Breakfast has always been an intriguing possibility for operators — an operating window with strong beverage margins, lower perceived food costs, and untapped hours where your dining room could be making money instead of sitting idle.
But like most “simple” ideas in restaurants, flipping on the open sign three hours earlier is not as easy as it sounds.
To break down where breakfast succeeds or fails, we spoke with Back of House consultants Dan Durkin and David Wisdom, who routinely help operators evaluate expansion opportunities.
Their answer to whether you should roll out a restaurant breakfast menu? It depends, but the upside can be real if the fundamentals are there.
Growing interest in morning service is real, Dan says, driven by the search for fresh revenue without heavy overhead.
“Many restaurateurs are searching for additional revenue streams,” Dan says. “Breakfast is one such area that I’ve spoken with a few about.”
Operators are watching consumer trends, too. Circana reports increasing morning traffic and interest in better-for-you foods, and Dan sees newer concepts capitalizing on those trends.
“I’ve been working with a startup ‘bowl’ chain focused on protein and functional foods,” he says. “That’s more difficult for established concepts — changing how a restaurant is identified by a local community can be a tough sell.”
Breakfast is booming most for:
For others, shifting into the morning market may create challenges rather than growth.
Headlines have been highlighting gas stations, convenience stores, and quick-service restaurants battling for breakfast share. Dan agrees there’s movement in the market, but the impact isn’t uniform.
“This shift impacts fast food far more than full-service breakfast concepts,” he explains. “A customer going to a gas station isn’t skipping a sit-down breakfast, they’re skipping a drive-through.”
In other words, if you’re a full-service restaurant, your direct competition isn’t from convenience stores or quick-service restaurants. The real pressure comes from national coffee chains.
“A bigger impact is national coffee chains offering higher-perceived-quality breakfast that’s easier to order,” Dan says.
Starbucks and similar chains aren’t just selling lattes. They combine convenience with a premium experience, giving busy morning customers a compelling alternative to traditional breakfast restaurants.
Independent full-service restaurants can’t compete on speed or price with convenience stores, but they do need to differentiate against coffee chains through quality, service, and experience.
Dan doesn’t hesitate when asked where independent restaurants hold an advantage. “Food quality and service!” he says. “A microwaved burrito for $3 will almost never be comparable to a proper, sit-down breakfast prepared to order.”
But it’s more than just ingredients. Timing, presentation, and the overall experience win customers over.
In a breakfast restaurant, guests expect hot, fresh plates served quickly but with attention to detail, and the ability to customize or accommodate requests that a convenience store or fast food chain simply can’t manage.
“That’s the differentiator you must lean into,” Dan emphasizes. “If you’re trying to be cheaper or faster, you’re competing with the wrong opponent.”
Focus on quality, service, and consistency — that’s what will bring guests through your doors in the morning, and why someone would choose their restaurant over a grab-and-go option.
Before designing dishes or pricing out lattes, Dan says the first thing you should evaluate is whether breakfast makes sense for your location.
“Market demand first and foremost,” he explains.
If the answers are yes, it could indicate there’s room for another option.
Once demand is confirmed, the next challenge is staffing. “Available labor would be the next consideration, because labor costs are skyrocketing,” he says. “Do you have the capacity with existing staff?”
Even if the market is ready, breakfast requires people who can handle early hours, fast service, and consistent quality, something you need to plan for before opening the doors.
According to David, operators often get blindsided when they enter breakfast thinking it’s easy, only to find the morning rush has its own rules.
“Restaurants underestimate early prep, extra labor, and equipment, and they build menus that are too large or complicated,” he says.
From scrambles that take longer than expected to coffee drinks that require barista-level precision, the details add up quickly. “Successful breakfast programs focus on speed, menu simplicity, accurate forecasting, and high-margin beverages.”
At breakfast, enthusiasm alone isn’t enough. You have to account for volume, staffing, and ingredients. If you don’t, you risk long tickets, unhappy staff, and spoiled food.
Once demand and practicality are confirmed, the next step is deciding what to serve.
Both David and Dan caution against over-ambitious menus on day one. A lean approach keeps operations manageable and lets you test the concept without overwhelming staff or kitchen systems.
Dan recommends starting with grab-and-go items, not just as offerings but as a way to gauge the market.
“Breakfast burritos, muffins, scones, sandwiches — these are easy ways to test the market,” he says. “And don’t sleep on drinks, because margins are still big on coffee and juices.”
The formula for a breakfast menu is simple. A focused menu paired with a strong beverage program creates a sustainable breakfast model. Guests may want wholesome ingredients and protein-rich plates, but they also expect speed. And in the mornings, speed wins.
David emphasizes starting small and testing before committing fully.
“Start small with a limited menu, weekend-only hours, or pop-up breakfast days promoted to nearby offices,” he says. “I agree with Dan that grab-and-go items or coffee bundles through delivery are great ways to gauge demand.”
If the pilot works, scale. If it doesn’t, pivot — before investing in extra equipment or staff. This approach balances menu quality, operational simplicity, and market feedback, giving you a clear path to profitable breakfast service.
Look for:
David sums it up, “Signals from the initial test will inform necessary strategic approaches for long-term success.”
Breakfast runs early, fast, and hot, and David doesn’t gloss over it.
“Let’s be honest, nobody’s leaping out of bed at 4 a.m. to flip omelets with a smile,” he says. “The hustle is real, and not everyone is built for it.”
You need:
Staffing for breakfast isn’t just about filling shifts — it’s about having people who can handle fast-paced service, precision cooking, and consistent beverages from the first ticket.
David ends with the bluntest truth. “The biggest risk is thinking breakfast is easy,” he warns. “Breakfast can be profitable gold — or a fast track to burning cash before the coffee even brews.”
When you commit to breakfast, several risks can hit fast if you aren’t careful:
Treat breakfast like the serious business it is. With careful planning, a streamlined restaurant breakfast menu, and the right team in place, your morning service can turn into a profitable revenue stream instead of a costly experiment.
If you can validate demand, execute simply, staff wisely, and pilot before scaling, breakfast can unlock revenue that your restaurant currently sleeps through.
If not, adding breakfast could strain your operation faster than it strengthens it. Either way, the decision shouldn't be emotional but operational.
Breakfast isn’t just a shift, it’s a machine. Every plate, every ticket, and every coffee order is a moving part that needs to work in sync.
Build it right, and mornings pay back.
Our team at Back of House can help you evaluate whether breakfast makes sense for your restaurant, from market demand and menu strategy to staffing and operational planning.
Schedule a consultation to get personalized guidance and actionable insights, so you can make an informed decision before committing to the morning shift.