Best Breakfast Restaurants in Downtown LA
18 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Girl & The Goat
Destination New American small plates with fearless, global flavor.
Essential Picks
9.1
Stephanie Izard’s Arts District outpost runs on bold, globally roaming small plates delivered with polish and momentum. The room is high-energy and design-forward, and the kitchen’s sweet spot is layered, punchy flavors meant to be shared. A destination-level New American anchor for Downtown nights and Sunday brunch.
Must-Try Dishes:
Goat curry, Sticky glazed pork shank, Grilled corn with seasonal toppings
What Makes it Special: Destination New American small plates with fearless, global flavor.
Notable Picks
#2
Eggslut
8.9
Inside Grand Central Market, Eggslut is the high-volume breakfast counter that turned chef Alvin Cailan’s egg sandwiches into a downtown ritual. Lines form early for made-to-order buns and the signature coddled egg jar, which still deliver remarkably consistent comfort despite tourist traffic.
Must-Try Dishes:
Fairfax egg sandwich, Bacon, Egg & Cheese sandwich, Slut (coddled egg over potato purée)
What Makes it Special: Downtown’s most famous egg-sandwich counter with huge, sustained crowds.
#3
Perch LA
8.6
A French-inspired rooftop bistro that pairs skyline drama with approachable brasserie staples. The kitchen leans classic—steak frites, mussels, roast chicken—executed reliably at high volume, while the real draw is the terrace energy and panoramic DTLA views. Come for golden-hour cocktails and stay for a lively, view-forward dinner.
Must-Try Dishes:
Steak frites, Moules frites, Duck confit
What Makes it Special: Rooftop French bistro dining with one of DTLA’s best views.
#4
JiST Cafe
8.3
Third-generation Little Tokyo cafe blending Japanese-American breakfast traditions with inventive dishes like chashu hash using a 70-year-old family marinade recipe. The crème brûlée French toast soaks for 24 hours before hitting the griddle.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chashu Hash, Lucky Ducky Scallion Pancake, Crème Brûlée French Toast
What Makes it Special: Family recipes dating back to 1920s Little Tokyo
8.2
The Rising Sun brings New Orleans-inspired brunch to a lofted Arts District space, balancing beignets, breakfast po’ boys, and Cajun breakfast burritos with cocktails. It still feels intimate and a bit under-the-radar compared to DTLA’s biggest names, making it a fun alternative when you want Southern flavors with a daytime buzz.
Must-Try Dishes:
Cajun Breakfast Burrito, Breakfast Po'Boy Sandwich, Beignets with strawberry gin preserves
What Makes it Special: Cajun-leaning brunch spot where breakfast po’ boys and beignets meet daytime cocktails.
8.1
A Francophile wine bar and café tucked into the Spring Arcade, combining a small French market with a cozy bistro perch. The food is simple and well-done—charcuterie, croques, salads, pastries—meant to pair with an excellent French-leaning wine list. It’s a mellow, under-the-radar spot that feels like stepping into a tiny Paris lounge downtown.
Must-Try Dishes:
Charcuterie and cheese board, Croque monsieur, Seasonal tart or pastry
What Makes it Special: Wine-first French café-market hybrid with real bistro intimacy.
8.1
An owner-operated DTLA breakfast counter built on from-scratch cooking and oversized portions at budget-friendly prices—the kind of place where a fried egg sandwich and horchata latte become a weekly detour. It runs a tight, small-space operation that rewards early arrivals before the counter fills up, with a calm enough atmosphere for laptop work between rushes.
Must-Try Dishes:
French Toast, Breakfast Burrito, Fried Egg Sandwich
What Makes it Special: Owner-operated DTLA breakfast counter known for oversized portions, from-scratch cooking, and a horchata latte that regulars detour for.
A 30,000 sq-ft moto-culture destination where the converted 1945 warehouse, vintage motorcycles on the floor, and club-like energy are the main attraction—food takes a supporting role. The modern American menu delivers solid burgers (the bone marrow truffle burger stands out) and a strong brunch spread, though portions and prices run toward destination-dining territory. Works best as a social gathering spot where the spectacle and sprawling lounge seating carry the experience.
Must-Try Dishes:
Bike Shed Burger, Steak & Eggs, Breakfast Burrito
What Makes it Special: A full-scale restaurant embedded inside a genuine moto social club.
#9
Azay
8
A family-run Little Tokyo storefront where Chef Akira Hirose applies classical French technique to traditional Japanese morning plates — one of the few places in LA proper doing a dedicated Japanese breakfast. The tight, open-kitchen format keeps things intimate and unhurried, built for regulars who treat it as a weekend ritual rather than a one-off visit.
Must-Try Dishes:
Daily Bento, Japanese Breakfast, Omurice
What Makes it Special: Family-run Little Tokyo institution where Chef Akira Hirose merges classical French technique with traditional Japanese breakfast — one of the only dedicated Japanese breakfasts served in LA proper.
8
Blu Jam’s Downtown location delivers a polished, comfort-forward American brunch with consistent execution and friendly pace. The menu leans classic-plus—pancakes, French toast, omelets—done with richer sauces and thoughtful sides. Best as a dependable weekend ritual rather than a hunt-worthy novelty.
Must-Try Dishes:
Crunchy French toast, Breakfast burrito, Seasonal pancakes
What Makes it Special: Elevated comfort-brunch staples with reliable consistency.
Worthy Picks
#11
Mike's Deli 2
7.9
A no-frills deli counter in Little Tokyo that stacks oversized reubens and pastrami sandwiches with quality cold cuts at prices that undercut most downtown lunch spots. The draw is straightforward—big portions, honest ingredients, and a menu that doesn't try to be anything other than a solid sandwich shop. Works best as a weekday lunch play if you time the parking right.
Must-Try Dishes:
Reuben Sandwich, Turkey Sandwich, Pastrami Sandwich
What Makes it Special: Old-school deli counter in Little Tokyo stacking hefty sandwiches with quality ingredients at budget prices
#12
L'Appart
7.9
A compact contemporary French brasserie and bar in the Spring Arcade corridor with a menu that moves from shareable starters to polished mains. Flavors stay familiar but thoughtfully updated, and the room feels more like a chic neighborhood hideout than a formal destination. Best for a relaxed dinner with a strong cocktail or wine backbone.
Must-Try Dishes:
French onion soup, Roasted chicken with jus, Steak frites
What Makes it Special: Downtown brasserie comfort with a cocktail-bar edge.
7.8
A weekday-only sandwich counter where owners Annette and Rafa have been building every order from scratch since 2011, tucked into an industrial stretch of Porter Street that most people drive past without noticing. The draw is reliable, unfussy lunch construction — turkey clubs and breakfast sandwiches assembled with care rather than spectacle. It runs on repeat-customer loyalty from the surrounding Arts District workforce, and the 15-year track record shows in a remarkably low complaint rate.
Must-Try Dishes:
Turkey Club, Andy's Special, Porter Breakfast Sandwich
What Makes it Special: Family-run weekday cafe since 2011 where owners Annette and Rafa build every sandwich fresh in an industrial pocket of the Arts District
#14
Cafe Dulce
7.8
A Japanese-American donut shop in Little Tokyo that builds its lineup around matcha, ube, and bacon glazes rather than standard bakery fare—the kind of place where the flavors reflect the neighborhood. It runs as a quick counter operation with donut-shop pricing, which keeps the barrier low enough to draw weekend lines from across the city.
Must-Try Dishes:
Green Tea Donut, Bacon Donut, Blueberry Donut
What Makes it Special: Japanese-American fusion donut shop in the heart of Little Tokyo, known for creative flavors like green tea and bacon that draw lines on weekends
#15
Café 2001
7.7
A Japanese-European all-day café from a Chez Panisse and St. John alum running a precise pastry program—canelés, tarts, and a pork katsu sandwich that reflects fine-dining technique in a casual format. The hushed Arts District space behind Yess operates more like a neighborhood salon than a typical café, pivoting to a wine bar on weekends. The polarized review profile (62% five-star, 24% one-star) signals a place that delivers when it connects but loses some visitors entirely—go expecting high craft with uneven execution odds.
Must-Try Dishes:
Pork Katsu Sandwich, Smoked Trout with Hashbrowns and Huckleberry Jam, Passion Fruit Tart
What Makes it Special: Japanese-European all-day café from a Chez Panisse and St. John alum, tucked behind Yess in the Arts District with an exacting pastry program and weekend wine bar pivot.
Vibes:
Brewery & Beer Garden Republic
Happy Hour Hotspots
Quick Bites Champions
Group Dining Gatherings
Golden Road's Grand Central Market bar pours twenty taps of house beer alongside vegan and buffalo-style wings that work as an easy happy hour pit stop. With counter seating facing the market and quick-service bar food, it is a casual way to pair crisp wings or cauliflower 'wings' with pints before or between other DTLA stops.
Must-Try Dishes:
Buffalo cauliflower wings with vegan ranch, Lemon pepper dry-rub cauliflower wings, Buffalo Loaded Fries with popcorn chicken or vegan option
What Makes it Special: A Grand Central Market beer bar pouring house brews with buffalo-style wings and vegan wing alternatives.
#17
Hi Bakery
7.7
An Arts District bakery built around 25 organic flours and a seasonally rotating lineup that changes with local farm availability — the egg tart and pistachio shortbread are the repeat-visit draws. The space runs calm and workable with enough tables to spread out, making it a low-key morning stop for the organic-leaning crowd who want their pastries with provenance.
Must-Try Dishes:
Egg Tart, French Toast, Pistachio Shortbread
What Makes it Special: Exclusively organic Arts District bakery using 25 unique organic flours with a seasonally rotating menu sourced from local farms.
#18
Etiquette Coffee
7.7
A coffee-and-barber collective on East 8th Street where the olive-tree patio does the heavy lifting — shaded, calm, and built for long sits rather than grab-and-go. The drink menu leans into lavender and specialty lattes alongside solid breakfast burritos and bagels, calibrated for Arts District morning routines. Works best when you treat it as a patio destination, not just a caffeine stop.
Must-Try Dishes:
Latte, Breakfast Burrito, Lavender Latte
What Makes it Special: Arts District coffee-and-barber collective built around an olive-tree patio where DTLA creatives post up all morning.