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This homemade peach butter recipe is an amazing way to preserve the peach harvest. This is the best low-sugar peach sauce, and it’s delicious on toast, yogurt, muffins, or oatmeal.

Homemade peach butter is a classic summer favorite. You can make it on the stovetop or simmer this recipe in a slow cooker all day (your house is going to smell amazing!).
This peach butter recipe is suitable for a canning in a water bath canner, but I’ll also teach you how to freeze it if canning is not your jam.
If you have lots of leftover peaches after making this recipe, check out our tutorials on canning peaches and peach crisp with canned peaches.

How to Make Peach Butter
*I’ll walk you through it here with some photos and tips, and you’ll also find a printable recipe card at the bottom of the post with exact measurements, etc. You can also click “jump to recipe” to skip down.
Wash your peaches and chop them into semi-uniform pieces. This recipe doesn’t have you peel the peaches, but you are welcome to if you’d prefer. If you need tips, check out our post on how to peel peaches.
Grab a heavy-bottomed saucepan (I used my enameled Dutch oven), and add the peaches, water, cinnamon, lemon zest/juice, and vanilla extract to the pot.
Cooking over medium-high heat, bring everything to a boil for 2 minutes. Once the 2 minutes are up, reduce the temp to medium-low and cook everything for 15-20 minutes or until the peaches are considerably softened.
If you have an immersion blender, carefully blend the peach mixture directly in the pot. No immersion blender? Carefully transfer everything to a blender or food processor. If you’re using a blender, remove the plastic cap from the lid and place a clean towel over the top to allow steam to escape.
Return the peach mixture to the saucepan, add the sugar, and cook over medium-low heat, stirring often until the mixture has reduced or thickened to your preferences (~5-15 minutes).
Pro tip: Unlike my annoying baby fine hair, the peach butter will look thick and shiny when it’s ready.

Technically, you’re done at this point if you’d like to be. Put it in containers and freeze if you’d like. But, if you want to learn to also can it, read on! All the cool kids are doing it.
How to Can Peach Butter
Prepare your canner by filling it with water. You need to have enough water to cover the jars by 1 inch once the water is boiling.
Set the canner on the stove. Turn the burner to high. Once it reaches a boil, reduce it to a simmer. You want to keep the water hot so that everything is ready when you jars of peach butter are ready to go.
Wash and clean your jars. You’ll want to keep them warm to avoid having them crack when placed in the canner. You can fill them with hot water, or place them on a tray in the oven at 170˚F.
Wash your lids and set them aside in a clean place. You no longer need to simmer lids in water to keep them sterile. Woot!
Ladle in the warm peach butter (I like using a canning funnel), leaving 1/4 inch of headspace. Headspace is defined as the space between the top of the food and the top of the jar. Remove the bubbles from the jar (I use a plastic chopstick).

Use a wet clean rag and wipe the rim of the jars to make sure they are free of any delicious peach sauce.
Place a new, clean lid on the jar, and then a ring, and tighten the ring to fingertip tight (tight enough that it won’t come off, but not so tight that a normal person couldn’t budge it).
Do not add the jars to the canner as you finish filling them. You’ll want to pack the canner all at once to avoid uneven processing.
Bring the water in the canner back to a rolling boil and then lower your jars into the canner using a jar lifter. Put the lid on the canner.
Processing times will vary based on altitude and size of jar. See the chart below.
Processing Time for Peach Butter
| Processing Time for Peach Butter | ||||
| Process Times at Altitudes of: | ||||
| Style of Pack | Jar Size | 0-1,000 ft | 1,001-3,000 ft | Aove 6,000 ft |
| Hot | Half-Pints & Pints | 10 min | 15 min | 20 min |
| Quarts | 15 min | 20 min | 25 min | |
Once the jars have been processed for the appropriate amount of time, remove the canner from the burner, wearing oven mitts, carefully take off the lid of the canner, and allow it to sit for 5 minutes. Pro tip: I tend to just slide the canner into the middle of my stove, as it weighs a ton.

Carefully remove the jars with canning tongs, and place them on a thick towel in a place where they can be undisturbed for 12 hours.
The lids will likely start to pop within 20-30 minutes of being removed from the water. That popping sound is music to your ears, as it tells you that everything has been sealed. It’s a reward for all your work!
After the jars have rested for about 12 hours, press down in the middle of each lid. If it “gives” at all, the jar didn’t seal. Either enjoy it that day, put it in the fridge, or reprocess it.
Pro Tips/Recipe Notes
- You can use frozen peaches! Let them heat up in the pot with the water. You’ll need to cook everything a bit longer to reduce the liquid that is produced as they defrost.
- Feel free to adjust the spices to taste. Personally, I see cinnamon as a condiment and tend to keep adding a little bit more throughout the process. Cloves and/or cardamom would be a nice addition too!

Low-Sugar Peach Butter Recipe

Equipment
Ingredients
- 8 cups peaches, sliced
- 1/2 cup water
- 1 cup sugar {optional – see notes}
- 1 tbsp ground cinnamon
- 1 tsp lemon zest
- 2 tsp lemon juice
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
How to Make Peach Butter
- Chop the peaches into semi-uniform pieces.8 cups peaches, sliced
- Add the peaches, water, cinnamon, lemon zest, lemon juice, and vanilla extract to a heavy-bottomed saucepan.1/2 cup water, 1 tbsp ground cinnamon, 1 tsp lemon zest, 2 tsp lemon juice, 1 tsp vanilla extract
- Bring ingredients to a boil over medium-high for 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Pro tip: watch for popping peach juice!
- Reduce the temperature to medium-low, stirring occasionally, cooking for 15 minutes.
- Blend the peach mixture with an immersion blender, or (carefully) transfer in batches to a blender or food processor. If using a blender, remove the center of the lid and drape the lid with a clean towel to allow steam to escape.
- Return the mixture to the Dutch oven, add the sugar, and cook over medium-low heat, stirring often, until the mixture has reduced/thickened (~5-15 minutes).1 cup sugar
{Optional} Canning Peach Butter Instructions
- Prepare your water bath canner by filling it with water. You need to have enough water to cover the jars by 1 inch once the water is boiling.
- Set the canner on the stove. Turn the burner to high. Once it reaches a boil, reduce it to simmer. You want to keep the water hot so that everything is ready when the peach butter is.
- Wash and sanitize your jars. You’ll want to keep them warm to avoid having them crack when placed in the canner. You can fill them with hot water, or place them on a tray in the oven at 170˚F.
- Wash your lids and set aside in a clean place.
- Place a canning funnel on top of one of the jars.
- Ladle the warm peach butter into jars, leaving 1/4 inch of headspace. Headspace is defined as the space between the top of the food and the top of the jar.
- Remove any bubbles from the jar (I use a plastic chopstick).
- Use a wet clean rag and wipe the rim of the jars to make sure they are free of any delicious peach sauce.
- Place a clean lid on the jar and then a ring. Tighten the ring to fingertip tight.
- Using canning tongs, gently place your jars in the canner. Put the lid on, and set your timer. Pro tip: the water must return to a boil in the canner before you can start the timer.
- Process half-pints, pints and quarts based on the elevation guide below:*0-1,000 ft – Half-Pints & Pints =10 min Quarts =15 min*1,001-6,000 ft – Half-Pints & Pints =15 min Quarts =20 min*6,000 ft+ – Half-Pints & Pints =20 min Quarts =25 min
- Once the jars have processed for the appropriate amount of time, remove the canner from the burner, and carefully remove the lid of the canner (Pro tip: use oven mitts to take the lid off because the steam is super hot).
- After the jars sit for 5 minutes in the canner, use canning tongs to carefully remove the jars, and place them on a thick towel in a place where they can be undisturbed for 12 hours.
- After the jars have rested for about 12 hours, press down in the middle of each lid. If it "gives" at all, the jar didn't seal. Either enjoy it that day, put it in the fridge, or reprocess it.
- Once the jars have sealed and cooled, remove the rings. Label and store sealed jars in a cool (best results are 50-70˚F) dark place for up to 12-18 months.
Notes
- The amount of natural sugar in peaches allows you to reduce the sugar if you’d like and it will still be safe for canning. If you prefer a low-sugar option, start with 1/4 cup and then adjust to taste.
- Makes 3 half-pints.
- Nutrition values are an estimate only.
Slow Cooker Instructions:
Cook ingredients on low for 4-6 hours.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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Can you use honey instead of sugar? If so, how much would you recommend? TY
Hi Kathy, yes you can use honey. You can also keep it entirely sugar-free if you’d prefer.
As far as how much to add, I would start with 1/4 cup and then adjust to taste.