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A piece of toast is topped with various roasted veggies, including spicy cashew sauce and dill.
Roasted veggie toast at Bake Shop.
Bake Shop

The 16 Best Places for Breakfast in Seattle

Old-school diner food, perfectly executed pastries, and more

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Roasted veggie toast at Bake Shop.
| Bake Shop

Breakfast is more than a meal, it’s a state of mind. You can eat eggs, bacon, biscuit sandwiches, or pancakes at any time; breakfast can be the fuel you need to jump-start your day or the landing pad after a long night that’s bled into morning. Breakfast can be a quick bagel on the go or a hours-long bacchanal that includes multiple courses and necessitates a nap afterward. It might not be the most important meal of the day, but it’s definitely the most fun, and Seattle has more than its share of spots where you can experience a great one. Here are 13 of the best ones, as always ordered geographically north to south.

Know of a spot that should be on our radar? Send us a tip by emailing [email protected].

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Bebop Waffle Shop

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Bebop (formerly the Admiral Bird) is a funktastic West Seattle diner with a flower shop in the back and a rack of neon-pink hoodies in the front. It’s like if a car with too many bumper stickers became a restaurant, and we’re not complaining. The crispy and sometimes eccentric waffles (one variation has Coco Pebbles baked into it, another is called the Kate McKinnon) are satisfying, the bacon is perfectly cooked, and the vibes are family-friendly. Bebop also hosts events like a monthly sober brunch and a silent reading party.

A waffle with a dab of butter and a powdered sugar topping next to a breakfast sandwich.
A waffle and breakfast sandwich at Bebop Waffle shop.
Harry Cheadle

Rachel's Bagels & Burritos

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Formerly the much-loved Porkchop & Co, this Ballard shop was reborn as a breakfast spot during the pandemic lockdown era. The perfectly chewy bagels are excellent across the board, with offerings like bagels topped with za’atar and shichimi togarashi (a Japanese chili pepper and spice blend). There are also great bagel sandwich options, like the Nick and Nora, a riff on avocado toast with chili crisp. Beyond bagels, the shop serves satisfying one-pound breakfast burritos with fillings like Oaxacan cheese and guajillo chili salsa, and J Kenji López-Alt-approved biscuit sandwiches. In 2024, Rachel’s expanded into Lake City’s Elliot Bay Brewing.

Two halves of a bagel sit on a plate. They are topped with cream cheese, avocado, and chili crisp. Rachel’s Bagels & Burritos

Seattle Biscuit Company

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This little shack-sized joint on Leary Way has a hidden gimmick: All of the ingredients are sourced from places so close that co-founder Sam Thompson, a former professional endurance runner, can jog to them. The biscuit sandwiches here have none of the asceticism associated with long-distance running, however: We love the one with fried chicken, sausage gravy, and sweet onion mustard; another fan favorite is the Che, SBC’s version of a Cuban sandwich. But these biscuits are so good it almost doesn’t matter what you put between them — flaky, warm, with just a hint of sweetness.

A biscuit is cut in half and stuffed with jam, bacon, and an egg. Seattle Biscuit Company

Bake Shop

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In addition to excellent pastry case items like Yukon gold potato ham and cheese rolls, roasted shallot scones, and banana bread made with rye and oat flour, Bake Shop also has a small selection of sandwiches and toasts made to order with their outstanding bread. Roasted veggie toast is eminently satisfying, with the seasonal veggies getting a pairing of spicy cashew sauce on country loaf. The similarly generic-in-name-only nut butter and jam toast is sea salt topped almond-cashew butter on seedy brown bread, and it’s so good that it doesn’t even need the excellent seasonal jam it’s served with. As the bakery’s name may imply, everything at Bake Shop is an understatement. 

A piece of toast is topped with various roasted veggies, including spicy cashew sauce and dill. Bake Shop

Pete's Egg Nest

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Originally the first location of local chain Patty’s Eggnest, this diner changed its name after being sold to Pete and Voula Sideris decades ago. There are Greek items on the menu but you can’t go wrong with the diner classics, like the elegantly light pancakes or the corned beef hash. On the weekends, it fills up fast — everyone wants that Saturday morning diner feeling, and that’s exactly what Pete’s, nee Patty’s, delivers.

A table full of diner food including eggs and pancakes.
A table of food at Pete’s Eggnest.
Harry Cheadle

Beth's Cafe

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When Beth’s Cafe closed (at times seemingly for good) during COVID, it left a 12-egg omelet-sized hole in Seattle’s diner scene. After reopening with limited hours in 2023, Mason Reed (who also co-owns Tim’s Tavern) and Tim Crawley took over ownership in 2024. He made two important changes. First was reinstating the ultra late-night hours that Beth’s reputation has long been focused on (Beth’s is now open until 4 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays). He also made some subtle but impactful menu improvements. The coffee is now from Seven Coffee Roasters, using more locally sourced ingredients, and more sauces are made from scratch. The ethos is still no-frills, but now there’s more quality to go with the bodacious omelet and all-you-can-eat hash browns quantity. 

A biscuit is smothered with cream gravy. Next to it are crispy hash browns. Beth’s Cafe

Ludi's Restaurant

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Long ago, especially when Ludi’s was a bar called the Turf, some of its customers preferred to drink their breakfasts. While you can still get cocktails here, the new location of the beloved Filipino-American diner is decidedly more family-friendly, a chilled-out restaurant where you can order all kinds of silog (a classic Filipino breakfast of eggs, rice, and usually meat) and dress it up with all kinds of condiments. If someone at your table is the posting type, they’ll probably want the eye-catching ube pancakes, and you should try a bite — they’re both dessert-rich and surprisingly light.

A plate of pancakes covered in bright purple ube sauce under a neon sign that says “Ludi’s.”
The ube pancakes at Ludi’s.
Suzi Pratt

Hudson has been slinging southern-inflected breakfasts in this circa-1931 brick roadhouse since 2009, and its atmosphere is understatedly timeless. The horseshoe-shaped bar is the ideal place to sit with an order of some of the city’s best chicken fried steak, which is topped with rare-in-Seattle country gravy (peppery white gravy sans sausage). The shrimp and cheddar grits and the brisket omelet are stars, too. And speaking of rare-in-Seattle, a Monte Cristo might be just the thing if you want something truly old-school. [Heads up: true to its roadhouse form, Hudson is 21+ only]

A man sits, holding his fork and knife, with a plate in front of him with a fried chicken sandwich and a small salad. Hudson

Mas Cafe

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You come to Mas for the mess. This tiny Fremont spot with a gravel parking lot has two incredible breakfast options: loaded Tex-Mex style burritos with chorizo, potatoes, and all the fixings, and perfect breakfast sandwiches. The sausage sandwich is meaty, slightly sweet thanks to the aioli and huge caramelized onion slice, and has a crunchy green chile in it — the type of sandwich an Egg McMuffin wants to be when it grows up.

A breakfast sandwich loaded with onion and melted cheese.
The sausage sandwich at Mas Cafe.
Harry Cheadle

B-Side Foods

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This bite-sized restaurant inside Analog Coffee (get it? B-side?) is one of those “hidden gems” that’s hardly hidden — everyone knows about the breakfast sandwich here by now, surely? Ham, Beecher’s cheese, daikon pickles, charred onion aioli, and as the star ingredient, a thin omelet-y slice of egg dotted with scallions. Like much of what B-Side does, it’s casually impressive and shockingly good.

A slice of frittata is served on a plate with a salad. B-Side Foods

After a fire and a relocation, the Capitol Hill diner Glo’s has reopened next to Cal Anderson Park. The famous item here is the eggs Benedict, but don’t worry if you show up after they’re out of hollandaise, because the whole menu is full of great stuff like corned beef, biscuits, and coffee cake. In true Seattle diner fashion, there’s an extensive cocktail list as well, in case you’re having one of those days.

A plate of corned beef topped with an egg
Corned beef hash at Glo’s.
Harry Cheadle

This U District biscuit shop offers the kind of biscuits that breakfast lovers dream of — pillowy interior, crispy exterior, flaky bite. The “fast break,” Morsel’s signature sandwich, is a behemoth stack of eggs, fatty bacon, and cheddar cheese on a biscuit of your choice that’s smeared with earthy tomato jam. You can also opt to grab one of its buttermilk biscuits plain with butter and jam on the side; there’s strawberry balsamic jam, chocolate hazelnut jam, and raspberry jam, among others. Morsel usually has gluten-free biscuits available.

A biscuit is cut in half and served like a sandwich with eggs and bacon. Morsel

The Station

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This community-oriented coffee shop across the street from the light rail station is an old-school sort of hangout spot, with local artists on the wall, pop music flowing from the speakers, and a Seattle Public Libraries machine by the door that dispenses short stories. The good vibes come with hearty breakfast sandwiches and an even heartier biscuits and chorizo gravy dish. There are lots of flavored mochas and lattes, but the best drink might be the Cafe Cola, which is Topo Chico, espresso, and chocolate.

Volunteer Park Cafe & Pantry

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This cafe from a pair of Canlis alums, Crystal Chiu and Melissa Johnson, has been impressing Capitol Hill diners with its pastries, many of which are gluten-free. In an elegant glass case in the cafe, creations like smoked black tea shortbread topped with a puffed kamut brittle line up next to classics like galletes filled with seasonal fruit. For something heavier, you can order the egg and cheese sandwich the Seattle Times christened the best in town.

A pastry cabinet holds buns, cakes, blondies, and more. Volunteer Park Cafe & Pantry

Temple Pastries

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The glorious array of baked goods at this bright bakery includes familiar items such as cookies, croissants, Kouign Amann, macarons, and breads. Patrons also might encounter combinations like black sesame yuzu, Jasmine green tea, and guava cream cheese. The cruffin (croissant baked into a muffin mold) is a dream, particularly the cinnamon variety. In the summer of 2024, Temple added a “bodega-style” breakfast sandwich.

A woman stands at a counter in a pastry shop that is all white with lots of plants. Temple Pastries

Geraldine's Counter Restaurant

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This diner is famous for its French Toast but it’s worth checking out the rest of the menu, which leans on vegetables and herbs more than ordinary traditional meat-and-potatoes diner fare. Whatever you do, get the biscuit — the only possible criticism we could make is that its texture is a bit scone-like, but if there’s a biscuit-scone convergence happening, we are here for it.

A omelet with caramelized onions and hashbrowns on the side.
The herbed omelette at Geraldine’s Counter.
Harry Cheadle

Bebop Waffle Shop

Bebop (formerly the Admiral Bird) is a funktastic West Seattle diner with a flower shop in the back and a rack of neon-pink hoodies in the front. It’s like if a car with too many bumper stickers became a restaurant, and we’re not complaining. The crispy and sometimes eccentric waffles (one variation has Coco Pebbles baked into it, another is called the Kate McKinnon) are satisfying, the bacon is perfectly cooked, and the vibes are family-friendly. Bebop also hosts events like a monthly sober brunch and a silent reading party.

A waffle with a dab of butter and a powdered sugar topping next to a breakfast sandwich.
A waffle and breakfast sandwich at Bebop Waffle shop.
Harry Cheadle

Rachel's Bagels & Burritos

Formerly the much-loved Porkchop & Co, this Ballard shop was reborn as a breakfast spot during the pandemic lockdown era. The perfectly chewy bagels are excellent across the board, with offerings like bagels topped with za’atar and shichimi togarashi (a Japanese chili pepper and spice blend). There are also great bagel sandwich options, like the Nick and Nora, a riff on avocado toast with chili crisp. Beyond bagels, the shop serves satisfying one-pound breakfast burritos with fillings like Oaxacan cheese and guajillo chili salsa, and J Kenji López-Alt-approved biscuit sandwiches. In 2024, Rachel’s expanded into Lake City’s Elliot Bay Brewing.

Two halves of a bagel sit on a plate. They are topped with cream cheese, avocado, and chili crisp. Rachel’s Bagels & Burritos

Seattle Biscuit Company

This little shack-sized joint on Leary Way has a hidden gimmick: All of the ingredients are sourced from places so close that co-founder Sam Thompson, a former professional endurance runner, can jog to them. The biscuit sandwiches here have none of the asceticism associated with long-distance running, however: We love the one with fried chicken, sausage gravy, and sweet onion mustard; another fan favorite is the Che, SBC’s version of a Cuban sandwich. But these biscuits are so good it almost doesn’t matter what you put between them — flaky, warm, with just a hint of sweetness.

A biscuit is cut in half and stuffed with jam, bacon, and an egg. Seattle Biscuit Company

Bake Shop

In addition to excellent pastry case items like Yukon gold potato ham and cheese rolls, roasted shallot scones, and banana bread made with rye and oat flour, Bake Shop also has a small selection of sandwiches and toasts made to order with their outstanding bread. Roasted veggie toast is eminently satisfying, with the seasonal veggies getting a pairing of spicy cashew sauce on country loaf. The similarly generic-in-name-only nut butter and jam toast is sea salt topped almond-cashew butter on seedy brown bread, and it’s so good that it doesn’t even need the excellent seasonal jam it’s served with. As the bakery’s name may imply, everything at Bake Shop is an understatement. 

A piece of toast is topped with various roasted veggies, including spicy cashew sauce and dill. Bake Shop

Pete's Egg Nest

Originally the first location of local chain Patty’s Eggnest, this diner changed its name after being sold to Pete and Voula Sideris decades ago. There are Greek items on the menu but you can’t go wrong with the diner classics, like the elegantly light pancakes or the corned beef hash. On the weekends, it fills up fast — everyone wants that Saturday morning diner feeling, and that’s exactly what Pete’s, nee Patty’s, delivers.

A table full of diner food including eggs and pancakes.
A table of food at Pete’s Eggnest.
Harry Cheadle

Beth's Cafe

When Beth’s Cafe closed (at times seemingly for good) during COVID, it left a 12-egg omelet-sized hole in Seattle’s diner scene. After reopening with limited hours in 2023, Mason Reed (who also co-owns Tim’s Tavern) and Tim Crawley took over ownership in 2024. He made two important changes. First was reinstating the ultra late-night hours that Beth’s reputation has long been focused on (Beth’s is now open until 4 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays). He also made some subtle but impactful menu improvements. The coffee is now from Seven Coffee Roasters, using more locally sourced ingredients, and more sauces are made from scratch. The ethos is still no-frills, but now there’s more quality to go with the bodacious omelet and all-you-can-eat hash browns quantity. 

A biscuit is smothered with cream gravy. Next to it are crispy hash browns. Beth’s Cafe

Ludi's Restaurant

Long ago, especially when Ludi’s was a bar called the Turf, some of its customers preferred to drink their breakfasts. While you can still get cocktails here, the new location of the beloved Filipino-American diner is decidedly more family-friendly, a chilled-out restaurant where you can order all kinds of silog (a classic Filipino breakfast of eggs, rice, and usually meat) and dress it up with all kinds of condiments. If someone at your table is the posting type, they’ll probably want the eye-catching ube pancakes, and you should try a bite — they’re both dessert-rich and surprisingly light.

A plate of pancakes covered in bright purple ube sauce under a neon sign that says “Ludi’s.”
The ube pancakes at Ludi’s.
Suzi Pratt

Hudson

Hudson has been slinging southern-inflected breakfasts in this circa-1931 brick roadhouse since 2009, and its atmosphere is understatedly timeless. The horseshoe-shaped bar is the ideal place to sit with an order of some of the city’s best chicken fried steak, which is topped with rare-in-Seattle country gravy (peppery white gravy sans sausage). The shrimp and cheddar grits and the brisket omelet are stars, too. And speaking of rare-in-Seattle, a Monte Cristo might be just the thing if you want something truly old-school. [Heads up: true to its roadhouse form, Hudson is 21+ only]

A man sits, holding his fork and knife, with a plate in front of him with a fried chicken sandwich and a small salad. Hudson

Mas Cafe

You come to Mas for the mess. This tiny Fremont spot with a gravel parking lot has two incredible breakfast options: loaded Tex-Mex style burritos with chorizo, potatoes, and all the fixings, and perfect breakfast sandwiches. The sausage sandwich is meaty, slightly sweet thanks to the aioli and huge caramelized onion slice, and has a crunchy green chile in it — the type of sandwich an Egg McMuffin wants to be when it grows up.

A breakfast sandwich loaded with onion and melted cheese.
The sausage sandwich at Mas Cafe.
Harry Cheadle

B-Side Foods

This bite-sized restaurant inside Analog Coffee (get it? B-side?) is one of those “hidden gems” that’s hardly hidden — everyone knows about the breakfast sandwich here by now, surely? Ham, Beecher’s cheese, daikon pickles, charred onion aioli, and as the star ingredient, a thin omelet-y slice of egg dotted with scallions. Like much of what B-Side does, it’s casually impressive and shockingly good.

A slice of frittata is served on a plate with a salad. B-Side Foods

Glo's

After a fire and a relocation, the Capitol Hill diner Glo’s has reopened next to Cal Anderson Park. The famous item here is the eggs Benedict, but don’t worry if you show up after they’re out of hollandaise, because the whole menu is full of great stuff like corned beef, biscuits, and coffee cake. In true Seattle diner fashion, there’s an extensive cocktail list as well, in case you’re having one of those days.

A plate of corned beef topped with an egg
Corned beef hash at Glo’s.
Harry Cheadle

Morsel

This U District biscuit shop offers the kind of biscuits that breakfast lovers dream of — pillowy interior, crispy exterior, flaky bite. The “fast break,” Morsel’s signature sandwich, is a behemoth stack of eggs, fatty bacon, and cheddar cheese on a biscuit of your choice that’s smeared with earthy tomato jam. You can also opt to grab one of its buttermilk biscuits plain with butter and jam on the side; there’s strawberry balsamic jam, chocolate hazelnut jam, and raspberry jam, among others. Morsel usually has gluten-free biscuits available.

A biscuit is cut in half and served like a sandwich with eggs and bacon. Morsel

The Station

This community-oriented coffee shop across the street from the light rail station is an old-school sort of hangout spot, with local artists on the wall, pop music flowing from the speakers, and a Seattle Public Libraries machine by the door that dispenses short stories. The good vibes come with hearty breakfast sandwiches and an even heartier biscuits and chorizo gravy dish. There are lots of flavored mochas and lattes, but the best drink might be the Cafe Cola, which is Topo Chico, espresso, and chocolate.

Volunteer Park Cafe & Pantry

This cafe from a pair of Canlis alums, Crystal Chiu and Melissa Johnson, has been impressing Capitol Hill diners with its pastries, many of which are gluten-free. In an elegant glass case in the cafe, creations like smoked black tea shortbread topped with a puffed kamut brittle line up next to classics like galletes filled with seasonal fruit. For something heavier, you can order the egg and cheese sandwich the Seattle Times christened the best in town.

A pastry cabinet holds buns, cakes, blondies, and more. Volunteer Park Cafe & Pantry

Temple Pastries

The glorious array of baked goods at this bright bakery includes familiar items such as cookies, croissants, Kouign Amann, macarons, and breads. Patrons also might encounter combinations like black sesame yuzu, Jasmine green tea, and guava cream cheese. The cruffin (croissant baked into a muffin mold) is a dream, particularly the cinnamon variety. In the summer of 2024, Temple added a “bodega-style” breakfast sandwich.

A woman stands at a counter in a pastry shop that is all white with lots of plants. Temple Pastries

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Geraldine's Counter Restaurant

This diner is famous for its French Toast but it’s worth checking out the rest of the menu, which leans on vegetables and herbs more than ordinary traditional meat-and-potatoes diner fare. Whatever you do, get the biscuit — the only possible criticism we could make is that its texture is a bit scone-like, but if there’s a biscuit-scone convergence happening, we are here for it.

A omelet with caramelized onions and hashbrowns on the side.
The herbed omelette at Geraldine’s Counter.
Harry Cheadle

Related Maps