NYCGuide

The Best Brunch In NYC

All the New York City restaurants where you should be eating pancakes, eggs, chilaquiles, and more.
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Brunch is good for a lot of things. It's a solid pretext for day drinking, and it's also a convenient way to eat breakfast food after you've spent a reckless amount of time in bed. Whatever your reason for subjecting yourself to the masses on a weekend morning, make sure you’re going to a place that serves great food. For the city’s best breakfast burritos, french toast, and biscuits and gravy, check out the spots below. If you’re specifically looking for dim sum, we have a guide for that as well, and we also have you covered when it comes to bagels and pancakes.

THE SPOTS

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Thai

Nolita

$$$$Perfect For:BirthdaysBrunchDate NightImpressing Out of TownersLunch
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The bamboo walls at this uber-popular spot sparkle like a disco ball when it’s sunny out, so it’s a great place for brunch on a nice weekend day. (But you should come even if the weather sucks.) Thai Diner’s must-order item is the buttery egg-and-cheese roti, which keeps all of its components compact, so that every bite includes the same layers and flavors. From top to bottom, you’ll taste herby sai oua sausage, a mash of mayo and scallions, a soft egg crepe covered in oozing american cheese, and a few slivers of fresh Thai basil. Get that and the Thai tea babka french toast, and you’re in for what is easily Nolita’s best brunch.

Unlike the food at whatever place comes up when you search “diner near me,” the classics at Golden Diner in Chinatown are updated and slightly unexpected. In most cases, they make the original versions seem inadequate. We recommend the honey butter pancakes, breakfast burrito, or breakfast sandwich on a soft milk bun with american cheese, eggs, and a big crunchy hash brown. The cement floors and exposed ducts makes this place feel industrial, but there’s also a long counter with retro chrome stools so you won’t forget that you are indeed in a diner.

This East Village Texan spot is great at any hour, but we especially like coming for brunch, which feels like a collab between IHOP and Dolly Parton with floral wallpaper and mismatched ‘70s-looking lamps. Get a brunch cocktail and a few kolaches to start, then stock up on tacos. We especially like the smoked bacon and egg, bean and cheese, and carne guisada varieties, all of which come on fresh flour tortillas. They also serve a rotating menu of incredibly light and fluffy doughnuts on weekends—and they’ll wind up being what you remember most.

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$$$$Perfect For:Date Night

This Fort Greene restaurant is destination dining disguised as a humble neighborhood restaurant, and weekend brunch is no exception. At Sailor, menu items that sound simple, like a tomato grilled cheese or gruyère omelet, tend to have surprising twists that turn them into new classics. There are only 10 tables, so it’s a tough reservation, but you might be able to snag one of the walk-in bar seats if you come in early. The dishware is plain, the plating isn’t fussy, and the nautical themes make this place feel super casual, but don’t let that fool you—every meal here feels like a special occasion.

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Located in the Ace Hotel in Nomad, Koloman takes the kind of food you’d expect to find at a fancy hotel in Europe, gives it a 21st-century makeover, then serves it all up in a surprisingly casual setting. Their brunch includes some of the greatest hits from their dinner menu, including duck liver parfait with Texas toast-style brioche, roasted beets “linzer”, and what might be the best apple strudel outside of Austria. There’s plenty of breakfast-y food available too, like french toast and a soft scramble with chives and pumpkin seed oil.

Brunch at Win Son Bakery in East Williamsburg involves food that's more exciting than your usual Saturday morning short stack. This counter-service Taiwanese cafe from the people behind Win Son (across the street) has fan tuan, mochi doughnuts, and one of the city's best BECs on the menu. For an extra $6, you can and absolutely should get your BEC on a warm, chewy scallion pancake. Think of this place as a neighborhood coffee shop that happens to serve food so good it’ll make you angry and confused, like a dog confronted with a mirror.

We should warn you that—even more than all the other greasy deliciousness on this list—brunch at Agi’s might put you to sleep. This Crown Heights restaurant serves Hungarian and Austrian-inspired takes on Jewish-American classics: think tuna melts and brisket, served with thick, buttery pieces of toast, and aged cheeses. Newbies should start with the Alpine cheddar egg sandwich, which comes on a buttery Hungarian cheese biscuit. They only have a few counter seats and corner tables, but if you can nab a seat at the counter, it’s a nice place to have a cup of coffee in what feels like your most put-together friend’s, warm, welcoming kitchen. Ask about their special Hungarian donuts.

This restaurant on the Chinatown/LES border does fun, modern takes on Cantonese-American cuisine in a space with faux movie theater displays and a bar with a sign that says “Here for a good time, not a long time.” Do not skip the salt-and-pepper fried chicken sandwich, even if you’ve spent the last two days polishing off a family meal from KFC. They also serve a Hong Kong-style french toast with salted egg yolk lava and taro shrimp fritters. A coffee milk tea goes perfectly with everything here, but we also love their mocktails, so try both.

There are few things more exhilarating than trying to get a table at Buvette on a weekend afternoon. As you peek through the windows on Grove Street, you’ll see people enjoying brioche french toast and the fluffiest eggs in all of New York City, and you’ll think to yourself, “That could be me.” Yes, it could be you—if you put your name in with the host and wait a few hours. Think about waiting for a table at this cramped, yet charming French spot from the Via Carota people as a West Village rite of passage.

BGG is brunch royalty. That’s why we can use that abbreviation and just assume you know what we’re referring to. This 1908-established Jewish deli has plenty of room for you to sit and eat a real brunch, which sets it apart from a lot of the city’s classic smoked fish spots. The no-frills diner-esque space opens at 8:30am, and you probably want to get here by 10am if you don’t want to have to wait for a table. Bring a small group, and get some scrambled eggs, oblong-shaped latkes, and near-translucent nova. This place doesn’t accept credit cards, so bring cash.

Superiority Burger does brunch on the weekends now, meaning that their faux-diner aesthetic turns into a real diner for two days a week. Obviously, if you’re looking for your bacon fix, Superiority Burger isn’t the place for you. But if a spongy, crisp waffle served with guava butter and syrup, grits, or a tofu scramble sound like a good way to start the day, then Superiority Burger is a great East Village option. Plus, it’s easier to walk in for brunch than dinner. The menu changes often, but one weekend special is always available—ask them for a slab of their absolutely killer focaccia.

It’s impossible to resist the siren song of Ursula’s breakfast burritos, especially when you’re a little bit hungover—the outsides get kissed on the griddle, and the insides are stuffed with hashbrowns, among other things. A meal at this pink and turquoise restaurant in Bed-Stuy is the closest you can get to New Mexican food in New York, with chile peppers and other ingredients imported directly from the Land of Enchantment. They also have excellent coffee and cocktails for those mornings when you need one drink for energy, one drink for fun, and some water for hydration or whatever. 

The people behind Queens Comfort (now closed) run this cafe and doughnut shop in Astoria. You order at a counter, and a lot of the menu involves elaborate baked items. They switch up their offerings often, but you might see nutella crème brulée doughnuts or rainbow cookie crumb cake. For something savory, get the McGruffin biscuit sandwich. It’s so thick you’ll struggle to fit all of its layers in one bite, and the moist buttermilk biscuit is so fluffy and sweet it could be classified as a cupcake. On Sunday’s, Comfortland hosts a special brunch, which is $60 and cash-only. It includes four courses and a drink, and there’s a DJ present.

Greywind’s brunch is the only reason we go to Hudson Yards on the weekend. The quiet American restaurant, painted country blue with clouds on the walls, feels like a refuge in the neighborhood's office hellscape. And well-done brunch standards like the buckwheat galette and buttermilk pancakes with rhubarb jam use quality seasonal ingredients that make us wish we owned a farm upstate. Brunch is also the best time to try their pastries, which normally sell out early on weekdays at their counter-service spot around the corner. On the weekends you can order from a fresh batch while sitting inside the main dining room with a spritz.

This vegan cafe and specialty foods store in Clinton Hill, from the people behind Mekelburg’s, is where you’ll find some of the best plant-based brunch food in the city. They serve a breakfast torta with king trumpet mushroom bacon as well plant-based lox bagels, picadillo empanadas, and pozole. You can’t go wrong with any of those dishes, and nothing costs more than $20. If it’s nice out, we recommend hanging out all morning on the pleasant patio, but if you must do takeout, you can always grab some guava cream cheese doughnuts to go and eat them on your couch.

Housed in a building that looks like it was around when the founding fathers were alive, this Dumbo (technically, Vinegar Hill) restaurant has a smallish dining room and an immensely charming backyard with string lights and creeping vines. We always love the seasonal quiche, which has the consistency of a soufflé, but the must-order item is the incredible sourdough pancake that's cooked in a wood-fired oven. It’s custard-like in the middle and might come with strawberries, apples, or peaches depending on the season. No matter what it comes with, just get it.

You’ve heard of Sylvia’s. It’s famous, and you’ll undoubtedly see tourists here, but you’ll also see people from the neighborhood who recognize the fact that Sylvia’s is good at just about everything. Fresh, warm cornbread? Check. Thick waffles and chicken so crispy that you could shoot an ASMR video? Also check. And don’t forget the mac and cheese that comes with a thick cap of melted cheddar. The huge space hosts a gospel brunch every Sunday, so bring all your live music-loving friends.

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Suggested Reading

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