Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Bread
This perfect pumpkin chocolate chip bread is loaded with chocolate chips. Fluffy and super moist, it tastes even better the next day!
Year after year, pumpkin season after pumpkin season, and with all the variations of pumpkin chocolate chip bread on the market, this is the only recipe I turn to.
It has been a tried-and-true favorite for over ten years.
Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Batter
This recipe is very straightforward.
For the wet ingredients:
- Canned pumpkin
- Eggs
- Sugar (not a wet ingredient, but we’re adding it here)
- Oil or a combo of oil and applesauce
- Water, milk or buttermilk (delicious any which way)
Once the wet ingredients are nicely combined, the dry ingredients are added. Nothing finicky here – just your basic flour + warm fall spices + baking soda and salt.
Adaptations
It pains me to even say this out loud, but the chocolate chips are technically optional.
As in, you can leave them out if you want a simple unadorned pumpkin bread…but I don’t necessarily think that’s the right thing to do. 😉
Also, you can decrease the sugar (see the note in the recipe) and also play around with using all whole wheat flour in place of the all-purpose flour or a combination of half whole wheat flour and half all-purpose flour.
I prefer using a lighter wheat flour in this bread, like hard or soft white wheat flour, kamut or einkhorn. It helps the bread stay fluffy instead of moody and dense.
Bread Pan Sizes
The batter can be split between:
- Two 9X5-inch pans
- Two 8 1/2 X 4 1/2-inch pans plus 1-2 mini loaf pans
- 6-8 mini loaf pans
The specific pan size doesn’t affect the taste outcome of the bread, but I’ve found that the pumpkin bread domes slightly better in the smaller (8 1/2-inch or mini) pans.
A Fan Favorite
This recipe has been around a long time, and it’s become a tried-and-true favorite for many!
Rachel says: I have been making this for years and it’s still my favorite thing to bake during the holiday season!
Lexy says: I knew this was the best of the best but this year I got adventurous and tried a different recipe that required making homemade pumpkin butter… it wasn’t worth the extra effort. So I’m back to this recipe! Tried and true, this is THE BEST pumpkin bread recipe on the internet.
Ellen says: Perfect is an understatement! I shall never again Google “pumpkin bread recipe”. Never. PS: Cinnamon chips in place of the chocolate chips is also amazing.
One Year Ago: Sourdough Pumpkin Muffins {a.k.a. The Best Muffins On The Planet}
Two Years Ago: Instant Pot Double Chocolate Steel Cut Oats
Three Years Ago: Chicken Cordon Bleu Panini {My New Favorite Sandwich}
Four Years Ago: Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Streusel Cake
Five Years Ago: Pumpkin Applesauce Muffins with {Optional} Maple Cream Glaze
Six Years Ago: 20-Minute Chicken and Veggie Stir Fry
Seven Years Ago: Cheesy Bacon and Garlic Butter Smashed Red Potatoes
Eight Years Ago: Cookie Dough and Funfetti Greek Yogurt Dips
Nine Years Ago: Green Lentil Soup with Curried Brown Butter
Ten Years Ago: The Best Monkey Bread
Perfect Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Bread
Ingredients
- 3 ½ cups (497 g) all-purpose flour (can sub half whole wheat flour – see note)
- 2 cups (424 g) granulated sugar (see note)
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 (15-ounce) can (425 g) pumpkin puree
- 1 cup (226 g) vegetable, canola, avocado or melted coconut oil (see note)
- 4 large eggs
- ⅔ cup water, milk or buttermilk
- 1 to 2 cups (170 to 340 g) semi-sweet chocolate chips (optional)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease two 9X5-inch loaf pans or two 8 1/2X4 1/2-inch loaf pans plus 1-2 mini loaf pans.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt together. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl or in a large liquid measuring cup, whisk together canned pumpkin, oil, eggs and 2/3 cup water, milk or buttermilk until well combined.
- Pour the wet ingredients over the dry ingredients, and stir until there are still a few dry streaks or clumps.
- Stir in the chocolate chips and mix until no dry streaks remain – but don't over mix! Pour batter in prepared pans.
- Bake the bread for 55 to 70 minutes until a toothpick or thin knife inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove the bread from the oven and let sit for 10-15 minutes. Run a knife gently around the edge of the bread and turn the bread out, right side up, onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: my brother, Nate W.
Recipe originally posted October 19, 2010; updated October 2022 with new photos, commentary and recipe notes.
I know this was posted last year, but it looks like comments are still being posted. This is a great recipe and taste’s very delicious. I keep having a problem with burning however, and I was wondering if you had any advice. I read the other comments and no one else seems to have this problem and so I’m thinking maybe it’s my high altitude (Utah). The first time I made the bread I made two large loaves and they were burnt on the outside but still doughy on the inside and so I thought I would try them in the 8 X 4 pans the second time, which I did, and they came out totally burnt. I refuse to give up on this because it’s such a great tasting bread, but I wanting it to turn out so I don’t have to cut the crust off, and also so I feel okay about giving it away. I was thinking of baking the larger loaves at a lower temp until cooked thoroughly, and just baking the smaller loaves for less time, but you’re the expert. Do you have any advice? By the way, thank you so much for the time you put into this blog, I’m cooking things I never thought possible!
Thanks, Jess – glad you are enjoying the recipes! If I were you, I’d probably try baking the bread at 25 degrees lower than the recipe states. Are your bread pans dark? That can sometimes make the bread crust darken more quickly. Another idea is once the bread forms the crust on the outside (and before it is overly darkened) you can carefully tent the loaves with foil while they continue baking. Hope you have better luck!
Delicious! I made this tonight and was not disappointed. Thanks for the recipe 🙂
I am so in love with this recipe. I made it for my family and they all loved it too. It’s addictive! I used half apple sauce and half oil. I also used Libbys pumkin pie filling but it was just plain pumkin! So yummy 🙂 Thank you
This is to die for – I made it last night and holy moly it was delicious. I did the same as Andrea and used applesauce instead of oil, and all I could find was pie filling instead of puree and it came out seriously amazing. My husband is loving it!
Yum!! I made these tonight and they were delicious! I love the way they make my house smell- so festive. I too used applesauce instead of the oil and cut back to 2 C sugar and they turned out great. Thanks Mel!!
Thanks Mel! I went ahead and tried to halve it, and it turned out great. Only have one loaf pan…so today I’ll make it again:) thanks again for a great recipe and your response.
Hello –
I’d like to try this recipe (looks great!) but I’m wondering if I half it to make just one loaf – will it work? It looks easily halve-able, but sometimes recipes don’t turn out after halving.
Please let me know. Thanks!
Sarah V. – I’ve never halved the recipe, but I think it should work just fine. You could always make both loaves and freeze one!
Mel, I am wanting to make this & I recently bought the white whole wheat flour that you mentioned in your oatmeal cookie recipe. I’m wondering if you have ideas for how to sub it for the white flour/ whole wheat flour combo in this recipe. Thanks!
Hi Linsday – you can use the white whole wheat flour for the whole wheat flour called for in the recipe. If you want to sub all the flour with whole wheat flour, you should be able to sub 1:1 the white flour for the whole wheat, but be sure to measure the wheat flour with a lighter hand (don’t compact it into the measuring cup).
When using all white whole wheat flour, it’s best to up the leavening to compensate for the heaviness of whole wheat flour, so I’d say to increase the baking soda to 3 tsp. and because that is salty, decrease the salt from 1 tsp. to maybe 1/4-1/2 tsp.
@Janet
Thank you for this tip!! I always bake with organic white-whole wheat flour and have never heard this advice.
🙂
I have 2 friends that have wanted me to try chocolate chip pumpkin bread for about 2 years. I gave in after I came across your recipe. I actually baked mine in baby bundt cake pans. They were fantastic! Maybe a new favorite fall recipe! I think maybe next time I will squirt some cream cheese icing in the middle of each cake! Yum!
Tonight at my house I had a little Mel’s Kitchen Cafe Experiment! I tried 4 of your recipes for our family dinner get together (Grilled Pork Chops {Amazing}, Pumpkin chocolate chip bread {wonderful}, s’more cookie bars {splendid}, & the cheesy cauliflower bake {got rave reviews, but not my personal favorite… next time I want to try it w/o the thyme and maybe more cheese!}) Thanks for helping my plan my dinner tonight! Love your blog!
I made this for a breakfast potluck at my office last week and it was great! The recipe is easy and my coworkers raved about it, thanks!
I tried this today and I’m thrilled with the results! I only have one loaf pan, so I made some muffins too. They’re delish!
You are my new best friend 🙂 This was delicious! I wish I would have read all the way to the comments at the bottom – I too made a double batch like Anissa and it BARELY fit into my biggest bowl. I made it into 12 muffins and 3 loaves and they were all delicious. I’d probably add some toasted pecans next time just for some more texture, but otherwise not change a thing. Thank you!
I made a double batch of this yesterday. I started to question my sanity when I realized how much dough it made, but luckily it all fit in the largest bowl I had. I made 10 mini loaves with the ceramic loaf pans that are $1 a piece at Michaels and then 2 9×5 loaves. Baked them all at the same time. Came out AMAZING. Seriously, such good bread. I’ve got all my mini loaves frozen and ready to hand out in their little pans for Christmas. 🙂 PERFECT!
Anissa – seriously – a double batch of this would make a ton! I’m glad it worked out well and that the mini ones baked up great, too.
This recipe is sooooo good! My whole family loves it! Can’t wait to make it again and share it for the holidays! 🙂
Thanks, Cindy!
Great recipe! I tweaked a few ingredients to lower the fat. Check it out at my blog
http://blogfoodbetter.blogspot.com/2010/11/pumpkin-chocolate-chip-bread.html
Jody – love the premise of your blog – making recipes healthier! Glad you liked this one!
I made these in mini-muffin form for my Kindergartner’s class Halloween party today. I made them last night, and when I ate the first one out of the oven I thought, “Ehh…not that great.” But I remembered what you said about them being better the next day, so I let them sit a few hours, tried one again and they were way better. Then I tried one this morning and wow! The flavors were so much deeper and richer. They were a HUGE hit. The other moms ate more than the kids and couldn’t stop raving about them! They all asked for the recipe and said I needed to bring them to the next party too. So, once again–thanks Mel for making me look like a super star!
Reyna – phew! Glad these really did taste better the next day and that everyone gobbled them up!
Made this today and sure enough, it’s the perfect pumpkin bread recipe – I had waaaay too many pieces! One question: do you flour your loaf pans after greasing? I sprayed my pans pretty generously, and the bottoms still stuck on all 3. I’m thinking I need to find “muffin wrappers” for loaf pans like they use in bakeries.
Thanks, Camille! I usually use the Baker’s Secret cooking spray that has flour in it. It’s amazing and resolves the need to grease AND flour. Before I used that, I would usually only grease the pans because I hate pounding out flour. I don’t remember having any sticking issues but adding the step to flour your pans could definitely help remedy that. By the way, king arthur flour (kingarthurflour.com) has those loaf tin liners you are talking about. I’ve never bought them but I’ve wanted to many times!
I have NEVER made pumpkin bread before, since I have never really been into pumpkin things! But last year I tried someone’s recipe for pumpkin bread and I fell in love. Sadly I never got the recipe from them…but today I found yours! It was DIVINE! I made one loaf with Choc. Chips and one without. They were both great. And by the way…whenever my husband goes crazy over one of my recipes and asks, “Where did you get this recipe??”…it’s always from your site. I can honestly say that every recipe I’ve ever made from here (which is a lot) has always turned out great.
The one we make and eat the most is the oatmeal pancakes. That is something we have at least once or twice a week! Yum!!!!!!! Thank you for your incredible recipes, I am amazed!
Amy – thank you for your sweet comment! I’m thrilled this pumpkin bread met your expectations of the recipe you had lost. That’s wonderful you’ve had such good luck with recipes from here and I hope it continues. Thanks for letting me know!
I made this other day and we all LOVED it! I planned to freeze two of the loaves for later during pumpkin eating season, but nope – they are all gone! Thanks for the recipe.
JaNae – well, I’m sorry you didn’t get any left to freeze but I’m glad that’s an indication everyone liked the bread!
Very tasty. I completely forgot to add the water and it wasn’t a problem at all.
I did half oil and half applesauce. Hmm… I wonder how it would be if you increased the amount of WW flour and decreased the white flour….
Erica – glad you loved this. And as for the whole wheat flour, I’ve successfully made it with all whole wheat flour (using white wheat flour). It is definitely more dense and not as light and decadent, but it is still delicious.
I forgot about this recipe! Thanks for posting it and reminding me about this delicious bread!
It’s not fall without this bread!
I’m so excited that you posted a recipe for this! Your recipes haven’t failed me yet, and I’ve been looking for the perfect pumpkin chocolate chip bread recipe for a loooong time – I’m hoping this is it! I’ll try it out this weekend.
Hi Mel! Could I refrigerate the batter since I had some leftover and was thinking making I could make a few muffins? Do you think it would work in muffin form and if so, how long should I try baking for?
Also, do I store the bread in the fridge overnight or just leave it on the counter?
Thanks!
Lori – I’m guessing this batter would fare well refrigerated but probably not for more than a day. I definitely think these would work in muffin form. I’d check them after baking for 10-12 minutes just to be sure. They might need upwards of 15 (at the same temp in the recipe). I usually leave my bread on the counter overnight.
Oh, We also added applesauce instead of oil and it was still fabulous!
I made this bread last night, and everyone loved it. I only put 2 cups of sugar instead of 3 and it tasted great.
Thanks, Erin – I appreciate you including your changes, also!
pumpkin bread is tolerable, but the simple addition of chocolate makes it irresistible. it’s probably not a good thing that an ingredient holds such power over me. 🙂
If you substitute apple sauce for the oil, it’s just as moist and much healthier! :]]
and it tastes AMAZING!! my family loves these in muffin form.
Mel, this was fabulous! Perfection! I think it had the perfect amount of sugar and my house smelled unbelievable. I COULD NOT wait until the time you mentioned it would be at its best….I ate it straight out of the oven! My mom kept making up excuses to come back in the kitchen and get another chunk! She said, and I quote, “I don’t even like stuff with pumpkin, and I am in HEAVEN!” I used one 9X5, two little tiny pans, and then made the rest into the perfect muffins which my kids are devouring two at a time! It made me happy to put those as the dessert in their school lunches instead of a Hostess Ding Dong! Truly, you are my hero.
Allie M. – glad you liked this one (even straight out of the oven!). That is hilarious about your mom…and a great compliment! Thanks so much for checking in on this recipe!
Melanie..this is my favorite recipe too! A quick ‘lowfat’ tip…use 1/2 c. applesauce and 1/2 c. oil and you will never be able to tell the difference! It will still come out soft and smooth, but it will be half the fat. Applesauce is my go-to ingredient when trying to cut back on calories.
Great minds think alike…I was just about to blog about pumpkin bread today too. It must be that time of year 🙂
http://www.dealstomeals.blogspot.com
Made it. Ate all of it. Loved it.
To the readers who said it had too much sugar, au contraire mon amie. I think you got it wrong. This recipe actually has LESS sugar than most recipes. Some stated that their recipe usually uses 3 cups sugar; I have similar recipes — but they only make one loaf. This recipe makes two loaves. So, there is only 2 cups per loaf.
The wheat flour is a huge plus.
By the way, that Nate guy seems pretty awesome. I recognize the name from the best corn bread and honey butter of all time.
Johnson – thanks for your comment (made me smile)! I was actually getting ready to chime in on the too-much-sugar discussion by also reaffirming that this recipe makes two large loaves so thanks for doing it for me. And actually, sugar and loaves aside, this isn’t meant to be health food so as long as you realize it’s more like a cake, we should all be good to go! Glad you loved it. Oh, and yes, that Nate guy is pretty awesome. Good looking. Smart. Funny. He gets it from his big sister.
Made this today! YUM, thanks!
Thanks, Amanda!
Really have been looking for a great pumpkin bread! I’m excited to try it!
I’m in but hold the chocolate! 🙂
~ingrid
This looks so delicious, I will have to make it! Never tried with choco chips before, yum.
Thanks for the post – I appreciate that this recipe makes 2 9X5 pans. I’m always on the lookout for larger volume recipes! this will be one of my weekend projects!
I have never heard of water in a quick bread…very interesting! I have yet to make pumpkin bread this fall and this just might be the one I make! It looks delicious!
Looks so yummy! I haven’t made a loaf of pumpkin bread yet and it’s already mid-October..Yikes!
looks a-maze-ing!!!
I have a similar recipe I’ve been using for a couple of years & have tweaked it to make it healthier. Mine calls for milk, butter instead of oil & more eggs. I’m going to try yours & see how it compares because I like some of your ingredients better!
My kids take it to school for a snack & love it! I triple my recipe using 5 cups of flour & freeze 2/3 of it & it’s great to have in the freezer!
I think you could use less sugar in your recipe & more whole wheat flour too. My kids can’t tell the difference!
yum-pumpkin bread is the BEST–I love the addition of chocolate chips!
I love pumpkin bread, though I’ve never tried it before with chocolate chips. It really is amazing how many variations of it there are. I keep thinking someone should do a linky of pumpkin breads alone just to see how many different ones pop up.
Yum!!! I’m a sucker for pumpkin chocolate chip yummies!! Love your recipes!!
This looks delicious! I may have to make some of this asap. Thanks for sharing. 🙂
I make this exact recipe. I can attest….It is divine! Now I have to go make it.
this looks similar to my mom’s pumpkin bread recipe which is my all-time favorite…. might have to try it!
Pumpkin and chocolate are such a perfect combination! Your pumpkin bread looks delicious, Melanie! I wish I had a piece for breakfast! (Is that bad?) 🙂
Yum! I make a pumpkin friendship bread that would be perfect to add chocolate chips to. Thanks for the idea.
Wow – 3 cups sugar – no wonder this is the ideal bread! I don’t think I’ve ever put more than 2 cups of sugar in a quick bread recipe, I’ll have to make this today 🙂 Surely the cup of whole wheat flour balances everything and makes it a healthy indulgence!
wow – this looks perfect indeed! And since it has chocolate chips in it my husband may even try it! (he’s not a huge fan of pumpkin. gasp!)