finish the batch.
Video Tutorial (Step-by-Step)
Tips for the Fluffiest Oatmeal Pancakes
- Let the batter rest. After blending, let it rest for about 8 minutes before cooking. The oats absorb the liquid, and the batter thickens, which gives you height rather than flat, runny pancakes.
- Don't overblend. Blend just until smooth, around 20 to 40 seconds. Overblending makes the batter gummy and the pancakes dense.
- Cook low and slow. Medium-low heat lets the inside cook through before the outside browns. Too hot and you get raw centers with dark edges.
- Use real eggs. The eggs are what hold these together and give them lift. Egg replacers like flax tend to make them fall apart, so I don't recommend swapping them out.
- Thin the batter if it stiffens. It keeps thickening as it sits, so if the pancakes are getting too thick later, stir in a splash more milk.
- Watch the edges, not for bubbles. Because these are made from oat flour, they won't bubble much as regular pancakes do. Instead, flip when the edges look set, and the surface turns from glossy to matte. Flipping too early is what tears them.
Mix-Ins & Variations
- Higher protein: Use cottage cheese instead of Greek yogurt for a protein boost. Or add a scoop of protein powder, dropping the oats to 1¾ cups so the batter doesn't get too thick.
- Blueberries: fresh or frozen, pressed gently into the batter once it hits the skillet.
- Banana slices: on top if you want that banana flavor, without putting it in the batter.
- Chocolate chips: because chocolate chip pancakes never miss.
- Chopped apples: scattered on top once the batter hits the skillet, then pressed in gently so they soften as the pancake cooks. It tastes like apple pie!
- Chia or hemp seeds: stirred in for extra fiber or a protein bump. A few readers add hemp hearts to boost protein.
- Chopped pecans or a swirl of nut butter: for a little crunch and staying power.

How to Store, Freeze & Meal Prep
- Fridge: Store cooled pancakes in an airtight container for up to 3 to 4 days.
- Freezer: Let them cool completely, then freeze in a zip-top or freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months. Laying them flat first so they aren't touching keeps them from freezing into one block.
- Reheat: Microwave wrapped in a damp paper towel in short bursts until warm, or warm in a 350°F oven for 5 to 10 minutes.
- Meal prep: This is what these pancakes are built for. I make a double batch on the weekend, fridge a few days' worth, and freeze the rest so a high-protein breakfast is ready on busy mornings with no cooking.
Protein Oatmeal Pancakes FAQ
About 11g per serving, three pancakes. The protein comes from Greek yogurt and eggs, not protein powder, so it's all whole-food protein.
Yes, these are made entirely without it. The Greek yogurt and eggs do the work, which also means no chalky aftertaste. If you want even more protein, you can add a scoop of powder and drop the oats to 1¾ cups.
They're made from whole-food ingredients with no refined sugar, no banana, and no flour beyond blended oats. Each serving has around 11g of protein and 4g of fiber, which is what keeps you full through the morning.
The eggs are what hold these together, so swapping in an egg replacer like flax tends to make them break apart. For pancakes that hold their shape, stick with real eggs.
No. Plenty of oatmeal pancakes lean on banana for sweetness and structure, but these don't, so they work if you don't like banana or are watching blood sugar.
Yes, up to 3 months. Cool completely, freeze flat so they don't stick, then reheat in the microwave or oven.

More Easy Pancake Recipes You'll Love
If you loved these fluffy protein oatmeal pancakes, here are a few more recipes to try next:
Did you make this recipe?
If you make this recipe, be sure to comment and rate it down below. Also, don't forget to tag me @healthfulblondie on Instagram and use the hashtag #healthfulblondie so I can see your delicious creation and share it with my followers!
📖 Recipe

Protein Oatmeal Blender Pancakes
Ingredients
- 2 large eggs
- ½ cup Greek yogurt, plain or vanilla (0%, 2% or 5%)
- ⅔ cup almond milk, or any milk
- 2 tablespoon real maple syrup
- 1 ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 cups rolled oats
- 2 ¼ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon cinnamon
- ¼ teaspoon salt, optional
- Maple syrup, optional topping
- Optional mix-ins: blueberries, chocolate chips, banana slices, chia seeds
Instructions
- Blend. Add all ingredients to a blender and blend until smooth, about 20 to 40 seconds. The batter should look pourable with no visible chunks of oats.
- Rest the batter. Let it sit 8 minutes while you heat the pan. It will thicken slightly and look puffy on top as the oats absorb the liquid.
- Heat the pan. Set a large nonstick pan over medium-low and lightly grease it. The pan is ready when a drop of water sizzles on contact.
- Pour and cook. Add about ¼ to ⅓ cup batter per pancake plus any mix-ins. Cook 2 to 3 minutes, until the edges look set and the top turns from glossy to matte (since this is oat flour it will not have as many bubbles as regular pancakes).
- Flip. Cook about 1 minute more, until the bottom is golden brown and the center springs back when lightly pressed.
- Serve. Enjoy warm with fresh fruit, maple syrup, or nut butter. For a big batch, keep cooked pancakes warm in a 200°F oven.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Recipe tested and developed by Tati Chermayeff, creator of Healthful Blondie, where everyday ingredients meet high-protein, wholesome recipes. Tati is a recipe developer, food blogger, and endurance athlete based in Austin, TX, who specializes in high-protein, whole-food recipes that taste like the real thing. These protein oatmeal pancakes are one she makes on repeat for an easy, high-protein breakfast.












Mikki says
Great receipe, thx! I added vegan protein powder in the mix and topped it off with some peanut butter and banana, super healthy and packed full of protein for a good work out! 🥰
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Mikki! Vegan protein powder with peanut butter and banana on top sounds like the perfect post-workout stack. So glad these fueled you. Thank you!
Kara says
Really good recipe. I found it filling and added honey on top of mine for a little sweetness. Overall I will make is again
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Kara! So happy you found them filling. A drizzle of honey on top is a great call. Thanks for planning to make them again!
Sarah Anderson says
I make this recipe almost every single weekend for me and my roommates. It is a great one. The pancakes are fluffy and the protein addition is fabulous.
Tati Chermayeff says
Sarah, thank you so much for this comment and review! I am in love with these pancakes too!
Carla Jenkins says
These Pancakes look delicious and
I plan to try them!! Thanks so very much for the recipe and the especially the detailed information
you were nice enough to provide,
also!! Thanks again and Happy
Cooking During the the Holidays.
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Carla! Thank you so much, that means a lot. I hope you love them when you make them. Happy holiday cooking!
Andrea says
Forgot to leave a comment the first 10 times I made these pancakes. They are SO SO SO delish. Ill never stop making them
Tati Chermayeff says
Ha, better late than never! So glad they're a forever staple for you. Thank you Andrea!
Kate says
Amazing. So good. Make them weekly,
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Kate! Making them weekly is the best compliment. Thank you so much!
Nick says
IN LOVE WITH THIS RECIPE! It is so easy and so delicious!
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Nick! So happy you're in love with them. Easy and delicious is exactly the goal. Thank you!
Maxi says
My go to breakfast! I forgot to comment after making these for the first time, but better late than never. You will not be disappointed! These pancakes are fluffy, healthy and easy to make. I also love the protein in them without protein powder (doesn't sit well with my stomach). Anyways try these!!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Maxi! This made my day. I love that the no protein powder part matters for you since powder can be tough on the stomach, that's exactly why these lean on Greek yogurt and eggs instead. So glad they're your go to. Thank you!
Stephanie Orr says
Made these delicious pancakes this morning & all I have to say is WOW. My new go-to pancake recipe!!! So good!!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Stephanie! WOW right back at you. So thrilled this is your new go to. Thank you!
Genesis says
I loved this recipe!!! I tried it as waffles instead and added a little bit of vanilla protein powder. No regrets 🤤 me and my boyfriend loved it!!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Aw thank you so much!!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Genesis! Love that you made them as waffles with a little vanilla protein powder. So glad you and your boyfriend loved them. Thank you!
Ashley Isenberg says
such an easy and delicious breakfast! love them and will be making them again tomorrow!
Tati Chermayeff says
So happy to hear this!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Ashley! So happy they were easy and delicious. Enjoy making them again tomorrow. Thank you!
Saskia C says
Don't take this comment lightly... I don't even like pancakes, YET these were killer!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Ha, that might be my favorite kind of review, a non pancake person won over. So glad these were killer for you. Thank you Saskia!
Brynn Murray says
Perfection on a plate! Made mine with blueberries a heavy pour of maple syrup…absolutely delish!! Not only do they taste good, but they’re good for you!!!
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Brynn! Blueberries and a heavy pour of maple syrup sounds perfect. So glad they hit both the tasty and good for you marks. Thank you!
Madi G says
Nothing like Sunday morning pancakes!!! I added banana and chocolate chips and they were PERFECT. Thank you Tati 💖
Tati Chermayeff says
Hi Madi! Banana and chocolate chips is such a good Sunday combo. So glad they were perfect. Thank you!
Sarah says
Have to admit, I made these 2 seconds after you posted them. SO GOOOOOOOOD WOW!
Tati Chermayeff says
Ha, making them seconds after I posted is dedication! So glad they were so good. Thank you Sarah!