Fluffy Dairy-Free Scones (Easy Bakery Recipe)
A warm dairy-free scone with a cup of tea is one of my favorite quiet pleasures, and these are the ones I make on repeat. They bake up tall and golden, tender and fluffy inside with a lightly crisp top, ready to split and pile with jam. I went through plenty of dense, dry, hockey-puck scones before I learned the rules that actually matter: keep everything cold, handle the dough as little as possible, and don’t twist the cutter. Now they come together in one bowl in about ten minutes of hands-on time, no mixer required. They taste buttery and rich without a drop of dairy, and a fresh batch never lasts long in my kitchen.
By Brooks · Tested and updated May 31, 2026
Key Takeaways
- Keep everything cold — cold dairy-free butter and milk make the flakiest, tallest scones.
- Don’t overwork the dough for tender, fluffy results instead of tough ones.
- Press to 3/4-inch thick and cut straight down without twisting for a good rise.
- Brush the tops with chilled dairy-free milk for color and a crisp finish.
- One bowl, no mixer, ready in about 30 minutes start to finish.
What Are Dairy-Free Scones?
Dairy-free scones are tender, fluffy baked pastries made with no butter, milk, or cream from dairy. Cold dairy-free butter is cut into the flour to create flaky layers, while dairy-free milk brings the dough together. A little baking powder gives them a tall rise, and the result is a buttery-tasting, lightly crisp-topped scone that splits perfectly for jam. Quick to make in one bowl and endlessly adaptable with fruit, chocolate, or savory add-ins, they’re a comforting, reliably dairy-free bake for breakfast or afternoon tea.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Tall and fluffy. Tender inside with a lightly crisp top.
- One bowl, no mixer. Quick and easy to put together.
- Buttery flavor. Rich and satisfying without any dairy.
- Endlessly adaptable. Sweet or savory, fruit or chocolate.
- Freezer-friendly. Freeze the dough or baked scones.
Ingredients
This makes 8 scones. Cold ingredients are the secret, so chill your butter and milk well.
- 2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour
- 1/3 cup (65 g) granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 1/2 cup (113 g) cold dairy-free butter, cubed
- 1/2 cup (120 ml) cold dairy-free milk, plus more for brushing
- 1 large egg (or 1 flax egg for vegan)
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Serve these warm with a mug of my homemade dairy-free coffee creamer for a proper cozy breakfast.

How to Make Dairy-Free Scones
Step 1: Whisk the dry ingredients
Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Tip: Whisking thoroughly distributes the baking powder evenly so the scones rise uniformly instead of lopsided.
Step 2: Cut in the cold butter
Cut the cold dairy-free butter into the flour with a pastry cutter or your fingertips until pea-sized crumbs form. Tip: Keep the butter cold and the pieces visible; those little pockets of butter melt in the oven to create flaky, tender layers.
Step 3: Add the wet ingredients
Whisk the cold milk, egg, and vanilla together, then pour into the flour and stir until just combined. Tip: Stop mixing while the dough still looks shaggy; overworking it makes dense, tough scones instead of light, fluffy ones.
Step 4: Shape the dough
Gently pat the dough into a 3/4-inch-thick round or rectangle on a floured surface. Tip: Handle it as little as possible; a few gentle folds bring it together while keeping the butter cold and the texture light.
Step 5: Cut and chill
Cut into 8 wedges or rounds, then chill on the tray for 15 minutes while the oven heats to 400°F (200°C). Tip: Cut straight down without twisting the cutter — twisting seals the edges and stops the scones from rising tall.
Step 6: Brush and bake
Brush the tops with chilled dairy-free milk and bake for 12 to 15 minutes until golden. Tip: The milk brush gives a beautifully browned, crisp top; pull the scones when they’re golden and sound hollow when tapped.

Expert Tips & Tricks
- Freeze the butter and grate it in for the flakiest, easiest distribution.
- Chill before baking so the scones hold their shape and rise tall.
- Don’t twist the cutter — press straight down for the best lift.
- Weigh the flour to avoid dense, dry scones from over-measuring.
Variations & Substitutions
- Vegan: Use a flax egg and a vegan butter and milk.
- Gluten-free: Swap in a 1:1 gluten-free baking blend with xanthan gum.
- Fruit: Fold in 1/2 cup dried cranberries, blueberries, or raisins.
- Chocolate chip: Add 1/2 cup dairy-free chocolate chips.
- Savory: Skip the sugar and add herbs and dairy-free cheese, lovely with my dairy-free bechamel sauce.
Storage & Reheating
- Room temperature: Store airtight for up to 2 days; best the day they’re baked.
- Freezer (baked): Freeze for up to 3 months and thaw at room temperature.
- Freezer (dough): Freeze cut wedges and bake from frozen, adding 2 to 3 minutes.
- Reheat: Warm in a 300°F oven for 5 minutes to revive the fresh-baked texture.
Nutrition Information
Values are an estimate per scone (recipe makes 8), based on USDA FoodData Central reference data. Numbers vary with add-ins and your dairy-free butter.
| Nutrient | Amount per scone |
|---|---|
| Calories | 278 |
| Total Fat | 12 g |
| Saturated Fat | 3 g |
| Carbohydrates | 38 g |
| Sugar | 10 g |
| Fiber | 1 g |
| Protein | 4 g |
| Sodium | 320 mg |
Cold dairy-free butter is the key to flaky layers; this dairy-free substitutes guide covers choosing baking-friendly dairy swaps.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are my scones dense and flat?
Usually the butter got too warm, the dough was overworked, or the cutter was twisted. Keep everything cold, handle the dough minimally, and press the cutter straight down for tall, fluffy scones.
What is the best dairy-free butter for scones?
Use a firm, block-style dairy-free baking butter rather than a soft tub spread. It holds its shape when cold, creating the flaky pockets that give scones their tender, layered texture.
Can I make these dairy-free scones vegan?
Yes. Replace the egg with a flax egg (1 tablespoon ground flax plus 3 tablespoons water, rested 5 minutes) and use a vegan butter and milk. They stay tender and fluffy.
Do I have to chill the dough before baking?
It really helps. A short 15-minute chill firms the butter so the scones hold their shape and rise tall instead of spreading into flat discs in the oven.
Can I freeze scones?
Yes. Freeze the cut, unbaked wedges and bake straight from frozen, adding 2 to 3 minutes. Baked scones also freeze well for up to 3 months; thaw and warm before serving.
For more easy dairy-free bakes, try my tender dairy-free muffins or a loaf of dairy-free banana bread.
Related Dairy-Free Recipes
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