Deeply spiced pumpkin zucchini bread has that tall, crackly top and a moist crumb that stays tender for days without turning heavy. The pumpkin brings the autumn flavor people expect, but the zucchini keeps the loaf soft and gives it a little extra body without making it taste vegetal. Sliced warm, it tastes like pumpkin bread with a quieter, fresher finish underneath.
The trick is treating the zucchini like a moisture ingredient, not a vegetable to notice. Once it’s grated, it needs to be squeezed dry enough that it doesn’t dump water into the batter and make the center gummy. The other thing that matters is mixing only until the flour disappears, because overworking quick bread tightens the crumb and keeps the loaf from rising with that nice, even dome.
Below, I’ve included the small details that make this loaf bake up evenly, plus a few smart variations if you want to add pecans, chocolate chips, or make it a little more breakfast-friendly.
The loaf came out incredibly moist without being dense, and the zucchini disappeared into the crumb the way it should. I loved the crackly turbinado sugar top with the pumpkin spice flavor underneath.
Save this pumpkin zucchini bread for the days when you want a soft, spice-filled loaf with a crackly sugar top.
The Reason This Loaf Stays Moist Without Turning Dense
Pumpkin zucchini bread can go wrong in one of two ways: it bakes up heavy from too much batter moisture, or it turns cakey and dry because the batter was overmixed. This version avoids both by balancing a thick pumpkin base with zucchini that has been squeezed dry enough to blend in quietly instead of thinning the batter. You still get moisture, but it’s controlled moisture.
The other piece that matters is the sugar and oil combination. Oil keeps the crumb soft even after the loaf cools, while the two sugars give you that slightly crisp top and a deeper, rounder sweetness than granulated sugar alone. If you bake quick breads often, you’ll recognize that the visual cue here is as important as the timer: the center should spring back lightly, and the crack on top should look set rather than wet.
- Pumpkin puree — Use plain canned pumpkin, not pumpkin pie filling. Pie filling already contains sugar and spices, and that throws off both flavor and texture.
- Zucchini — Grate it finely and squeeze it dry in a clean kitchen towel or a few layers of paper towels. If it’s left wet, the loaf can sink in the middle.
- Brown sugar — This adds a little molasses depth and helps the crumb stay tender. Light or dark brown sugar both work; dark will taste a touch richer.
- Turbinado sugar — This is what gives the top that bakery-style crunch. If you skip it, the loaf still works, but you lose the crackled finish.
Building the Batter So the Crumb Stays Tender

Dry ingredients first. Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, pumpkin pie spice, and cinnamon together until the spices are evenly distributed. That keeps you from getting one bite that tastes heavily spiced and another that tastes flat. It also helps the leaveners spread through the batter so the loaf rises evenly instead of doming on one side.
Wet ingredients until smooth. Beat the sugars, eggs, oil, pumpkin puree, and vanilla together until the mixture looks glossy and fully blended. You’re not trying to whip in air here; you just want the sugars dissolved enough that the batter bakes into a fine, even crumb. Stir in the squeezed zucchini last so it disperses without breaking down.
Fold, don’t stir. Add the dry mixture and fold only until the last streaks of flour disappear. If you keep mixing once the batter looks combined, the loaf can turn tough and tunnel through the middle. Fold in pecans or chocolate chips at the end if you’re using them, then stop.
Watch the pan, not just the clock. The loaf is ready when the top is deeply golden, the center no longer jiggles, and a toothpick comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs. If the top is browning too quickly before the center sets, tent it loosely with foil for the last part of baking.
Add Chocolate Chips for a Dessert-Style Loaf
Fold in the chocolate chips at the very end so they stay evenly scattered instead of melting into streaks. The chocolate makes the loaf taste richer and a little more like dessert, especially with the cinnamon and pumpkin spice. Semi-sweet chips work best because they balance the sweetness of the batter.
Swap in Pecans for More Crunch
Chopped pecans add a toasty edge and a little texture against the soft crumb. If you want stronger nut flavor, toast them briefly before adding them, then cool them first so they don’t melt the batter’s fat. Walnuts work too, but pecans lean sweeter and fit the pumpkin better.
Make It Dairy-Free Without Changing the Method
This loaf is already dairy-free as written, which makes it an easy option when you need a breakfast bread that works for more than one table. Just keep an eye on any add-ins like chocolate chips and use a dairy-free brand if needed. The texture stays the same because the moisture comes from pumpkin, zucchini, eggs, and oil, not butter.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store tightly wrapped for up to 5 days. The crumb stays moist, though the top will soften a bit after day one.
- Freezer: Freezes well for up to 3 months. Wrap individual slices or the whole cooled loaf in plastic, then foil, and thaw at room temperature.
- Reheating: Warm slices in a toaster oven or microwave for a few seconds until just heated through. Don’t overheat it or the crumb will go from soft to rubbery fast.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Pumpkin Zucchini Bread
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F and grease a 9x5 loaf pan so the batter releases cleanly.
- Whisk all-purpose flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, pumpkin pie spice, and cinnamon together until evenly combined, with no visible spice clumps.
- Beat granulated sugar, brown sugar, eggs, vegetable oil, canned pumpkin puree, and vanilla extract until smooth and glossy.
- Stir in grated zucchini until the batter looks evenly speckled throughout.
- Fold the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients just until combined—stop when you no longer see dry flour.
- Fold in chopped pecans or chocolate chips if using so the mix-ins are distributed without overmixing.
- Pour the batter into the prepared pan and sprinkle turbinado sugar over the top for a crackled finish.
- Bake at 350°F for 60–70 minutes, until a toothpick comes out clean and the top is golden-brown.
- Cool for 15 minutes before slicing so the loaf sets and the crumb holds together when you cut it.


