Best Brunch in Miami: 15 Spots You Can't Miss
Miami
2026-05-07
14 min read

Best Brunch in Miami: 15 Spots You Can't Miss

Sarah Mitchell

Travel Curator

From bottomless mimosas on Ocean Drive to Cuban-style brunch in Little Havana — our curated guide to the 15 best brunch spots in Miami for every mood and budget.

Best Brunch in Miami: 15 Spots You Can't Miss

Miami does brunch the way it does everything else — with sunshine, style, and a refusal to be ordinary. In a city where the first meal of the day might happen at noon and the dress code is always slightly overdressed, brunch is not merely a meal. It is a Saturday and Sunday institution, a social ritual, and occasionally a competitive sport involving reservations, waiting lists, and strategic arrival timing. The good news is that Miami's brunch scene has evolved far beyond the standard eggs-and-champagne formula into one of the most diverse and exciting breakfast cultures in the United States.

This guide covers 15 brunch spots across Miami that are genuinely worth your time and money — from the iconic oceanfront terraces of South Beach to the hidden gems in neighborhoods that most tourists never discover. We have included everything from blow-out bottomless brunch experiences to quiet, quality-focused cafes where the food speaks for itself. Whatever your brunch personality — whether you want a DJ and unlimited prosecco or a perfectly poached egg in peaceful silence — Miami has exactly what you are looking for.

South Beach Brunch

1. The Front Porch Cafe

Tucked into the ground floor of a residential building on Ocean Drive, The Front Porch Cafe is South Beach brunch without the South Beach attitude. The patio faces the beach through a screen of palm trees, the service is warm and unhurried, and the menu strikes that perfect balance between health-conscious and indulgent. The acai bowl is massive and genuinely well-made (not the watered-down tourist version), the banana foster French toast is a controlled demolition of restraint, and the omelets come stuffed with fillings that actually taste like something. Coffee is strong and constantly refilled.

What makes Front Porch special is its accessibility. There is no velvet rope, no dress code, no minimum spend, and no DJ competing with your conversation. You can show up in your swimsuit after a morning beach walk and feel perfectly at home. Prices are reasonable for Ocean Drive — most entrees fall between $15 and $22. Arrive before 10:30 AM on weekends to avoid the wait, which can stretch to 45 minutes by noon.

2. Nikki Beach

If your brunch philosophy leans toward spectacle, Nikki Beach delivers the full Miami experience on a silver platter. Located at the southern tip of South Beach on Ocean Drive, this beachfront venue transforms Sunday brunch into a daylong event with a DJ, a crowd that treats the meal as a fashion show, and a champagne-forward drinks menu that makes the afternoon disappear pleasantly. The food — sushi platters, grilled seafood, truffle fries, and a solid brunch buffet — is better than it needs to be for a venue that could coast on atmosphere alone.

Nikki Beach brunch is a commitment: plan for three to four hours minimum, dress well (think resort chic rather than casual beach), and arrive with a credit card that will not flinch at $60 to $80 per person before drinks. It is not an everyday brunch — it is a celebration brunch, a birthday brunch, a we-are-in-Miami-and-we-are-doing-this brunch. And on those terms, it delivers completely.

3. Juvia

Perched on the rooftop of the 1111 Lincoln Road parking garage — yes, a parking garage, designed by Herzog & de Meuron — Juvia offers brunch with panoramic views of South Beach, the ocean, and the Miami skyline. The kitchen blends French, Japanese, and Peruvian cuisines in a combination that sounds chaotic but works brilliantly: think miso-glazed salmon with a perfectly poached egg, wagyu beef tartare, and matcha crepes alongside classic French pastries.

The setting is strikingly beautiful, with an open-air terrace, vertical gardens, and sunset views that justify the elevated pricing ($35 to $55 per entree). Weekend brunch reservations are essential — book at least a week in advance. Juvia is the brunch spot you choose when you want to impress someone or when you want to treat yourself to something genuinely memorable rather than merely filling.

4. Big Pink

Big Pink is the anti-Juvia — a loud, colorful, unpretentious diner on Collins Avenue that has been serving massive portions of American comfort food since 1996. The menu is a laminated novel featuring over 200 items, from towering stacks of buttermilk pancakes to breakfast burritos the size of your forearm. Portions are absurd. Prices are low by South Beach standards ($12 to $18 for most items). The vibe is retro-kitsch, with TV screens on every wall and a clientele that spans from families to people who clearly have not been to bed yet.

Big Pink will never win a design award or appear in an architecture magazine. What it will do is feed you exceptionally well at a fair price while asking nothing of you in terms of dress code, reservation, or social performance. For a no-nonsense, reliable, generous brunch on South Beach, it is hard to beat.

Wynwood and Design District Brunch

5. KYU

KYU in Wynwood brings Asian-inspired wood-fired cooking to the brunch table with spectacular results. The brunch menu features items you will not find anywhere else in Miami — roasted cauliflower with goat cheese and shishito peppers, short rib with Thai herbs, and a duck egg fried rice that makes you reconsider every fried rice you have eaten before. The space is industrial-chic with exposed brick, communal tables, and a wood-burning grill that fills the room with an intoxicating smokiness.

KYU brunch is popular with Miami's creative and culinary crowd — the people who choose restaurants based on the food rather than the scene. Prices are moderate to high ($18 to $35 per dish, designed for sharing), and reservations are recommended. The cocktail program is excellent, with innovative twists on classic brunch drinks — the KYU Bloody Mary with smoked ingredients is a revelation.

6. Mandolin Aegean Bistro

Hidden behind a white picket fence in the Design District, Mandolin transports you to a Greek island courtyard — whitewashed walls, potted olive trees, dappled sunlight through pergola vines, and the gentle hum of a neighborhood that has not decided to be loud yet. The brunch menu pulls from Turkish and Greek breakfast traditions: shakshuka with perfectly spiced tomato sauce, borek pastries filled with feta and spinach, thick Greek yogurt with honey and walnuts, and a spread of mezze that makes sharing a table feel like a celebration.

Mandolin is one of the most beautiful restaurant spaces in Miami, and it achieves this without trying too hard. The food is honest Mediterranean cooking, the service is gracious, and the courtyard setting makes you forget you are in a major American city. Weekend brunch without a reservation is inadvisable — book at least a few days ahead. Budget $25 to $40 per person with a drink.

7. Salty Donut

Salty Donut in Wynwood is not a traditional brunch restaurant, but its artisan doughnuts and coffee program have earned it a cult following that demands inclusion on any Miami breakfast list. The doughnuts are made in small batches using high-quality ingredients — think brown butter and salt, guava and cheese, maple bacon, and rotating seasonal specials that sell out by mid-morning. Each doughnut costs $5 to $7, which sounds steep until you take the first bite and realize these are not Dunkin' imitations.

Pair a doughnut or two with a specialty coffee (the espresso program is excellent) and you have a brunch that costs under $15 and takes 20 minutes — perfect for mornings when you want fuel rather than an event. The Wynwood location has limited seating inside and out; arrive before 10 AM on weekends for the best selection.

Little Havana and Calle Ocho Brunch

8. Versailles Restaurant

No Miami brunch guide is complete without Versailles, the legendary Cuban restaurant on Calle Ocho that has been the beating heart of Miami's Cuban community since 1971. Brunch here is a Cuban affair: cafe con leche served in thick white cups, tostada cubana slathered with butter, croquetas de jamon that shatter and melt simultaneously, and a full Cuban breakfast platter of eggs, ham, toast, beans, and fried plantains that could sustain you until dinner.

The decor is wonderfully over the top — mirrored walls, chandeliers, and an atmosphere that buzzes with rapid-fire Spanish and the clatter of porcelain. Versailles is not just a restaurant; it is a cultural institution and a window into the soul of Cuban Miami. Prices are remarkably low ($8 to $15 for a full breakfast), portions are generous, and the experience is authentically, unmistakably Miami. Skip the tourist spots on the beach and come here instead for at least one morning of your trip.

9. Cafe La Trova

Cafe La Trova, James Beard Award-winning bartender Julio Cabrera's cocktail bar and Cuban restaurant on Calle Ocho, brings contemporary energy to Little Havana's culinary scene. Weekend brunch features elevated Cuban comfort food — think vaca frita eggs Benedict, guava and cream cheese stuffed French toast, and platanos maduros served with a poached egg and mojo hollandaise. The cocktails are exceptional, drawing from the Cuban cantinero tradition with modern technique.

The space is divided between a lively front bar and a more intimate dining room in the back, both decorated with the saturated colors and vintage photography that evoke mid-century Havana. Brunch at La Trova hits the sweet spot between the authenticity of Versailles and the polish of South Beach fine dining — Cuban tradition with contemporary execution. Reserve for weekend brunch, especially for groups of four or more. Budget $30 to $50 per person with cocktails.

Coconut Grove and Coral Gables Brunch

10. Greenstreet Cafe

Greenstreet in Coconut Grove has been a neighborhood anchor since 1992, and its sidewalk terrace is one of Miami's most pleasant places to spend a Saturday morning. The setting — a leafy street corner with ficus trees providing natural shade, the pace of the Grove's relaxed village atmosphere washing over you — is as much the draw as the food. The menu covers all the brunch essentials competently: eggs any style, French toast, omelets, salads, and a burger that appears on more Instagram stories than any single dish in the Grove.

What Greenstreet does exceptionally well is atmosphere. The terrace fills with a mix of locals reading the paper, young families, and visitors who have discovered that Coconut Grove is Miami's most livable neighborhood. Prices are moderate ($14 to $22 for most items), the coffee is good, and the people-watching is excellent. No reservations needed — just show up and grab a table.

11. Threefold Cafe

Australian-style brunch has colonized American cities from Brooklyn to San Francisco, and Threefold in Coral Gables is Miami's best example of the genre. Avocado toast done correctly (not the limp, underseasoned versions that give the dish a bad name), soft-scrambled eggs with the texture of clouds, flat whites pulled by baristas who understand milk texture, and a lamington doughnut that bridges Australian and American breakfast cultures. The space is bright, minimal, and designed for lingering.

Threefold is the brunch spot for people who care about coffee as much as food — the espresso program uses locally roasted specialty beans and the baristas are trained to competition standards. Everything on the menu is made from scratch, portions are well-judged rather than grotesquely large, and the prices ($12 to $20) reflect the quality of ingredients without reaching for pretension. A very good brunch that does not demand you dress for it or plan around it.

Mid-Beach and North Beach Brunch

12. Cafe Americano at the Confidante

Inside the Confidante Miami Beach (formerly the Thompson), Cafe Americano serves Latin-influenced brunch in a space that marries mid-century modern design with tropical warmth. The churro French toast with dulce de leche is the signature — a towering construction that photographs beautifully and tastes even better. The huevos rancheros are properly executed with house-made salsa, and the raw bar offers a refreshing alternative to heavy breakfast fare.

The pool deck is accessible for brunch guests, making this a natural pairing — eat first, then migrate to a lounger for the afternoon. It is the kind of effortless Miami experience that feels luxurious without being ostentatious. Brunch is served Saturday and Sunday, with prices in the $18 to $30 range. Reservations recommended during high season.

13. Cecconi's at Soho Beach House

Cecconi's occupies the ground floor of the members-only Soho Beach House, but the restaurant itself is open to the public. The Italian-influenced brunch menu features delicate pastas, perfectly cooked eggs, and a bresaola salad that makes you feel healthy enough to order the ricotta pancakes without guilt. The setting — a lush garden terrace with dripping candles, bougainvillea, and the quiet remove of a private club — is one of the most romantic brunch spaces in Miami.

Cecconi's is where you go when brunch is a date rather than a meal. The service is polished, the atmosphere is intimate, and the crowd is a mix of Soho House members and outside diners who have discovered that this is one of Miami Beach's best-kept breakfast secrets. Prices are on the higher side ($22 to $40 per entree), and weekend reservations should be made several days in advance.

Brickell and Downtown Brunch

14. La Mar by Gaston Acurio

Located inside the Mandarin Oriental on Brickell Key, La Mar brings Peruvian celebrity chef Gaston Acurio's cuisine to a waterfront terrace overlooking Biscayne Bay and the Miami skyline. Weekend brunch features Peruvian-Japanese fusion — ceviche flights, tiradito with aji amarillo, anticuchos, and a pisco-based brunch cocktail menu that would stand alone as an attraction. The terrace view is staggering, with boats gliding past and the downtown skyline reflected in the water.

La Mar brunch is a special occasion destination — this is where you go for anniversaries, milestone birthdays, or the kind of Sunday where money is not the primary consideration. Expect to spend $50 to $80 per person with drinks. The ceviche alone justifies the trip. Book at least a week ahead for terrace seating.

15. Boulud Sud

Daniel Boulud's Mediterranean restaurant in the JW Marriott Marquis in downtown Miami offers a brunch that reflects the chef's French training filtered through Mediterranean and Middle Eastern influences. Shakshuka, Tunisian-style lamb merguez, and duck confit hash sit alongside classic French pastries and a selection of market-fresh salads. The space is sleek and modern, with views of the Metromover tracks creating an unexpectedly compelling urban backdrop.

Boulud Sud is popular with Brickell professionals and downtown residents — a crowd that expects quality and service without theatrical excess. The brunch prix fixe ($45 to $55 per person) offers excellent value given the chef's pedigree and the ingredient quality. Cocktails are expertly mixed, with the Mediterranean-inspired Aperol spritz variations particularly well-suited to midday drinking.

Pro Tips for Miami Brunch

Reservations are not optional at popular spots during high season (November through April). Book through OpenTable or Resy, or call the restaurant directly. Walk-ins work at casual spots and during summer months, but any weekend brunch at a notable restaurant between December and March requires advance planning.

Timing matters. The sweet spot for avoiding crowds is 9:30 to 10:30 AM — early enough to beat the late-rising brunch crowd but not so early that the kitchen is still warming up. After 11:30 AM, waits at popular spots can exceed an hour.

Bottomless brunch deals are common across Miami, particularly on South Beach. Typical packages run $35 to $60 per person for a set menu with unlimited mimosas, bellinis, or bloody marys over a 90-minute window. These offer decent value if you are a group of four or more and intend to make an afternoon of it. Read the fine print — some deals require minimum group sizes or weekday-only availability.

If you are staying on South Beach near the Carlyle building, you are within walking distance of several of the spots on this list. Casa Amore at The Carlyle puts you on Ocean Drive with Front Porch Cafe, Nikki Beach, and Big Pink all reachable on foot — no rideshare, no parking, no hassle. Roll out of bed, walk to brunch, and walk back. That is peak Miami living.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best brunch in South Beach Miami?

For quality food in a relaxed setting, The Front Porch Cafe on Ocean Drive is hard to beat. For a special occasion with views, Juvia's rooftop offers stunning panoramas and creative French-Japanese-Peruvian cuisine. For a full Miami spectacle, Nikki Beach on Sunday delivers music, fashion, and champagne alongside solid food. Each represents a different facet of the South Beach brunch experience.

How much does brunch cost in Miami?

Brunch in Miami ranges from $10 to $80 per person depending on the restaurant and your drink choices. Casual spots like Big Pink and Versailles serve full breakfasts for $10 to $18. Mid-range restaurants like Front Porch Cafe and Greenstreet Cafe run $15 to $25. Upscale options like Juvia, La Mar, and Cecconi's range from $35 to $60 per person. Bottomless brunch packages typically cost $35 to $60 for food plus unlimited drinks.

Do I need reservations for brunch in Miami?

During high season (November through April), reservations are strongly recommended for any popular restaurant, especially on weekends. Casual spots like Big Pink and Versailles are walk-in friendly. Most restaurants accept reservations via OpenTable, Resy, or direct phone calls. During summer months, walk-ins are easier across the board.

Where is the best Cuban brunch in Miami?

Versailles on Calle Ocho is the classic choice — authentic Cuban breakfast at low prices in a legendary setting. Cafe La Trova, also on Calle Ocho, offers a more contemporary take on Cuban brunch with elevated dishes and exceptional cocktails. For a quick, no-frills Cuban coffee and pastry, any ventanita (walk-up window) along Calle Ocho serves cafe con leche and croquetas for under $5.

What is bottomless brunch in Miami?

Bottomless brunch is a fixed-price meal that includes unlimited drinks — typically mimosas, bellinis, bloody marys, or sangria — over a set time period (usually 90 minutes to two hours). Prices range from $35 to $60 per person. It is popular across South Beach and Brickell, particularly for groups celebrating birthdays or bachelorette weekends. Quality varies widely — prioritize restaurants where the food is good independent of the drink deal.

What time does brunch start in Miami?

Most Miami restaurants begin brunch service between 9 and 11 AM on weekends, with some spots (especially those with a nightlife crossover crowd) starting as late as noon. Brunch typically runs until 3 or 4 PM. The sweet spot for arriving without a long wait is 9:30 to 10:30 AM. Cuban restaurants and bakeries open earlier — Versailles serves breakfast from 8 AM.

Is brunch in Miami only on weekends?

Most of the notable brunch spots serve brunch only on Saturday and Sunday. However, many offer breakfast menus during the week that overlap significantly with their brunch offerings. A few spots — Front Porch Cafe, Big Pink, Greenstreet Cafe — serve breakfast and brunch-style items daily. During Miami's high season, some restaurants add a Friday brunch service to meet demand.

What should I wear to brunch in Miami?

Dress code ranges from swimsuit-casual at beachside spots to resort-chic at upscale restaurants. For South Beach brunch, think sundresses, linen shirts, smart shorts, and stylish sandals. Juvia and Cecconi's expect a more polished look. Little Havana and Wynwood are completely casual. When in doubt, aim for one level above your current outfit — Miami tends to dress up rather than down, even for daytime dining.

Where can I get brunch with a view in Miami?

Juvia's rooftop overlooking South Beach is the most dramatic brunch view in the city. La Mar's bayfront terrace at the Mandarin Oriental offers stunning water and skyline perspectives. The Front Porch Cafe has casual ocean views through palm trees. Nikki Beach provides direct beachfront dining. For city views, Boulud Sud's downtown location offers an urban panorama.

Are there any good healthy brunch options in Miami?

Threefold Cafe in Coral Gables excels at healthy, well-made brunch — avocado toast, grain bowls, quality coffee. Front Porch Cafe on Ocean Drive has strong acai bowls and health-conscious options alongside indulgent items. Mandolin in the Design District offers Mediterranean-style brunch with fresh vegetables and lighter fare. Most Miami brunch menus now include plant-based and health-forward options alongside the classic indulgences.

Sarah Mitchell

Travel Curator

Sarah Mitchell is a seasoned travel writer with a passion for luxury experiences and authentic cultural discoveries.