Brunch
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Hit Whisk on Camp Creek Parkway for a pretty brunch spot with big portions and high energy.
These are your best bets for getting a table for brunch with friends who seem to always be tardy for the party.
Atlanta has many phenomenal Black-owned restaurants around the metro. Here are some popular (and some pioneering) spots worth checking out.
Waffle sandwiches and a Video Soul-era soundtrack make this a fun but chill brunch outing.
You haven't done brunch in Atlanta until you’ve hit at least one of these hotspots.
Bring your noisy friends to T's Brunch Bar for a fun brunch, as long as they like fried garlic butter crab claws.
If we could spend the whole day at a restaurant, it would be at Bread & Butterfly, a French and Haitian cafe in Inman Park.
Unlike a lot of brunch spots with grass walls, great food overpowers cutesy trends at Midtown's Flavor Rich Restaurant.
Eat My Biscuits is a brunch restaurant in East Point that stands out more for its cute peach decor than its food.
Elektra’s great mezze dips, family-style Mediterranean plates, and poolside views feel like a small vacation.
With a bright, unapologetically pink backdrop, High Noon is a solid brunch option to celebrate your picture-required moments.
With vintage signs on the walls and a huge menu, Folk Art in Inman Park is a great place for a casual brunch.
Home Grown is a throwback diner in Reynoldstown serving good Southern classics like pimiento cheese sandwiches.
Nearly everything on Buttermilk Kitchen's Southern breakfast and lunch menu is something we’d draft to our brunch all-star team.
Cultivate is a reliably good brunch cafe suited for The Battery’s big crowds and those who like a lot of options.
The General Muir in Toco Hills is an all day spot serving Jewish deli classics like latkes, pastrami, and bagels and lox.
For Southern food served in an upscale space, head to South City Kitchen in Buckhead, and try to get a table on their patio overlooking Peachtree.
Crescent City Kitchen in Midtown is a solid stop for your big group when you're in the mood for an easy-going brunch.
There’s always a wait at Ria’s Bluebird in Grant Park, but they make the best pancakes in the city.
This creative soul food restaurant in Cascade Heights proves that cornbread salad should have always been a thing.
J'ouvert is an all-day Caribbean brunch cafe near Lindbergh Station that deserves a spot in your group’s breakfast meetup rotation.
The Breakfast Boys is the Beyoncé of Historic College Park’s brunch mile, but it's also among the best places to get brunch in the entire metro.