Banana Flour in
Nepal: An Opportunity to Transform Into a High-Value Business
Banana flour is an ordinary-looking yet highly promising agricultural product. Made by drying and grinding raw green bananas, this flour is increasingly gaining popularity worldwide in the health, nutrition, and gluten-free food industries.
👉 Note: While powder made from bananas is often produced from ripe bananas, flour is primarily made from raw (green) bananas.
Key areas where banana flour is used today:
- Gluten-free food industry
- Bakery industry
- Baby food manufacturing companies
- Sports nutrition product companies
- Health-focused food businesses
It has now been used to make bread, biscuits, cakes, pasta, pancakes, healthy snacks, and energy-boosting foods.
Source: (mdpi.com; bananaprocess.com)
👉 This means it is not just flour; it is a high-potential product linked to a growing market seeking healthy foods.
Banana Flour: An Emerging Opportunity in Nepal
In Nepal, farmers are plagued by problems such as low prices for bananas, rapid spoilage, market instability, and the need to rely on middlemen.
- Farmers are selling bananas at NPR 5–6 per piece (Source: NayaPage 26/4/2026; Ratopati 20/4/2026)
- Production cost is around NPR 4 per piece (Source: Ratopati 20/4/2026)
- Profit margins are extremely thin.
👉 This means banana flour offers farmers the opportunity to transform from a "raw produce seller" situation into "value-adding entrepreneurs."
Banana Flour: More Profitable than Selling Fresh Bananas
1. Long Storage Capacity = Greater Market Control
Fresh bananas spoil quickly, so they must be sold immediately. But banana flour:
- Can be stored for a long time
- Can be sold when market prices are favorable
- Has a lower risk of spoilage
👉 Study shows that banana flour can be "safely stored for extended periods."
Source: (mdpi.com)
2. Rapid Growth of the Gluten-Free Market
The demand for gluten-free food is growing rapidly worldwide.
- Banana flour is already being used in products such as bread, biscuits, pasta, cakes, and chips.
👉 Banana flour has been used as an alternative to wheat flour and refined flour (maida).
Source: (mdpi.com)
3. Reduced Post-Harvest Loss
A significant portion of bananas goes to waste due to:
- Misshapen bananas
- Bananas unsuitable for exports
- Bananas that do not get sold in the markets
👉 However, research considers banana flour to be an effective means of banana management.
Source: (Sciencedirect.com)
4. Easier Transportation and Storage
Fresh bananas:
- Require careful handling
- Spoil quickly
- Have high logistics risk
👉
Banana flour is
lightweight, has low spoilage risk, and can be transported long distances, thus
opening access to urban and export markets.
Banana Flour: How Many Bananas Make 1 KG Flour?
Typically:
- 8–10 kg of raw (green) bananas ≈ 1 kg banana flour
👉 Why This Matters: Because bananas contain a lot of water, their weight decreases significantly after drying.
Source:
(Bananaprocess.com)
Banana Flour: Step-by-Step Economics (Per Kg of Banana Flour)
Cost Breakdown Table:
| Component | Details | Cost (NPR) |
|---|---|---|
Raw Material | 40–60 bananas @ NPR 4 each | 160–240 |
Processing Cost | Drying, grinding, labor, and packaging | 200–350 |
Total Production Cost | Raw + Processing | 360–590 |
Selling Price | Wholesale to branded retail range | 700–1500 |
Profit Margin | Selling Price – Total Cost | 110-1140 |
👉 With premium organic branding, good packaging, and export-grade quality, the price can increase even further.
Banana Flour: Step-by-Step Economics (1 Ropani Banana Cultivation)
Approximately 1,500 to 2,000 bananas can be produced from one ropani of land.
Particulars | Fresh Banana Sales | Banana Flour Production |
|---|---|---|
Total Output | 1,500 – 2,000 bananas | 30 – 50 kg flour |
Raw Material Cost | NPR 6,000-8,000 |
NPR 6,000-8,000
|
Processing Cost | N/A | NPR 12,000 – 25,000 |
Total Cost | NPR 6,000 – 8,000 | NPR 18,000 – 33,000 |
Selling Price | NPR 5 – 6 per banana | NPR 700 – 1,500 per kg |
Total Revenue | NPR 7,500 - 10,000 | NPR 21,000 - 75,000 |
Potential Profit | NPR 2,000 - 5,000 | NPR 5,000 - 40,000 |
Bananas currently have to be sold at just 5 to 6 rupees per piece.
Durga Prasad Bhurtel - cited in Nayapage 26/4/2026
The production cost per banana piece is about 4 rupees. Selling at 5.5 rupees gives a profit of around 1.5 to 2 rupees per piece. Without a price of at least 4.5 rupees per piece, even the farmer's investment cannot be recovered.
Sundar Neupane - cited in Ratopati 20/4/2026
Business Insight
Processing increases income by 5–10 times.
The real problem in Nepal is not production - it is a lack of value addition.
Banana Flour: Production Process Overview
The banana flour production process is not very complex, but it requires maintaining quality.
Sources: (Bananaprocess.com; ResearchGate - August 2022, ResearchGate - May 2022; ScienceDirect.com)
1. Selection of Raw (Green) Bananas
Raw (green) bananas are used because they contain:
- High levels of resistant starch
- Properties that improve the quality of the flour
2. Washing and Peeling
Bananas are thoroughly washed and peeled.
3. Cutting into Small Pieces
Cut the bananas into pieces, making them as uniform as possible. This helps:
- Easier drying
- Better control of moisture content
4. Anti-Browning Treatment
After cutting, bananas brown quickly. To prevent this, the following treatments are used:
- Citric acid, or sodium metabisulfite, or hot water treatment
👉 This step greatly affects the color and shelf life of the banana flour.
5. Drying (The Most Important Step)
The main indicator of banana flour quality is how dry it is. Common drying methods include:
- Sun drying
- Hot air drying
- Solar drying technology
According to research, properly dried flour:
- Preserves resistant starch
- Maintains good color
- Ensures high quality
👉 Solar drying can be a highly useful method for Nepal.
6. Grinding
After drying, the banana pieces are ground into flour. The finer and more consistent the grinding, the better the quality of the flour.
7. Packaging
Cool, moisture-proof packaging is essential.
- The flour may spoil
- The shelf life of the flour can be reduced
Challenges in the Banana Flour Business
Although the banana flour business has great potential, there are several significant practical challenges. Without addressing these challenges, scaling up is difficult.
- High drying costs - High energy costs, especially when using artificial dryers
- Browning problem after cutting bananas
- Inconsistent quality – variations in texture, moisture, and color
- Lack of processing infrastructure in rural areas
- Competition with unbranded or imported products in the market
What Could be the Solutions?
These challenges can be converted into business opportunities with the right strategy:
- Use solar or hybrid dryers to reduce energy costs and ensure consistent production
- Improve pre-treatment methods, such as citric acid or blanching, to reduce seasonal fluctuations, making quality control easier, and making costs predictable
- Invest in branding and certification (food safety, hygiene standards) to build trust
- Focus
on branding, especially positioning as “Himalayan Organic Banana Flour.”
👉 Key Insight: Currently, the banana flour industry in Nepal does not exist on a large scale. Whoever builds good quality and strong branding first can take market leadership.
How to Succeed in The Banana Flour Business
Success in the banana flour business depends on the roles of three levels: farmers, entrepreneurs, and local government. This is not just a production business; it is a value chain management business.
For Farmers, Where Does Profit Come From?
For farmers, real profit comes from changing the way their produce is sold.
- Selling bananas that would otherwise go to waste (overripe, low-grade, or misshapen) to processing industries
- Doing contract farming with processing industries to ensure guaranteed demand
- Maintaining continuous production so that
supply can be maintained year-round
👉 Key insight: Farmers increase their income when they see bananas not just as "fresh fruit" but as "raw material for processing."
For Entrepreneurs, Where is the Profit?
For entrepreneurs, the greatest opportunity lies in processing and branding.
- Reducing costs by improving drying technology
- Developing a high-quality and consistent production system
- Building branding around health, organic, and natural positioning
- Targeting baby food, health products, and export markets
- Investing in attractive, hygienic packaging
👉 Key insight: The biggest profit doesn't come from selling flour - it comes from selling a branded product.
For Local Government, What is the Role?
The role of local government is not just to increase production but to develop the entire ecosystem.
- Providing subsidies and training for small-scale processing units
- Developing solar drying infrastructure in rural areas
- Creating linkages between farmers and processing industries
- Encouraging cooperatives and group-based enterprises
- Supporting quality certification and export readiness
👉 Key insight: Long-term agro-industry development is possible only through a strong ecosystem, not just by increasing production.
Final Insight
The challenge of the banana flour business is not a lack of demand - the main challenges are processing capacity, quality consistency, and the ability to create the right market positioning.
- Improving drying and processing technology
- Investing in branding and quality certification
- Strengthening the supply chain among farmers,
processing industries, and the market
👉 Banana flour is not just a food product - it is a means to transform Nepali agriculture from low-value production toward a high-value agro-industry.