Healthy Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins
Healthy lemon poppy seed muffins made with whole wheat flour and yogurt. These delightfully fluffy muffins offer tons of flavor!
Updated by Kathryne Taylor on February 27, 2026
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These lemon poppy seed muffins will brighten your day! Each bite is bursting with zesty lemon flavor, while the nutty poppy seeds offer irresistibly crackly bits. They’re sweet enough to taste like a treat, but not cloyingly so. In fact, I managed to use around half as much sugar as the average muffin without compromising the lovely flavor or tender texture.
These muffins are more redeeming—you could even call them healthy compared to most—since they’re composed of tangy yogurt instead of sour cream and whole grain flour instead of all-purpose flour. I recommend using whole wheat pastry flour or white whole wheat flour, which retain all of the nutrients of whole wheat flour but offer a lighter flavor and color. That way, the lemon shines through.
I hope you love this recipe as much as I do! Please let me know in the comments.


What These Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins Taught Me
These muffins taught me some valuable baking lessons before I published this recipe over ten years ago, back in 2014. After retesting them recently, I learned even more from a few additional tweaks. Here’s a review.
Paper liners make for easier clean-up, but you might prefer the crisp bottoms that result from baking the muffin batter directly against the pan. For nicely rounded tops, grease only the bottom of the cups and halfway up the sides.
Rubbing the zest into the sugar with your fingers imparts way more citrus flavor than just whisking the two together.
Increasing the amount of baking soda helps achieve golden tops and plenty of air bubbles, making the muffins nicely fluffy. They looked too pale before I doubled the amount.
Sprinkling the tops with turbinado sugar offers a sweet, crackly top that complements the texture of the poppy seeds.


Healthy Flour Options
I prefer to bake with whole grain flours when I can, so I’ve tested this recipe with a variety of flours. Here are my notes.
- Whole wheat pastry flour: Lovely muffins that taste like they were made with all-purpose flour (no one will know the difference).
- White whole wheat flour: Also known as golden wheat, this flour yields slightly more hearty muffins with no discernible “wheaty” flavor.
- Regular whole wheat flour: The nutty flavor detracts from the lemon and poppy seed flavors. Use a different flour if you can.
- All-purpose flour: Yields light and fluffy muffins. The only downside is that the muffins are no longer whole grain, but that may not matter to you.


Recipe Tip
Do not overmix the batter, or your muffins will turn out tough instead of tender. Use a big spoon to stir the wet and dry mixtures together just until combined (a few remaining lumps of flour are ok—better safe than sorry).

Healthy Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins
These delightful muffins are bursting with lemon flavor and poppy seeds. These healthy muffins are made with whole wheat flour and yogurt. Serve with yogurt for a quick and filling breakfast. Recipe yields 1 dozen muffins.
Ingredients
- ½ cup cane sugar
- 2 medium lemons, preferably organic (you’ll need the zest of both and the juice of one)
- 1 ¾ cups whole wheat pastry flour, white whole wheat flour, or all-purpose flour
- 2 tablespoons poppy seeds
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon fine salt
- 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and lightly cooled
- 1 cup plain yogurt (plain Greek yogurt works, too)
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 teaspoons turbinado sugar for sprinkling on top (optional)
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Line your muffin tin with paper liners, or grease your muffin pan using butter or non-stick cooking spray. (Pro tip: grease only the bottoms and halfway up the cups so your muffin tops don’t flatten out while baking.)
- Combine the sugar and lemon zest in a medium mixing bowl. Use your fingers to rub the zest into the sugar until it is fragrant and pale yellow. Whisk in the flour, poppy seeds, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
- In a separate, smaller mixing bowl, combine the butter, yogurt, eggs, vanilla and the juice of one of your bald lemons. Whisk until combined.
- Pour the liquid ingredients into the dry ingredients. Use a large spoon to mix the two together, just until combined (a few lumps are ok—do not overmix, or your muffins will become tough).
- Divide the batter evenly between the 12 muffin cups. The batter will be thick, but don’t worry; your muffins will turn out great. Sprinkle the muffins with turbinado sugar (if using) and wipe off any sugar that lands between the muffin cups.
- Bake for 16 to 19 minutes, until tops are golden and a toothpick inserted in the center of a muffin comes out clean. Let the muffins cool for 5 minutes in the muffin pan, then carefully transfer the muffins to a baking rack to cool completely.
Notes
Recipe adapted from my blueberry lemon muffins, with references to The Fauxmartha and Two Peas and their Pod.
2025 edits: I retested this recipe and lightly tweaked the amounts of poppy seeds, baking soda (for more browning), flour, butter and yogurt. The current recipe yields lighter, fluffier and more delicious muffins.
Nutrition
The information shown is an estimate provided by an online nutrition calculator. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice. See our full nutrition disclosure here.
P.s. For more poppy seed goodness, try my orange poppy seed pound cake (rich and decadent, made with olive oil and yogurt, feel free to sub lemon for the orange) and poppy seed dressing.














My kids love this recipe, we are dairy intolerant though, so we make them with olive oil not butter and applesauce not yogurt and they are scrumptious.
THat’s great! Thank you for sharing how you were able to adapt this recipe.
I have been on a search for a good and healthy lemon poppyseed muffin recipe and I believe I have found it. Since we are vegan the only substitution I made was using Bob’s Red Mill egg replacer. They came out so fluffy and moist. So yummy will use again.
Thank you for sharing how you made this Fredra!
Hi! Would love to make these but I’m dairy free. Is there a good alternative instead of yoghurt? Would a nut milk work?
Hi Aysha, I haven’t tried, and since this is a baked good, I’m hesitant to offer suggestions that aren’t tested. Maybe vegan yogurt and flax eggs would work?
Mine didn’t turn out : (
I’m not sure what I did wrong. They did not rise and were in the oven probably 30 minutes, at least, and were still doughy in the middle.
I’m sorry to hear that, Diane. Are you sure you added all the ingredients and measurements? Sounds like something was missed. Sorry I can’t be of more help.
I’ve made these muffins about 4 times now and they are by far the best I’ve found. I usually make them as 36 mini muffins and bake them for 10 minutes. Then I freeze them and pop out a few at a time for a perfect treat.
Thank you for reporting back, Marie! I’m happy you love them. These would be fun mini muffins. :)
I made these and loved them! I wanted a really lemony muffin that didn’t have too much sugar and I thought these were great. I had small lemons, so I used the juice from four small ones. They were sooooo good. Definitely making again. Thank you!
You’re welcome, Nicole!
These muffins are just lovely. Not too sweet, not too dry and light. Wonderful recipe to use for my church baking group as well as with a cup of coffee or tea. Thank you!
You’re welcome! I’m happy you loved them.
Do you think it would be possible to use chia seeds instead of poppy seeds? Thank you!
I have’t tried it, so I can’t say for sure.
We baked it and it turned out like hard lemon balls!
1st. I think the recipe only yields around 8 muffins instead of 12. We followed your instruction and ended up with 24 small muffin balls.
2. Texture: very hard. Perhaps with tiny size and baking time was 16 minutes, it overbooked the muffin.
We followed everything as it was written.
A big disappointment for me and my daughter!
I’m sorry this one didn’t turn out for you, Maria. It sounds like there was something that wasn’t measured correctly or the muffin tins were filled too full. How did you measure your flour?
These muffins turned out wonderfully! I had to make some recipe adaptions to make these gluten-free and replace the yogurt with vegan buttermilk since I didn’t have any yogurt on hand. I also made a blueberry-lemon icing which paired very well with the muffins.
For gluten-free: I just used regular GF AP flour, but I added 1/2 tsp xantham gum to the dry mix. In my experience, GF baked goods don’t brown up like regular wheat flour, so mine were still pretty pale at the end but baked through just fine.
For the vegan buttermilk: Mix 3/4 cup dairy-free milk with 3/4 Tbsp apple cider vinegar, then let it sit for 5-10 minutes before adding the other wet ingredients.
For the blueberry-lemon icing: I don’t measure icing because it’s a pretty simple formula: lots of powdered sugar and a little liquid. I’ve found it works just fine to tweak it as you go along. You basically want to start with what looks like an obnoxious amount of powdered sugar, add a tiiiny amount of milk or dairy-free milk (I recommend no more than 1 Tbsp at a time). Mix it together and continue adding milk until it’s half wet, half dry. Then add 1-2 tsp lemon extract or lemon juice and ~2 Tbsp or so of blueberry juice. For the blueberry juice, I microwaved some frozen blueberries, then crushed them up with a fork, then put them in a sieve to squeeze out the juice using the back of a spoon. If your mix gets to be too runny, just add some more powdered sugar.
Thank you for sharing how you adapted this recipe! I know others will find it helpful.
My batter came out very dry! I double checked to make sure I didn’t miss any ingredients. I used plain whole wheat flour and greek yogurt.
Thanks!
Hi Robyn, I’m sorry to hear that. How did you measure the flour? Be sure to spoon and level it.
These were delicious! Thanks for the great recipe.
You’re welcome, Rae!
Can you substitute flax seeds for poppy seeds for toddler friendly?
Hi! I recommend this recipe as written. I don’t know how flax would impact your results. Sorry!
Loved them! This recipe is excellent.
Great to hear, Laura! I appreciate your review.
Can this be adapted to use maple syrup as a sweetener? I love the orange cranberry muffins and want these to be sweetened similarly!
Love this recipe! I make them with gf plain flour and have worked out perfectly every time. Love how light and and fluffy they come out.
As I live alone I tend to freeze the batch and stick one in the microwave for a minute when I need an afternoon sweet treat, taste just as good as fresh!
That’s great to hear, Megan! I’m glad you loved it.
These were great! Our household is sick so we were looking for something that would satisfy our sweet tooth but not set us back. My only suggestion is to perhaps use weight in grams for your recipes. I went easy on the lemon zest and juice since I only had huge lemons and not medium lemons. I went too cautious, but if weights were provided, I could’ve accommodated! Thanks for all your great recipes!
Oh. no! I hope everyone is feeling better, Donna.
I’ve not tried this recipe, but I LOVE your other muffin recipes! I’d like to make this in my MINI-muffin tin (24 mini-muffins). Do you know how to convert this recipe for mini-muffins?
Thanks for your reply!
I can’t wait for you to make it! You will use the same temperature, but cut the time in half. However, keep an eye on them so they don’t get burnt.
Good not great. Should have a more specific intense lemon flavor
Can you make this as a bread instead? I love your pumpkin bread recipe and would love a good lemon poppyseed bread rather than muffin. Thanks!
Hi Emma-Kate, yes you can. Just bake it in a 9 inch loaf pan for about 55 minutes.
Could I make this as a bread? I loved your healthy pumpkin bread and would love a lemon poppyseed version :)
Hi Emma-Kate, yes you can make as a bread in a 9 inch loaf plan. It should bake for about 55 minutes.
These weren’t my favorite. I LOVE this blog and often make your muffins, but the batter was dense and dry (maybe my lemon wasn’t juicy enough?), they didn’t ride much, and they were only a little sweet. Will revert to one of your other muffin recipes! Thank you!