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Nuts & SeedsMacadamia integrifolia / tetraphylla

Macadamia Nuts โ€” Nutrition Facts & Health Guide

Macadamia integrifolia / tetraphylla ยท Evidence-based nutritional information for Australians

718
kcal / 100g
13.8g
Carbs
7.9g
Protein
8.6g
Fibre
10
GI (low)
Full calculator โ†—
Macadamia nuts are Australia's gift to the world of premium nuts โ€” native to the subtropical rainforests of southeast Queensland and northern NSW, they are the only native Australian food to become a major global commercial crop. At 718 kcal per 100g and 75.8g of fat (the highest fat content of any nut), macadamias are exceptionally calorie-dense โ€” but their fat profile is dominated by oleic acid (the same monounsaturated fat as olive oil) with the highest monounsaturated fat content of any nut. Adjust the slider below for your serving size.
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Serving size calculator
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Serving size:30g
215Calories (kcal)
4.1Carbs (g)
2.4Protein (g)
2.6Fibre (g)
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๐Ÿ“Š Full nutrition facts โ€” per 100g

NutrientAmount% Daily valueLevel
Calories718 kcal36%
Carbohydrates13.8g5%
Dietary fibre8.6g31%
Sugars4.6gโ€”
Glycaemic Index~10 โ€” Negligibleโ€”
Protein7.9g16%
Monounsaturated fat58.9gโ€”
Manganese4.1mg205%
Thiamine (B1)1.2mg80%
Copper0.76mg38%
Magnesium130mg33%
Iron3.7mg21%

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

๐Ÿ“ˆ Glycaemic index (GI)

10
Glycaemic IndexLow GIMacadamia nuts have an effectively negligible GI of ~10. They are composed almost entirely of fat with very low carbohydrate and starch โ€” resulting in no meaningful blood sugar impact.
0 ยท Low (<55)Medium (56โ€“69)High (70+) ยท 100

๐Ÿ’Š Key vitamins & minerals

Manganese
4.1mg
205% RDI
Thiamine B1
1.2mg
80% RDI
Monounsat. fat
58.9g
Highest of any nut
Copper
0.76mg
38% RDI
Magnesium
130mg
33% RDI
Fibre
8.6g
31% RDI

โœ… Health benefits

โค๏ธ
Heart health โ€” highest monounsaturated fat of any nut (58.9g/100g)

Macadamias contain more oleic acid (the primary fat in olive oil) than any other nut โ€” 58.9g per 100g. Clinical trials have shown regular macadamia consumption reduces LDL cholesterol, total cholesterol and triglycerides while improving arterial function. The effect is comparable to olive oil in terms of cardiovascular benefit per gram of fat.

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Brain and nerve health (Thiamine B1)

Macadamias provide 80% of daily thiamine (vitamin B1) per 100g โ€” essential for neural signal transmission, myelin sheath maintenance and energy production in brain cells. Thiamine deficiency causes neurological damage; macadamias are one of the richest practical food sources.

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Bone health โ€” exceptional manganese (205% RDI)

At 205% of daily manganese needs, macadamias are the richest nut source of this mineral, essential for bone mineralisation, antioxidant enzyme production and carbohydrate metabolism.

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Blood sugar management

Despite being calorie-dense, macadamias have a GI of ~10 and have been shown in clinical studies to improve insulin sensitivity and fasting glucose when added to the diet. Their high monounsaturated fat content improves glucose uptake and reduces insulin resistance in people with type 2 diabetes.

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โš ๏ธ Who should limit or avoid

๐Ÿคง
Tree nut allergy

Macadamia allergy is a tree nut allergy that can cause anaphylaxis. People with known tree nut allergy should approach macadamias with caution โ€” cross-reactivity between tree nut species occurs in approximately 37% of cases.

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TOXIC to dogs โ€” never feed macadamias to dogs

Macadamia nuts are severely toxic to dogs. Even small quantities (1โ€“2 nuts) can cause macadamia nut toxicosis โ€” causing weakness, tremors, vomiting, hyperthermia and in severe cases paralysis. The mechanism is unknown. Keep macadamias completely away from dogs.

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Calorie density โ€” portion control essential

At 718 kcal per 100g, macadamias are the most calorie-dense nut. A single serving (30g) provides 215 calories. People managing weight should use measured portions โ€” eating from a bag makes overconsumption very easy.

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Blood-thinning medications

Macadamias contain moderate vitamin K. Maintain consistent macadamia consumption if on warfarin therapy.

โœ… For most healthy adults, macadamias in typical serving sizes (15โ€“30g) are a highly nutritious food appropriate for regular consumption. Their exceptional heart-health fat profile makes them one of the most cardiovascularly beneficial nuts available.
โš•๏ธ General nutritional information only โ€” not a substitute for professional medical or dietary advice.

๐Ÿ›’ How to select & buy macadamia nuts

1
Whole vs pieces โ€” when to use each

Whole macadamias are best for snacking and salads. Pieces and halves are better value for cooking, baking and granola where appearance doesn't matter. Pieces also tend to be fresher due to higher turnover.

2
Raw vs roasted โ€” nutritional comparison

Raw macadamias retain more heat-sensitive nutrients and have a cleaner, creamier flavour. Lightly dry-roasted enhances the naturally buttery flavour through the Maillard reaction without adding oil. Avoid oil-roasted and salt-heavy commercial varieties โ€” roast at home at 160ยฐC for 8โ€“10 minutes.

3
Check freshness โ€” rancidity is the main concern

Fresh macadamias smell buttery and sweet. Rancid macadamias smell sour, bitter or like old oil. Buy from stores with high turnover. In bulk bins check that nuts look plump and cream-coloured โ€” not yellow or shrunken.

๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australian tip: Macadamia nuts are native to Queensland and northern NSW โ€” Australia is one of the world's largest producers alongside South Africa and Hawaii. Queensland's Sunshine Coast hinterland, Bundaberg and Lismore are the main growing areas. Australian brands include Naked Harvest and Lucky Ranch. Farm-gate sales from the Sunshine Coast hinterland offer the freshest product at best value.

๐ŸงŠ Storage tips & shelf life

Pantry
1โ€“3 months
Sealed airtight container

Suitable for short-term storage in a cool dark pantry. In warm Australian conditions move to the fridge after 4 weeks to prevent the oleic acid oils oxidising.

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Refrigerator
6โ€“12 months
Airtight glass jar

Best everyday storage. Cold temperature prevents the high oleic acid content from oxidising. Bring to room temperature before eating for best flavour.

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Freezer
Up to 2 years
Zip-lock bag, air removed

Excellent for long-term storage โ€” macadamias freeze with no quality loss. Buy in bulk from Queensland farm suppliers and freeze to save significantly versus supermarket pricing.

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๐Ÿ“– About macadamia nuts โ€” complete guide

Macadamia nuts have an unusual origin story among commercially important tree nuts โ€” they are the only native Australian food plant to have become a major global agricultural commodity. Macadamia integrifolia and Macadamia tetraphylla are endemic to the subtropical rainforests of southeast Queensland and northern NSW, where they were a food source for Aboriginal Australians for thousands of years. The nuts were 'discovered' by European botanists in 1857 โ€” named by Walter Hill after his colleague John Macadam โ€” and commercial cultivation began in Hawaii in the 1880s from Australian stock, before Australia reclaimed production leadership in the 21st century.

Nutritionally, macadamias stand apart from other nuts primarily due to their extraordinary monounsaturated fat content โ€” 58.9g per 100g, the highest of any nut, dominated by oleic acid (the same primary fat as olive oil) and palmitoleic acid (a rare monounsaturated omega-7 that has shown specific anti-inflammatory properties). Clinical trials comparing macadamia-enriched diets to standard Western diets consistently show improvements in lipid profiles โ€” reduced LDL, reduced total cholesterol, and improved LDL particle size โ€” with the largest effect in people with elevated baseline cholesterol. The Australian macadamia industry funds significant nutrition research, and the evidence base is now sufficient for the Heart Foundation of Australia to recommend macadamias as a heart-healthy food.

โš–๏ธ Compare macadamia nuts to similar nuts

Macadamia Nuts
718 kcal
VS
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๐Ÿ’ก Interesting facts about macadamia nuts

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1
Macadamias are the only commercial food crop native to Australia
All other commonly cultivated food plants came from elsewhere โ€” wheat from the Fertile Crescent, tomatoes from South America, citrus from Asia. Macadamias were domesticated from Queensland rainforest species and are now grown commercially in 10 countries. Australia's Sunshine Coast region is the largest single macadamia growing region on earth.
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2
Macadamias are one of the most toxic foods for dogs โ€” even 2โ€“3 nuts can cause serious illness
Macadamia nut toxicosis in dogs causes weakness, tremors, vomiting, ataxia, hyperthermia and โ€” in severe cases โ€” inability to walk. The toxic mechanism is unknown (unlike grapes/raisins which are also toxic to dogs). Recovery usually occurs within 48 hours with veterinary support, but the condition can be life-threatening in small dogs or when combined with other toxic foods.
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3
Macadamias are the most expensive mainstream nut in the world โ€” they are extremely difficult to crack
Macadamia shells are among the hardest of any food plant โ€” requiring approximately 300 pounds of force per square inch to crack. This made commercial processing extremely difficult until industrial cracking machinery was developed in the 1950s. The difficulty of harvesting and processing is why macadamias remain premium-priced despite large-scale cultivation.
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4
Macadamia oil has a smoking point of 210ยฐC โ€” suitable for most cooking methods including stir-frying
Unlike most nut oils which have low smoking points, macadamia oil's predominantly monounsaturated fat content gives it excellent heat stability. At 210ยฐC it can be used for stir-frying, sautรฉing and even some shallow frying applications โ€” competing with avocado oil and refined olive oil for high-heat cooking.
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5
Hawaii built an entire macadamia industry on trees imported from Queensland in the 1880s
William Purvis planted the first macadamia trees in Hawaii in 1881 from Queensland seeds. For nearly 100 years, Hawaii dominated world macadamia production. Australia only overtook Hawaii in production in the 2000s after significant industry investment in QLD and NSW orchards. Hawaiian macadamia products remain premium-marketed despite Australia now producing more.
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