Best Hidden Gems Sandwiches Restaurants in Downtown LA
11 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Garo's Deli
Long-running alleyway deli known for overstuffed baguette sandwiches and Armenian specialties.
Notable Picks
#1
Garo's Deli
8.8
Tucked into the European-style St Vincent Court alley since 1989, Garo's Deli turns French baguettes and Armenian-influenced fillings into big, deeply satisfying sandwiches. Regulars come for generously stacked cold cuts, old-school hot pastrami, and a long list of cheese and veggie options served with pickles and little yellow peppers.
Must-Try Dishes:
Mortadella Sandwich on 10" French baguette, Garo's Special Combo Sandwich (turkey, mortadella, salami, provolone), Basturma Sandwich with provolone and pickles
What Makes it Special: Long-running alleyway deli known for overstuffed baguette sandwiches and Armenian specialties.
#2
Breadlam
8.6
Breadlam is an Arts District sandwich and cheese counter built around house-toasted breads, stacked fillings, and a short, focused menu. Downtown office workers and creatives use it as a dependable midday stop when they want a serious sandwich on crusty bread instead of another salad or grain bowl.
Must-Try Dishes:
Raymond Sandwich, Glendale Sandwich, Breadlam Blend Grilled Cheese
What Makes it Special: Serious, cheffy sandwiches built on excellent bread and cheeses.
8.3
At the Spring Street outpost of Sami Othman’s Cajun-Creole deli, Lil’ Hotties wings share the spotlight with shrimp po’ boys, gumbo, and big New Orleans–style platters. It’s a hearty, sauce-driven option when you want serious wings with fries plus the option to tack on gumbo or a sandwich.
Must-Try Dishes:
10 Lil’ Hotties Wings with Cajun Fries, Gumbo Mumbo over Rice, Shrimp Po’ Boy
What Makes it Special: New Orleans–inspired deli where wings come piled over Cajun fries alongside po’ boys and gumbo.
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.
8
Chris Bianco's lunch-only counter shop at ROW DTLA builds each sandwich on split focaccia baked to order in a wood-fired oven, filled with house-cured meats and local produce—a format that rewards the single-item visit over a full meal. The patio runs conversational rather than chaotic, and the free two-hour garage parking removes the usual downtown friction. With only 55 reviews it's still proving itself at this location, but the 80% five-star rate and Bianco's James Beard pedigree suggest the Phoenix playbook translates.
Must-Try Dishes:
Roast Beef Sandwich with Green Garlic Aioli, Mortadella Sandwich, Green Slice
What Makes it Special: Chris Bianco's lunch-only sandwich shop where split focaccia is baked to order in a wood-fired oven and served with house-cured meats and local produce.
#6
Pikunico
8
A Michelin-trained chef applying fine-dining karaage technique to a tight, mostly gluten-free counter menu inside the ROW DTLA complex. The fried chicken sandwich — built on pickled daikon, jalapeño, and miso jam — has carved out real neighborhood standing in a district that burns through concepts fast. Works best as a quick, purposeful stop where the technique-to-price ratio does the convincing.
Must-Try Dishes:
Golden Chicken Sandwich, Pikunico Bowl, Classic Fried Chicken
What Makes it Special: A Michelin-trained chef's take on Japanese karaage — nearly the entire menu is gluten-free, and the fried chicken sandwich with pickled daikon, jalapeño, and miso jam has become a DTLA icon.
Worthy Picks
#7
Café Persona
7.9
A quiet DTLA café tucked behind Disney Concert Hall, brewing Stereoscope Coffee beans and pairing them with housemade sourdough toasts and a standout saffron iced latte. The low-lit, couch-filled space draws remote workers and solo visitors who want a calm retreat from the downtown grid. Expect a focused menu built around quality coffee and a handful of well-executed toast and pastry options rather than a full kitchen.
Must-Try Dishes:
Saffron Iced Latte, Avocado Egg Salad Toast, Ricotta Toast
What Makes it Special: Intimate café tucked behind Disney Concert Hall, brewing Stereoscope Coffee beans and pairing them with housemade sourdough toasts and distinctive drinks like the saffron iced latte.
Vibes:
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Quick Bites Champions
Hidden Gems Heaven
Business Lunch Power Players
A compact Arts District takeout shop focused on crisp bánh mì and strong Vietnamese coffee. The bread-to-filling balance is the draw—fresh herbs, bright pickles, and savory proteins built for a quick, satisfying grab-and-go.
Must-Try Dishes:
Special banh mi, Grilled pork banh mi, Vietnamese iced coffee
What Makes it Special: Straightforward bánh mì with fresh bread and bright fillings.
#9
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.
#10
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.
7.6
MADE by DWC Cafe & Gift Boutique is the Downtown Women’s Center’s social-enterprise café, pairing simple sandwiches and salads with a retail shop of handmade goods. It’s a calm, mission-driven space for a light lunch that directly supports services for women experiencing homelessness.
Must-Try Dishes:
Turkey Arugula Sandwich, Tuna Salad Sandwich, Daily Pastry Selection
What Makes it Special: Social-enterprise café where sandwich sales fund Downtown Women’s Center programs.