Banana bread cinnamon rolls — the ultimate mashup breakfast you never knew you needed

Total Time: 2 hrs 25 mins Difficulty: Intermediate
Soft, fluffy banana-infused cinnamon rolls with sweet vanilla glaze — the best use for overripe bananas
Four golden banana bread cinnamon rolls in a white baking dish covered in a thick vanilla glaze with visible cinnamon swirls and overripe bananas in the background pinit

You know those two or three overripe bananas sitting on your counter that are just a little too far gone to eat but feel like a waste to throw away? Stop making banana bread with them.

Well — do not stop forever. But just this once, make these banana bread cinnamon rolls instead and prepare to have your mind completely blown.

This recipe takes everything you love about banana bread — that warm, sweet, deeply banana flavor — and wraps it inside the soft, pillowy, swirled format of a classic cinnamon roll.

The result is something that tastes like your favorite banana bread and your favorite cinnamon roll had the most delicious baby imaginable. Topped with a simple vanilla glaze that melts into every layer while the rolls are still warm from the oven.

Yes, this recipe takes a little more time than throwing bananas into a loaf pan. But the result is so spectacular that you will never look at overripe bananas the same way again. These are weekend morning material. Special occasion material. The kind of thing you make when you want to genuinely impress people without saying a word. Let’s get into it.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • The best use for overripe bananas by a wide margin. If you have been making banana bread on repeat every time your bananas go brown, this recipe is the upgrade your overripe banana situation has been waiting for.
  • Incredibly soft and fluffy texture. The mashed banana in the dough adds natural moisture and a tenderness that makes these rolls softer than a standard cinnamon roll dough. Every bite melts in your mouth.
  • That banana flavor throughout every layer. The banana is not just a background note — it comes through clearly in the dough and complements the cinnamon sugar filling in a way that is genuinely exceptional.
  • Freezer friendly. These rolls freeze beautifully, which means you can make a big batch and have a warm, homemade breakfast ready whenever you need one with very minimal effort.
  • Kid approved without reservation. Warm, sweet, banana-flavored cinnamon rolls with vanilla glaze. If kids are not excited about this then honestly nothing will work. IMO this is one of the best breakfasts you can put in front of a child.
  • Completely customizable. Add chopped walnuts or pecans to the filling, swap the vanilla glaze for a cream cheese frosting, or add a drizzle of peanut butter on top. This recipe handles variations beautifully.

Ingredients with key notes

For the banana dough:

  • 3 very ripe bananas, mashed — the riper the better. You want bananas that are deeply speckled or almost entirely brown. Overripe bananas are sweeter, more flavorful, and have a softer texture that incorporates into the dough much more easily than yellow bananas. If your bananas are not quite ripe enough, place them unpeeled on a baking sheet in a 300°F oven for 15-20 minutes until the skins turn black and the flesh is soft and sweet.
  • 2 and 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast (1 standard packet) — make sure your yeast is fresh and active. Old or dead yeast is the most common reason cinnamon rolls do not rise properly. To test your yeast, dissolve it in the warm milk with a pinch of sugar — if it foams and bubbles within 5-10 minutes it is active and ready to use. If nothing happens, your yeast is dead and needs to be replaced.
  • 1/2 cup warm milk — warmed to about 110°F / 43°C. Too hot and it will kill the yeast — too cold and the yeast will not activate. Aim for the temperature of a warm bath. Whole milk gives the richest dough but any milk works.
  • 1/3 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/3 cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
  • 2 large eggs, room temperature — room temperature eggs incorporate into the dough much more smoothly than cold eggs straight from the fridge. Set them out 30 minutes before you start.
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 4 and 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting — start with 4 cups and add the remaining half cup gradually if needed. The dough should be soft and slightly tacky but not sticky. Banana dough tends to be slightly wetter than standard cinnamon roll dough due to the moisture in the bananas so do not be alarmed if it feels softer than you expect.

For the cinnamon filling:

  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened to room temperature — softened butter spreads much more easily and evenly over the dough than melted butter. Take it out of the fridge at least an hour before you need it.
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar, packed — brown sugar gives the filling a deeper, more caramel-like sweetness than white sugar that pairs beautifully with the banana dough.
  • 2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg — a small amount of nutmeg adds a subtle warmth that complements the banana and cinnamon flavors perfectly.

For the vanilla glaze:

  • 1 and 1/2 cups powdered sugar, sifted
  • 3-4 tablespoons milk — add one tablespoon at a time until you reach your desired consistency. A thicker glaze stays on top of the rolls, a thinner glaze soaks into the layers beautifully — both are delicious.
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • Pinch of salt

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Activate the yeast

In a small bowl or measuring cup, combine the warm milk and a pinch of granulated sugar. Sprinkle the yeast over the milk and stir gently. Let it sit for 5-10 minutes until the mixture is foamy and bubbly. This tells you the yeast is alive and active. If nothing happens after 10 minutes, discard the mixture and start again with fresh yeast. This step cannot be skipped — dead yeast means dense, flat rolls that will not rise no matter how long you wait.

Step 2: Make the banana dough

In a large mixing bowl, combine the mashed bananas, sugar, melted butter, eggs, and vanilla extract. Stir until well combined. Pour in the activated yeast mixture and stir again. Add the salt and begin adding the flour one cup at a time, stirring after each addition. Once the dough becomes too thick to stir, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface and knead by hand for 8-10 minutes until the dough is smooth, elastic, and slightly tacky but not sticky. The dough will be slightly softer than a standard cinnamon roll dough due to the banana — this is completely normal. Alternatively, use a stand mixer with a dough hook on medium speed for 6-8 minutes.

Step 3: First rise

Shape the dough into a ball and place it in a lightly greased large bowl. Cover with a clean kitchen towel or plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm spot for 1 hour to 1 hour 30 minutes until doubled in size. The best spot for rising dough is inside your oven with just the oven light on — the gentle warmth is perfect for yeast activity. Ever made cinnamon rolls that came out dense and heavy instead of light and fluffy? Rushing or skipping the rise is almost always the reason. Give the dough the time it needs.

Step 4: Make the filling

While the dough is rising, mix together the softened butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg in a small bowl until it forms a smooth, spreadable paste. Set aside at room temperature so it stays soft and easy to spread.

Step 5: Roll out the dough

Once the dough has doubled in size, punch it down gently to release the gas. Turn it out onto a lightly floured surface and roll it into a large rectangle approximately 18 inches wide by 12 inches tall. Try to get the thickness as even as possible across the entire rectangle so the rolls bake evenly.

Step 6: Add the filling and roll

Spread the cinnamon sugar butter mixture evenly across the entire surface of the dough rectangle, going all the way to the edges on three sides and leaving about half an inch clear along the far long edge — this helps the rolls seal when you roll them up. Starting from the long edge closest to you, roll the dough up tightly and evenly into a log shape. Pinch the seam gently to seal.

Step 7: Cut the rolls

Using a sharp serrated knife or unflavored dental floss, cut the log into 12 equal rolls, each about 1.5 inches thick. Dental floss gives the cleanest cut without compressing the dough — slide a piece of floss under the log, cross the ends over the top, and pull to slice through cleanly. Place the rolls cut-side up in a greased 9×13 inch baking dish with a little space between each one.

Step 8: Second rise

Cover the baking dish loosely with plastic wrap or a clean kitchen towel and let the rolls rise for a second time for 30-45 minutes until they are puffy and touching each other. This second rise is what gives you that pillowy, pull-apart texture. Do not skip it.

Step 9: Bake

Preheat the oven to 350°F / 175°C. Bake the rolls for 22-25 minutes until the tops are lightly golden and the centers are set. Be careful not to overbake — overcooked cinnamon rolls become dry and tough very quickly. Pull them out when they look just barely done and the internal temperature reaches 190°F. They will continue cooking slightly from the residual heat of the pan.

Step 10: Make the glaze and finish

While the rolls are baking, whisk together the powdered sugar, vanilla extract, salt, and milk one tablespoon at a time until you reach your desired glaze consistency. Pour the glaze generously over the rolls immediately while they are still hot from the oven. The heat from the rolls will cause the glaze to melt slightly and soak into all the layers — this is exactly what you want. Serve warm.

Serving suggestions

These banana bread cinnamon rolls are pretty magnificent on their own but here are a few ways to make them even more special:

  • With cream cheese frosting instead of glaze — if you want to go full indulgence mode, swap the simple vanilla glaze for a thick cream cheese frosting. Beat 4 oz of softened cream cheese with 1 cup of powdered sugar, a splash of vanilla, and enough milk to reach a spreadable consistency. Spread it over the warm rolls and prepare yourself for something extraordinary.
  • With a drizzle of peanut butter — warm a few tablespoons of peanut butter in the microwave until pourable and drizzle it over the glazed rolls. Banana, cinnamon, and peanut butter is one of the great flavor combinations of all time and it works spectacularly here.
  • With chopped walnuts or pecans — scatter toasted chopped walnuts or pecans over the glaze while it is still wet. The crunch against the soft pillowy dough adds an incredible textural contrast.
  • With a side of fresh fruit — a bowl of fresh berries or sliced banana alongside these rolls makes for a complete, beautiful breakfast spread that looks like it came from a brunch restaurant.
  • Warmed up the next day — leftover rolls heated in the microwave for 20-30 seconds with a tiny splash of water in the container to generate steam come out almost as soft and fresh as they were straight from the oven. FYI day two rolls with coffee is genuinely one of life’s small pleasures.

Storage tips

Room temperature: Store leftover rolls in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days. Place a piece of parchment paper between layers if stacking to prevent them from sticking together.

Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days. Reheat individually in the microwave for 20-30 seconds with a small splash of water to keep them moist, or warm in a 300°F oven for 8-10 minutes.

Freezer — baked rolls: Allow the baked rolls to cool completely before glazing if you plan to freeze them. Wrap individually in plastic wrap and store in a freezer-safe bag for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight at room temperature and reheat in the oven. Add the glaze fresh after reheating for the best result.

Freezer — unbaked rolls: You can also freeze the rolls before the second rise. After cutting and placing in the baking dish, cover tightly and freeze for up to 1 month. To bake from frozen, place the covered dish in the refrigerator the night before to thaw and complete the second rise overnight. Bake as directed the next morning for fresh-from-scratch rolls with almost no morning effort.

Note: The banana in the dough means these rolls stay moist longer than standard cinnamon rolls — the natural moisture from the bananas works in your favor during storage.

Brief closing

Two beloved baked goods, one incredible recipe, and the best possible use for those overripe bananas you have been ignoring on your counter. These banana bread cinnamon rolls are soft, warmly spiced, naturally sweet, and finished with a vanilla glaze that makes every single bite feel like a genuine treat.

Make them on a slow weekend morning, pull them warm from the oven, and pour that glaze on generously. Then sit down, take your time, and enjoy every single bite.

Drop a comment below and let me know how yours turned out — and whether you went with the vanilla glaze or the cream cheese frosting. I have a feeling I already know the answer. 🙂

Difficulty: Intermediate Prep Time 2 hrs Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 2 hrs 25 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 10
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

These banana bread cinnamon rolls are what happens when two of the most beloved baked goods in the world decide to become one. Soft, pillowy dough made with mashed ripe bananas, rolled around a generous cinnamon sugar filling, baked until golden, and finished with a sweet vanilla glaze that melts into every swirl. If you have overripe bananas sitting on your counter and you are tired of making the same old banana bread — this is what you make instead.

Ingredients

For the banana dough:

For the cinnamon filling:

For the vanilla glaze:

Instructions

  1. Combine warm milk and a pinch of sugar. Sprinkle yeast over the top and let sit for 5-10 minutes until foamy.
  2. In a large bowl mix mashed bananas, sugar, melted butter, eggs, and vanilla. Add activated yeast mixture. Add salt and flour gradually, mixing until a soft dough forms. Knead for 8-10 minutes until smooth and elastic.
  3. Place dough in a greased bowl, cover, and let rise in a warm spot for 1 to 1 hour 30 minutes until doubled.
  4. Mix softened butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg into a smooth paste. Set aside.
  5. Punch down dough and roll into an 18x12 inch rectangle. Spread filling evenly over the surface. Roll up tightly from the long edge and cut into 12 equal rolls.
  6. Place rolls in a greased 9x13 inch baking dish. Cover and let rise for 30-45 minutes until puffy.
  7. Bake at 350°F / 175°C for 22-25 minutes until lightly golden.
  8. Whisk together glaze ingredients. Pour over hot rolls immediately. Serve warm.

Note

Use very ripe overripe bananas for the best flavor and sweetness.

Make sure your yeast is fresh and active before starting.

Do not skip either rise — both are essential for soft fluffy rolls.

Pour the glaze over the rolls while they are still hot for the best result.

Keywords: banana bread cinnamon rolls, banana cinnamon rolls, banana rolls recipe, cinnamon rolls with banana, easy cinnamon rolls, banana bread recipe, homemade cinnamon rolls
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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I make these rolls the night before?

Yes and this is actually one of the best ways to make this recipe. After cutting the rolls and placing them in the baking dish, cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight instead of doing the second rise at room temperature. The rolls will slowly rise in the fridge overnight. In the morning, remove them from the fridge and let them sit at room temperature for 30-45 minutes while the oven preheats, then bake as directed. Fresh warm cinnamon rolls in the morning with almost zero morning effort is a very good situation to be in.

My dough is too sticky to work with — what do I do?

Banana dough is naturally wetter and stickier than standard cinnamon roll dough due to the moisture in the bananas. Add flour one tablespoon at a time, kneading it in fully after each addition, until the dough is manageable — tacky but not sticking to your hands. Avoid adding too much flour at once as this can make the dough tough and the finished rolls dense.

Can I use instant yeast instead of active dry yeast?

Yes. If using instant yeast you can skip the activation step and add the yeast directly to the flour. Reduce the rise times slightly as instant yeast works faster than active dry yeast — check the dough after 45 minutes for the first rise and 20-25 minutes for the second rise.

Why did my rolls not rise?

The most common culprits are dead yeast, milk that was too hot and killed the yeast, or a kitchen that was too cold for the yeast to activate properly. Always test your yeast before committing to the recipe and make sure your milk is warm but not hot — around 110°F is ideal. If your kitchen is cold, the inside of your oven with just the light on is the perfect warm environment for rising dough.

Can I add mix-ins to the filling?

Absolutely. Chopped walnuts, pecans, chocolate chips, or even a thin layer of peanut butter spread over the dough before the cinnamon filling are all excellent additions. Keep any mix-ins fairly fine so they do not interfere with rolling the dough up tightly.

Can I make these dairy free?

Yes. Swap the butter in the dough and filling for a good quality vegan butter like Miyoko's or Earth Balance. Use your preferred plant-based milk in both the dough and the glaze. The rolls will taste slightly different but still very delicious. Make sure to check that your plant-based milk is unsweetened and unflavored for the best result in the dough.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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