Chewy Sweet Potato Oat Bars with Warm Cinnamon Flavor

These sweet potato bars made with oats are an ideal healthy snack. Customize with dried fruit, nuts, or chocolate chips to suit your preference.

These sweet potato bars made with oats are the perfect healthy snack. Add your favorite mix-ins like dried fruit, nuts or even chocolate chips.

In October I discovered meal prep and it completely changed my weekly routine. I hadn’t been one to spend hours cooking on the weekend, but once I started tracking macros more closely, prepping food ahead of time made everything so much simpler.

After a few months I realized the key to sticking with meal prep wasn’t spending hours on full recipes — it was prepping ingredients. Roasting a tray of vegetables, cooking a couple of starches like rice or squash, and browning a pound or two of ground meat means quick meals during the week. I also wash fruit and greens and chop snack vegetables in advance. That little bit of preparation makes weekday meals effortless.

One baked item I do make weekly is a simple snack bar, like these sweet potato oat bars.

These sweet potato bars make a delicious healthy snack. Add dried cranberries for a festive spin!

I keep a batch of bars in the fridge for afternoon snacks. They’re convenient for when that post-lunch slump hits or when I need a bite before an evening workout. These bars have a pleasing macro profile — around 4.5 g protein, just under 15 g carbohydrates, and 3.3 g fat per bar — so they’re a satisfying, relatively low-carb option compared with many snack bars.

Made with oat and coconut flour, cooked sweet potato and aromatic fall spices, these sweet potato bars are moist, flavorful and healthy!

How Do You Make Sweet Potato Bars?

The recipe is very simple and comes together quickly in a food processor. Add most of the ingredients to the processor and blend until smooth, fold in any mix-ins by hand, then bake in a prepared pan. It’s an easy, low-effort bake that’s perfect for meal prep.

These bars rely mainly on two ingredients: oat flour and cooked sweet potato. If you don’t have oat flour, make your own by processing rolled oats in a blender or food processor until they form a fine flour.

I often bake sweet potatoes when I’m already using the oven for other meal prep and freeze the cooked flesh in bags for later. Cooked sweet potato is versatile — it works in soups, stews, muffins, cookies, and bars — so keeping some on hand is handy. I do the same with overripe bananas, cooked carrots, and cooked lentils for quick use in baked goods and snacks.

Grab a sweet potato bar for a healthy snack on the go. Slightly sweet, packed with fall spices and perfect with a glass of milk or a dollop of nut butter.

What Can I Add To My Sweet Potato Bars?

The bars are flexible — dried fruit, nuts, coconut flakes, cacao nibs, or chocolate chips all work. I used dried cranberries in the photos for a festive touch, but raisins, dried cherries, or blueberries are great choices too. If you want more of a dessert-style bar, toss in chocolate chips. Keep add-in quantities similar to the recipe so texture stays consistent.

As an alternative to sweet potato, cooked carrots can be substituted to lower the carbs further. For reference, 100 g sweet potato has about 20 g carbohydrates while 100 g carrots contain roughly 10 g.

These healthy oat based sweet potato bars can be made with your favorite mix-in. Try dried cranberries for fall, chocolate chips for more of a dessert or nuts for some crunch.

How Do I Store Sweet Potato Bars?

Store the bars at room temperature for a day, then keep them in an airtight container in the fridge. They also freeze well for one to two months. In my house they rarely last more than a few days.

Sweet Potato Bars made with heart healthy oats are a great snack or even breakfast. Add-in your favorite dried fruit or even chocolate chips to customize!

More Sweet Potato Snacks:

Whole wheat sweet potato banana muffins
Sweet potato chocolate chip cookies
Sweet potato raisin bread

Other similar ideas: pumpkin apple olive oil muffins (you can swap pumpkin for sweet potato) and sweet potato and fig muffins.

4.41 from 27 votes

Sweet Potato Oat Bars

By: Gina Matsoukas
Servings: 12 bars
Prep: 10 mins
Cook: 25 mins
Total: 35 mins
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These sweet potato bars made with oats are the perfect healthy snack. Add your favorite mix-ins like dried fruit, nuts or chocolate chips.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup cooked sweet potato, about 200g
  • 1 egg
  • 3/4 cup unsweetened almond milk (or milk of choice)
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 cup oat flour* (see notes)
  • 1/4 cup coconut flour
  • 2 scoops / 1 serving whey protein powder**
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 tablespoons flax seed
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
  • Optional add-ins: 1/4 cup dried cranberries or other dried chopped fruit, chopped nuts, coconut flakes, or chocolate chips

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375°F and line an 8×8 baking dish with parchment paper.
  2. Add all ingredients to a food processor in the order listed, except any add-ins.
  3. Process until smooth, scraping down the sides as needed.
  4. Stir in add-ins by hand with a spatula if using.
  5. Pour the mixture into the prepared baking dish, spreading evenly and smoothing the top.
  6. Bake for 22–25 minutes, until the center is set.
  7. Remove from the oven and lift the bake out of the dish using the parchment overhang. Cool completely on a rack, then cut into 12 bars.

Notes

*To make oat flour at home, process rolled oats in a blender or food processor until fine.

**I used a collagen whey in the photos and have also used flavored whey for extra cinnamon notes; use one serving of your preferred whey protein powder.

Macros per plain bar (no add-ins): 4.5 g Protein | 14.8 g Carbohydrates | 3.3 g Fat

Macros per bar with 1/4 cup dried cranberries: 4.5 g Protein | 17.4 g Carbohydrates | 3.3 g Fat

Serving: 1 SERVING
Calories: 186 kcal
Carbohydrates: 24 g
Protein: 8 g
Fat: 7 g
Fiber: 4 g
Sugar: 10 g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated and should be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
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