Coconut Flour — Cups to Grams
1 cup coconut flour = 112 grams
1 cup Coconut Flour = 112 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Coconut Flour
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 28 g | 4 tbsp | 12.2 tsp |
| ⅓ | 37.3 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16.2 tsp |
| ½ | 56 g | 8 tbsp | 24.3 tsp |
| ⅔ | 74.7 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32.5 tsp |
| ¾ | 84 g | 12 tbsp | 36.5 tsp |
| 1 | 112 g | 16 tbsp | 48.7 tsp |
| 1½ | 168 g | 24 tbsp | 73 tsp |
| 2 | 224 g | 32 tbsp | 97.4 tsp |
| 3 | 336 g | 48 tbsp | 146.1 tsp |
| 4 | 448 g | 64 tbsp | 194.8 tsp |
How to Measure Coconut Flour Accurately
No baking ingredient demands more precise measurement than coconut flour. Its absorption capacity is so extreme — 4 to 6 times that of wheat flour — that a 10-gram error in a recipe calling for 28 grams (¼ cup) represents a 35% measurement mistake with immediate, visible consequences in the finished product. For context: that same 10-gram error in a all-purpose flour recipe calling for 240 grams is only a 4% mistake — barely noticeable.
Coconut flour's absorption power comes from its extraordinary fiber content: 40-60% dietary fiber by weight, predominantly insoluble cellulose and soluble pectin. These fiber types act like sponges, and they do not stop absorbing until the batter has been baked. This means the consistency of your batter will change as it sits — coconut flour batter that looks right immediately after mixing may be far too thick after 5 minutes as the flour continues to hydrate.
The measuring technique matters enormously. First, always sift coconut flour before measuring. It is highly hygroscopic and forms dense clumps within days of opening, even in a sealed container. Unsifted lumps in your measuring cup create pockets of dry fiber concentration in the batter — areas that will bake up crumbly and gritty while surrounding areas are properly textured. Use a fine-mesh strainer or sifter and break up any visible clumps.
After sifting, spoon the flour into your measuring cup using a gentle motion. Level off the top. The result should be approximately 112 grams. Never pack coconut flour — the cup should contain airy, fluffy powder, not compressed fiber. A packed ¼ cup of coconut flour can weigh 40-45g instead of the intended 28g, producing a baked good that is dramatically drier than intended.
For the most reliable results, weigh coconut flour directly. Even experienced bakers who make coconut flour recipes regularly use a scale. The ingredient is simply too variable by volume, too consequential in its absorption behavior, and too expensive (coconut flour costs 3-5× more than all-purpose flour) to waste on measurement errors.
Coconut Flour in Baking: Why Precision Is Non-Negotiable
Coconut flour is perhaps the least forgiving baking ingredient in existence. This is not hyperbole — it is a direct consequence of its physical chemistry. Understanding why helps you see that the "strict recipe adherence" advice you encounter everywhere for coconut flour is not overcaution; it is the minimum required to achieve a recognizable result.
The absorption problem. When you add liquid to a batter, it distributes between all the ingredients proportionally. All-purpose flour absorbs about 0.6ml of water per gram. Coconut flour absorbs 3-4ml per gram — more than 5× as much. A recipe that calls for ¼ cup (28g) of coconut flour is designed so that the eggs and liquid in the recipe exactly saturate those 28 grams of fiber. Add 38g instead (a poorly measured, slightly packed ¼ cup), and those extra 10g of fiber need to absorb an additional 30-40ml of liquid that isn't in the recipe. The result: dry, crumbly baked goods that fall apart.
The egg dependency. Coconut flour recipes use dramatically more eggs than wheat flour recipes — typically 1 egg per tablespoon of coconut flour. These eggs serve double duty: they provide liquid for hydration and act as the structural binder (coconut flour has no gluten). If you overmeasure the flour, the egg-to-flour ratio drops, providing less moisture per gram of flour and less binding per gram of flour simultaneously. The baked good falls apart and is dry. If you undermeasure, there is excess egg protein forming a rubbery, eggy texture that doesn't match the recipe's intent.
Real scenario: A keto banana muffin recipe calls for 3 tablespoons (21g) of coconut flour and 3 eggs. A baker scoops 3 tablespoons, compacting the flour to 35g — a 67% excess. The muffins bake up dry in the center, crumbly when bitten, and have a strangely dense, chalky quality from the unsaturated fiber absorbing all available liquid. The same recipe with 21g of weighed coconut flour produces moist, tender muffins with a clean crumb.
Texture and structure. Unlike almond flour (which has fat for moistness) or oat flour (which has starch for binding), coconut flour has neither significant fat nor starch. Its structure in baked goods comes entirely from the eggs and any added fat (butter, oil, coconut oil). This is why coconut flour recipes often seem heavily loaded with eggs and fat — they are compensating for the flour's inability to contribute anything except fiber bulk and a subtle coconut flavor.
Types of Coconut Flour and Their Weights
Coconut flour products vary more between brands than most other baking flours, because the processing method — particularly how much residual fat is left after pressing — significantly affects both density and absorption rate.
| Type | Per Cup | Fiber % | Absorption | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard coconut flour (Bob's Red Mill) | 112 g | ~40% | Very high | Most common; consistent performance |
| Fine coconut flour (Anthony's) | 110 g | ~42% | Very high | Slightly finer grind; smooth texture |
| Defatted coconut flour | 115 g | ~55% | Extremely high | More fat pressed out; even drier |
| Homemade (from fresh coconut) | 95–105 g | ~35% | High | Higher residual fat; less absorption |
The fiber percentage and residual fat content are the two variables that most affect how coconut flour behaves. Commercially defatted coconut flour has had more oil removed during processing, resulting in higher fiber concentration and even higher liquid absorption. If you switch brands, run a test batch of a simple recipe (coconut flour pancakes) before attempting something more complex like a layer cake.
Homemade coconut flour, made by drying and grinding fresh coconut meat, retains more natural fat and absorbs less liquid — closer to the behavior of almond flour. Recipes designed for commercial coconut flour will produce a wetter, more cohesive result when made with homemade coconut flour. Adjust by reducing liquid by 2-3 tablespoons per ¼ cup of flour.
Common Questions About Coconut Flour
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1 cup of coconut flour weighs 112 grams. Because most recipes use only 2-4 tablespoons (14-28g), even small errors matter enormously. A 5-gram error in a 28-gram measurement is an 18% mistake — enough to make a visible difference in texture. Always weigh coconut flour.
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Coconut flour is 40-60% dietary fiber by weight and absorbs 4-6 times more liquid than wheat flour. A full cup (112g) would absorb so much liquid that no practical recipe could compensate. Use ¼ cup (28g) for every 1 cup (120g) of all-purpose flour the original recipe calls for, and add extra eggs and liquid accordingly.
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Replace 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour with ¼ cup (28g) coconut flour. Add 1 extra egg per ¼ cup of coconut flour (for binding and moisture). Increase liquid by 2-4 tablespoons per ¼ cup. Let the batter rest 3-5 minutes to hydrate fully before baking. Use a tested coconut flour recipe rather than adapting — the results are more predictable.
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Only with major adjustments. Use ⅓ the amount of coconut flour by weight (replace 96g almond flour with 32g coconut flour) and add extra eggs and liquid. The texture will be noticeably different — denser and more fiber-forward. For reliable results, use recipes specifically developed for coconut flour rather than adapting almond flour recipes.
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The three most common causes: (1) Too much coconut flour from overpacking the cup; (2) Not enough eggs — you need approximately 1 egg per tablespoon of coconut flour; (3) Batter not rested for 3-5 minutes before baking, so the flour continued absorbing liquid during baking. Weigh your coconut flour and ensure your egg-to-flour ratio matches the recipe exactly.
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Yes. Coconut flour contains about 8g net carbs per ¼ cup (28g) — much lower than all-purpose flour (24g per ¼ cup) because its high fiber content is subtracted from total carbs. Because recipes use small amounts, net carbs per serving are very low. Coconut flour is also paleo, grain-free, and gluten-free.
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Slightly — sifted coconut flour weighs about 105-108g per cup versus 112g for unsifted. More importantly, sifting is necessary to prevent lumps from dry fiber concentrations in your batter. Always sift coconut flour before measuring, regardless of whether the recipe specifies it.
Troubleshooting Coconut Flour Problems
Problem: Batter looks too thick immediately after mixing.
Cause: Either too much coconut flour, or the batter has already begun absorbing liquid during the mixing process.
Fix: Let the batter rest for 3 minutes. If it is still too thick (won't fall off a spoon when tilted), add water or milk one tablespoon at a time. Coconut flour batter should be spreadable but not pourable. If you measured by volume, measure by weight next time — the batch may be salvageable with added liquid.
Problem: Baked goods taste eggy.
Cause: The recipe uses more eggs than the flour can absorb moisture from — typically caused by using less coconut flour than specified (undermeasuring).
Fix: Add 1-2 more tablespoons of coconut flour to the next batch to balance the egg-to-flour ratio. Weigh precisely. Also ensure you are using the correct number of eggs — coconut flour needs a high egg quantity, but not so high that the egg flavor dominates.
Problem: Finished product has a gritty or fiber-like texture.
Cause: Coconut flour was not sifted; large fiber particles remained that didn't hydrate evenly, or the batter was not rested long enough to fully hydrate.
Fix: Always sift coconut flour before use. Rest the batter for at least 3-5 minutes. For especially smooth results (pancakes, crepes), let the batter rest up to 10 minutes and whisk once more before cooking.
Problem: Coconut flour clumped into a hard mass.
Cause: Absorbed ambient moisture during storage. Coconut flour can clump within a week of opening in a humid kitchen.
Fix: Break up clumps and dry in a 200°F (93°C) oven for 10 minutes on a baking sheet, then sift. Store in an airtight container with a food-safe silica packet. In humid climates, store in the refrigerator.
Coconut Flour Conversion Table
| Measurement | Grams | Ounces |
|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 7 g | 0.25 oz |
| 2 tablespoons | 14 g | 0.49 oz |
| 3 tablespoons | 21 g | 0.74 oz |
| ¼ cup | 28 g | 0.99 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 37 g | 1.31 oz |
| ½ cup | 56 g | 1.98 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 75 g | 2.65 oz |
| ¾ cup | 84 g | 2.96 oz |
| 1 cup | 112 g | 3.95 oz |
| 2 cups | 224 g | 7.90 oz |
Related Converters
- USDA FoodData Central
- Bob's Red Mill Coconut Flour Nutrition and Technical Data
- King Arthur Baking — Gluten-Free Flour Guide
- Practical Paleo — Diane Sanfilippo (Victory Belt, 2016)