You pull the cake from the oven looking perfect. It has risen, it has color, and it smells incredible. You set it on the cooling rack and walk away feeling good about yourself. Then you come back and the center has dropped like a sad little crater. If you bake keto regularly, you have almost certainly lived this moment.
The sink itself is frustrating. But what really gets under your skin is not knowing why it happened. Was it the almond flour? Too many eggs? Did you open the oven at the wrong moment? Is keto cake just always going to do this? It does not have to. Let us go through every real cause one by one, because once you understand what is actually happening inside that pan, the fixes become obvious.
Why Keto Cakes Are More Vulnerable Than Regular Cakes
In conventional baking, gluten is what holds everything together. It forms a stretchy, elastic network that traps the gas produced by your leavening agent, expands with it, and then sets firm as the proteins cook through. It is genuinely strong stuff. Even a slightly underbaked wheat cake will hold its shape as it cools because that gluten structure is already doing most of the work.
Almond flour has no gluten. Neither does coconut flour, or any other keto alternative. So instead of that strong scaffold, you are relying almost entirely on egg proteins and fat to hold the structure together. Those are far more delicate, far more sensitive to temperature, and far more dependent on getting everything else right. This is the root of the whole problem. Every specific cause below is really just a different way that the egg structure gets overwhelmed before it can set.
Too Much Leavening Agent
This one surprises people. You would think more baking powder equals more rise, which means less sinking. But what actually happens is that too much leavening creates large, aggressive bubbles that expand faster than your egg structure can set around them. The cake puffs up dramatically in the oven, looks spectacular through the glass, and then collapses the moment that heat-driven expansion stops and there is nothing solid left to hold it up.
With almond flour cakes, you need significantly less leavening than a conventional recipe would use. A quarter teaspoon of baking powder per cup of almond flour is usually enough. If your recipe calls for more than half a teaspoon per cup, that is worth questioning.
Underbaking
Keto cakes are notoriously difficult to read visually. Almond flour browns faster than wheat flour because it has more fat and natural sugars in the almonds. So the outside of your cake can look genuinely done, even golden and beautiful, while the center is still essentially liquid batter. When you take it out and it cools, that unbaked center has nothing to hold it up and it sinks straight down.
The toothpick test works, but you need to test the very center and not be fooled by moist crumbs. A few moist crumbs are fine. Wet batter on the toothpick means it needs more time. An instant-read thermometer is even more reliable: you are looking for an internal temperature of around 200 to 205 degrees Fahrenheit (93 to 96 Celsius) for most almond flour cakes.
Also worth knowing: if your oven runs hot, the outside overcooks while the inside stays raw. An oven thermometer is one of the best investments you can make in your keto baking.
Opening the Oven Too Early
The egg structure in a keto cake is setting gradually from the outside in. During the first two thirds of baking, it is fragile enough that a sudden drop in temperature or a vibration can cause it to deflate before it has a chance to firm up. Opening the oven door causes a temperature drop of 25 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit almost instantly. If that happens before the structure has set, the cake drops and it will not recover.
Set your timer and leave it alone. If you need to check, use the oven light. Wait until at least three quarters of the baking time has passed before opening the door for any reason.
Sweetener Choice and Behavior
This is something that does not get talked about enough. Different keto sweeteners behave very differently when they are heated, and some of them genuinely affect how your cake rises and sets.
Erythritol, which is in Swerve and most granulated keto sweeteners, does not melt the way sugar does. It tends to recrystallize as it cools. In cakes, this can make the crumb slightly gritty but it does not typically cause sinking on its own. The bigger issue is that erythritol does not caramelize or brown the way sugar does, so the Maillard reactions that help set structure in a conventional cake happen differently here.
Allulose behaves much more like real sugar. It browns, it caramelizes, it dissolves cleanly, and it produces a noticeably more tender and stable crumb in keto cakes. If you have been struggling with sinking and you are using straight erythritol, switching to allulose or a blend is genuinely worth trying. We have seen it make a meaningful difference in cake stability.
Monk fruit and stevia blends are typically used in smaller quantities and have less structural impact on their own. If they are blended with erythritol, the erythritol behavior dominates.
Too Much Moisture in the Batter
Almond flour carries a lot of natural fat and moisture. Add sour cream, cream cheese, heavy cream, or Greek yogurt to a cake batter and you are working with a very high-moisture mixture. That moisture turns to steam in the oven, which helps the cake rise. But if there is more steam than the structure can contain, it escapes rapidly and the cake collapses behind it.
If your batter looks very wet or pourable rather than thick and scoopable, that is often a sign. You might need to reduce liquid ingredients, add an extra egg yolk for binding, or let the batter rest for five minutes so the almond flour can absorb some of the moisture before baking.
Cooling Too Quickly
Keto cakes are more fragile right out of the oven than regular cakes are. The egg structure is set but still quite delicate, and moving a hot cake to a cold surface or a drafty spot can cause it to sink just from that thermal shock. Let the cake cool in the pan for at least 15 to 20 minutes before turning it out. Do not put it near an open window or under a fan.
Pan Size Matters More Than You Think
If you bake the same volume of batter in a deeper pan than the recipe intends, the center takes much longer to cook through. By the time the center is done, the edges have overcooked and the whole cake may sink in the middle. Stick to the pan size the recipe specifies, or if you are adapting, know that a deeper pan needs a lower temperature and more time.
If keto cheesecake is more your challenge, the cracking and sinking mechanics there are a different story entirely. We cover all of it in our guide to why keto cheesecakes crack and how to prevent it.
A Quick Summary of Fixes
Reduce your baking powder to no more than a quarter teaspoon per cup of almond flour. Use an oven thermometer to make sure your temperature is accurate. Do not open the oven until at least three quarters of the baking time is up. Check doneness with a thermometer rather than just a toothpick. Consider switching to allulose if you have been using straight erythritol. If your batter seems very wet, let it rest before baking. Cool the cake in the pan before moving it anywhere.
None of these changes are dramatic. But together they make a real difference, and once your first cake comes out of the oven and holds its shape while it cools, you will understand exactly what was going wrong before.
Why did your keto cake sink?
Answer a few quick questions and we will pinpoint exactly what went wrong.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my keto cake sink in the middle but not the edges?
The center is always the last part to set. If the edges are done but the center sinks, the cake was underbaked. Use a thermometer to check the center has reached 200 to 205 degrees Fahrenheit before removing it from the oven.
Can I fix a sunken keto cake after it has baked?
You cannot reverse the sink, but you can disguise it. Fill the crater with whipped cream, mascarpone frosting, or berries. Alternatively, slice the cake horizontally and fill the layers so the sunken top is hidden inside the stack.
Does almond flour always make cakes sink?
No, but it does require more care than wheat flour because it has no gluten for structure. With the right leavening amount, correct pan size, and accurate oven temperature, almond flour cakes bake and hold their shape consistently.
Which sweetener is best for preventing keto cake from sinking?
Allulose performs most like sugar in terms of moisture retention and browning, which tends to produce a more stable crumb. Pure erythritol or Swerve can work well too, but they behave differently under heat and some bakers find allulose gives more consistent results.
Why does my keto cake sink every time even when it looks done on top?
Almond flour browns faster than wheat flour, so the surface can look perfectly baked while the center is still raw. Always check internal temperature rather than relying on color or a surface toothpick test near the edges.






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