These vegan Rice Krispie Treats are made with healthy ingredients! If you want to enjoy some homemade Rice Krispie Treats with no marshmallows and no peanut butter, you’ve come to the right place.

Yes, you can make vegan rice Krispie treats and make them with much healthier alternative ingredients! And I have the easy recipe for you 😍
Rice krispie treats have been a childhood favorite for decades. We all remember them growing up, don’t we? A classic cookie treat that’s fun for kids, easy to make, and loved by all.
However, the original recipe is made with butter and marshmallows. If they are vegan, they are made with margarine and vegan marshmallows.
What makes these healthy Rice Krispie Treats different?
I’m here to show you how to make Krispie treats without vegan butter, without vegan margarine, and without vegan marshmallows!

Crazy talk?
Nope. Recipe magic!
See, when I developed this recipe, vegan marshmallows were just coming on to the vegan market. They weren’t available in many stores or online.
I wanted to create a recipe using more common pantry staples. Plus, I knew I could make vegan rice krispie treats just a little healthier than with margarine and vegan marshmallows!
In eat, drink & be vegan, I created two vegan recipes of rice krispie treats. The first version was more ‘traditional’, using vegan marshmallows. Then, another using macadamia butter.
Later, when creating recipes for Plant-Powered Families, I created a nut-free version of this krispie treats recipe (now my favorite)!
Today, I’m sharing both the nut-free and original versions of my rice krispie treats.
In this video, I show you how to make the original version using macadamia nut butter.
Macadamia nut butter is ahhhmazing, but can be difficult to find. So, if you cannot get your hands on it, try a raw cashew butter.
Or, just go with the version, below. The treats hold together even better and have become my favorite version!
Enjoy the treats! x Dreena
Healthy Rice Krispie Treats (vegan & gluten free)
Ingredients
- 1/3 cup coconut butter (not oil, see note) OR 1/2 cup macadamia nut butter (see note)
- 1/2 cup brown rice syrup or coconut nectar, see note
- 3 tbsp unrefined sugar can reduce or omit, to taste
- 1/4 tsp sea salt
- 1 – 1 1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 3 1/2 – 4 cups natural brown rice crisp cereal
Instructions
- Line an 8×8-in (20×20-cm) pan with parchment paper.
- In a large saucepan on low-medium heat, combine coconut butter or macadamia butter, syrup, sugar, (agar if using macadamia nut butter), salt, and vanilla.
- Stir continually as mixture heats is fully dissolved (reduce heat if mixture starts bubbling).
- Remove from heat and stir in cereal, making sure to fully incorporate with nut butter mixture.
- Transfer mixture to pan and press in evenly (use an edge of parchment paper to press without sticking).
- Refrigerate to cool completely, then cut into squares. Makes 16 squares.
Notes
- Macadamia Note: If you don’t need these nut-free, use macadamia nut butter or raw cashew butter. If using nut butter, it’s helpful to add 1/4 tsp agar powder with the mixture before adding the cereal.
- Use coconut butter, not oil.
- Brown Rice Syrup Note: Don’t substitute with maple syrup! I get this question all the time. It’s not thick and sticky enough. If you need to substitute, only use a thick coconut nectar.





Yvonne says
I’ve been scouring the web for recipes that use coconut butter aka coconut manna and found your rice crispie recipe just as Barbara’s Brown Rice crisp cereal went on sale for 99 cents a box. I made these exactly as directed except for a scant sprinkling of cinnamon in the melted ingredients as well as on top of the finished, soft rice crispies. These are stupid delicious as in I could get real stupid and eat the whole batch at once. I found thick, gooey date syrup and will try that instead of brown rice syrup next time because brown rice syrup is becoming hard to find where I live. Thank you for this alternative recipe that doesn’t punish my taste buds.
Carmen Leon says
Any sub for brown rice syrup? Glycemic scale it is 98. That’s higher than any other sweetener I know of.
Piz Goode says
I have never heard of vegan rice crispy squares, thank you for sharing!
Nancy Nurse says
Hi Dreena, is Coconut Butter approved on the McDougall program? Also, I’ve never used coconut butter and just looking online… it seems it all comes in hard chunks, is that right? So do you just kind of estimate the amount since I’m reading in testimonials that it’s very difficult to even get out of the container? Thanks so much!
Sonya says
You don’t recommend substituting maple syrup for brown rice syrup as it’s not thick enough. How about using golden syrup?
Dreena says
Hi Sonya, I haven’t used it myself – is it corn syrup? It will have a similar texture if so, it’s just not a sweetener I use. Hope that helps!