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Nuts & SeedsCorylus avellana

Hazelnuts โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Corylus avellana ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

628
kcal / 100g
16.7g
Carbs
15.0g
Protein
9.7g
Fibre
15
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Hazelnuts are nutritionally exceptional among tree nuts โ€” providing the highest vitamin E content of any nut (86% RDI), extraordinary manganese (343% RDI), meaningful protein and a heart-healthy fat profile. They are the primary ingredient in Nutella, praline, gianduja and hazelnut butter โ€” one of the most universally loved flavour profiles in confectionery. Australian hazelnut production is centred in Victoria's alpine areas and Tasmania. Adjust the slider below for your serving size.
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Serving size calculator
Drag the slider โ€” all values update instantly
Serving size:30g
188Calories (kcal)
5.0Carbs (g)
4.5Protein (g)
2.9Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories628 kcal31%
Carbohydrates16.7g6%
Dietary fibre9.7g35%
Sugars4.3gโ€”
Glycaemic Index~15 โ€” Lowโ€”
Protein15.0g30%
Vitamin E15.3mg86%
Manganese6.2mg343%
Copper1.72mg86%
Thiamine (B1)0.64mg43%
Magnesium163mg41%
Folate113ยตg28%

Based on Australian NRV. Source: FSANZ Australian Food Composition Database.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

15
Glycaemic IndexLow GIHazelnuts have a GI of approximately 15 โ€” very low. Like most nuts, they are predominantly fat and protein with minimal digestible starch, resulting in negligible blood sugar impact.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Manganese
6.2mg
343% RDI
Vitamin E
15.3mg
86% RDI
Copper
1.72mg
86% RDI
Thiamine B1
0.64mg
43% RDI
Magnesium
163mg
41% RDI
Folate
113ยตg
28% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
Antioxidant powerhouse โ€” highest Vitamin E of any nut (86% RDI)

Hazelnuts provide 15.3mg of vitamin E per 100g โ€” the highest of any tree nut. Vitamin E is a fat-soluble antioxidant that protects cell membranes from oxidative damage, supports immune function and has been associated with reduced risk of age-related cognitive decline. Regular hazelnut consumption is one of the most practical ways to meet vitamin E requirements from whole food.

โค๏ธ
Heart health and cholesterol reduction

Hazelnuts' combination of monounsaturated fats, vitamin E, manganese and polyphenols provides comprehensive cardiovascular protection. A meta-analysis of 8 clinical trials found hazelnut consumption significantly reduced LDL cholesterol, total cholesterol and triglycerides, with the most pronounced effects in people with elevated baseline lipid levels. The effect is comparable to almonds per gram of nut.

๐Ÿง 
Cognitive function and nerve health

The combination of vitamin E (neuroprotective), thiamine B1 (neural signalling), folate (homocysteine reduction) and manganese (antioxidant enzyme support) makes hazelnuts a comprehensive brain-health food. Population studies associate nut consumption in general โ€” and vitamin E specifically โ€” with slower cognitive decline in ageing adults.

๐Ÿ’ช
Bone health โ€” exceptional manganese (343% RDI)

At 343% of daily manganese needs per 100g, hazelnuts are one of the richest dietary sources of this mineral โ€” essential for bone formation, antioxidant enzyme production and carbohydrate metabolism. Combined with their copper (86% RDI โ€” essential for collagen and bone matrix formation), hazelnuts provide strong bone-supporting mineral nutrition.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿคง
Tree nut allergy โ€” significant anaphylaxis risk

Hazelnut allergy is one of the most common tree nut allergies globally โ€” and notably the most common adult-onset food allergy in Europe. Hazelnut allergy is strongly cross-reactive with birch pollen allergy (oral allergy syndrome) โ€” people with hay fever from birch pollen often develop hazelnut sensitivity. Reactions range from mild oral itching to anaphylaxis.

๐ŸŽ‚
Nutella and hazelnut spreads โ€” high sugar content

Commercial hazelnut spreads (Nutella) contain approximately 57% sugar and 31% fat โ€” only about 13% comes from hazelnuts. The health properties of hazelnuts do NOT transfer to Nutella and similar confectionery. Whole or dry-roasted hazelnuts are nutritionally completely different from processed hazelnut spreads.

โš–๏ธ
Calorie density โ€” portion awareness

At 628 kcal per 100g, hazelnuts are calorie-dense. A 30g serving (approximately 20 nuts) provides 188 calories. Use measured portions for daily consumption.

๐Ÿ’Š
Blood-thinning medications

Hazelnuts contain vitamin E which has mild blood-thinning properties at high doses. At typical food amounts (30g/day), the risk is minimal, but people on anticoagulants should maintain consistent intake and inform their doctor.

โœ… For most healthy adults without tree nut allergy, hazelnuts are a highly nutritious food appropriate for daily consumption (30g/day). They are particularly beneficial for cardiovascular health, vitamin E status and cognitive function support.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to select & buy hazelnuts

1
Choose blanched or skin-on based on use

Skin-on hazelnuts retain more antioxidant polyphenols concentrated in the dark skin but have a slightly bitter, astringent flavour. Blanched (skin-off) hazelnuts have a milder, creamier flavour ideal for baking and confectionery. To skin at home: roast 10 min at 180ยฐC, wrap in a towel and rub vigorously.

2
Roasted for flavour, raw for nutrition

Roasting hazelnuts intensifies their flavour dramatically โ€” the Maillard reaction creates the characteristic toasted hazelnut aroma. Light dry-roasting (10โ€“12 min at 160ยฐC) is the sweet spot. Heavy roasting reduces vitamin E content significantly.

3
Check freshness โ€” hazelnuts go rancid quickly

Fresh hazelnuts have a sweet, nutty aroma. Rancid hazelnuts smell sour, stale or like crayons. Buy from stores with high stock turnover. Hazelnuts older than 6 months in typical pantry storage are often rancid โ€” buy in smaller quantities and refrigerate.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Australian hazelnut production is centred in Victoria's Ovens Valley near Myrtleford and Bright, and in Tasmania's Huon Valley. The harvest season is Februaryโ€“April. Most supermarket hazelnuts are imported from Turkey (which produces 70% of global supply). For the freshest product look for Australian-grown labelling or buy direct from Victorian orchard farm shops.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Pantry
1โ€“3 months
Sealed airtight container, cool dark

Hazelnuts go rancid more quickly than most nuts due to their high polyunsaturated fat fraction. Pantry storage is only suitable for short periods โ€” move to fridge in warm weather or after a month.

โ„๏ธ
Refrigerator
6โ€“9 months
Airtight glass jar

Best everyday storage. Cold temperature significantly slows oil oxidation. Keep in an opaque container to prevent light oxidation. Hazelnut flour and meal should always be refrigerated and used within 4 weeks of opening.

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Freezer
Up to 18 months
Zip-lock bag, air removed

Excellent for long-term storage, particularly roasted hazelnuts. Hazelnut meal and flour freezes exceptionally well and can be used directly from frozen in baking without thawing.

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๐Ÿ“– About hazelnuts โ€” complete guide

Hazelnuts have one of the longest relationships with human food culture of any tree nut โ€” evidence of hazelnut consumption has been found at Mesolithic sites across Europe dating to 7,000 BCE, and hazelnut groves were so abundant in post-glacial Britain that archaeologists describe it as the 'hazel period.' The Romans called hazelnuts 'nux Avellana' โ€” after the ancient Italian town of Avella โ€” which is where the species name Corylus avellana originates. For medieval Europeans in regions where olive oil was unavailable, hazelnut oil was the primary culinary oil, and hazelnuts were a critical winter calorie source.

The nutritional paradox of hazelnuts is that they are most famous as the primary ingredient in Nutella โ€” which is approximately 57% sugar and contains only 13% hazelnuts by weight. The genuine nutritional properties of whole hazelnuts (86% vitamin E RDI, 343% manganese, 30% protein, heart-healthy monounsaturated fats) bear essentially no relationship to the commercial hazelnut spread market. Eating 30g of whole hazelnuts daily provides an entirely different metabolic outcome than eating the equivalent weight of Nutella. The hazelnut's genuine nutritional reputation has been somewhat obscured by its association with confectionery, but the clinical evidence for whole hazelnuts' cardiovascular benefits is strong.

โš–๏ธ Compare hazelnuts to similar nuts

Hazelnuts
628 kcal
VS
Macadamia
VS
Almonds
VS
Walnut
Compare in full tool โ†’

๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about hazelnuts

๐Ÿซ
1
Nutella contains only about 13% hazelnuts โ€” and 57% sugar
A 200g jar of Nutella contains approximately 50 hazelnuts. The rest is palm oil, skim milk powder, cocoa and, predominantly, sugar. The health properties of hazelnuts โ€” vitamin E, manganese, heart-healthy fats โ€” are essentially absent in Nutella at the concentration of nuts it actually contains. The brand's association with hazelnuts has created a widespread misconception that Nutella is nutritious.
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2
Turkey produces 70% of the world's hazelnuts โ€” primarily from the Black Sea coastal region
The Giresun, Trabzon and Ordu provinces of Turkey's Black Sea coast produce more hazelnuts than the rest of the world combined. The climate is uniquely suited โ€” mild winters, abundant rainfall and mountain slopes that prevent waterlogging. Italy (second) and Azerbaijan (third) are distant competitors. Australia produces a small but premium-quality crop from Victoria's alpine valleys.
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3
Australian hazelnuts are grown in Victoria's alpine valleys โ€” the Ovens Valley near Myrtleford is the primary region
The Ovens Valley near Myrtleford in the Victorian Alps produces Australian-grown hazelnuts prized by chefs and specialty food retailers for their freshness and quality. The cool winters (needed for dormancy and flowering) and mild summers of this mountain valley replicate the hazelnut's native European highland conditions. Farm-direct sales from the Myrtleford area offer the freshest product.
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4
Hazelnut allergy is the most common adult-onset food allergy in Europe โ€” driven by birch pollen cross-reactivity
Approximately 5% of adults in Northern Europe with birch pollen hay fever develop oral allergy syndrome (OAS) to hazelnuts โ€” experiencing itching and tingling in the mouth when eating raw hazelnuts. This happens because birch pollen proteins (Bet v 1) are structurally similar to hazelnut proteins (Cor a 1) and the immune system cross-reacts. Cooked hazelnuts are usually tolerated โ€” cooking denatures the reactive proteins.
๐ŸŽจ
5
Hazelnuts were an important winter calorie source in prehistoric Europe โ€” 'hazel groves' dominated the post-ice age landscape
After the last ice age retreated from Britain approximately 12,000 years ago, the first trees to colonise were birch, then hazel. For several millennia, hazel woodland dominated much of Britain and provided critical caloric nutrition for Mesolithic hunter-gatherers. Archaeologists have excavated fire-pit sites with thousands of hazelnut shells โ€” evidence of mass processing and storage for winter survival.
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