Subway Breakfast Menu

Subway Breakfast Menu

You want a simple, familiar start to the day. This intro sets expectations for what you can get right now in the United States.

The subway breakfast build mirrors the rest of the restaurant. You start with eggs and cheese, pick a protein, and choose from wrap, flatbread, or sandwich formats. That structure keeps ordering easy and customizable.

This piece is a product roundup. You’ll find practical comparisons on taste, texture, and value, not just a list of items. It also flags a key reality: not every location serves morning fare and prices vary by store and region.

Read on for a quick lineup, price tables drawn from real receipts, and a simple guide to pick the best format for your meal and time of day. Later sections cover calories, protein, and sodium so you can choose with confidence.

What’s on the Subway Breakfast Menu in the United States right now

The chain’s morning lineup is built around a tight, dependable formula. That makes ordering quick when you’re on the go.

Core build: eggs, cheese, and your choice of meat

Every item starts with eggs and melty cheese. Then you pick a protein or keep it simple with egg & cheese.

Current lineup: the quick view

  • Four breakfast sandwiches — classic 6-inch style on roll bread
  • Four wraps (also offered as lavash-style flatbread variants)
  • Flatbread options commonly available for both wrap choices

Key proteins you’ll see most

Choices center on bacon, Black Forest ham, steak, or the egg & cheese option. There is no sausage choice at most locations.

Format Typical size Common protein
Sandwich 6-inch Bacon / Ham / Steak
Wrap Hand-rolled lavash Bacon / Egg & Cheese
Flatbread Thin, folded Ham / Steak

Format changes the bite: sandwiches feel bready and cozy, while wraps and flatbreads are thinner and more portable. Like lunch subs, these items are meant to be customized. Later sections will compare taste, texture, and why a wrap can cost more than a 6-inch sandwich.

For a full breakdown of every item currently offered, see every breakfast item.

How to choose the best Subway breakfast option for your morning

Think about how you’ll eat it: sitting down, walking, or driving. That decision shapes the rest. Pick format first, then protein, then toppings and sauce.

Sandwich, wrap, or flatbread — a simple decision path

  1. Choose format: sandwich, wrap, or flatbread.
  2. Pick protein: ham, bacon, steak, or egg cheese.
  3. Add toppings or sauce to lift flavor without making a mess.

Flavor and texture cues

Sandwiches use pillowy bread with a bit of toastiness. They give a steady, comforting bite and hold melted cheese well.

Wraps use a thin tortilla and a tight roll. They feel neater in the car and often keep fillings from sliding.

Flatbreads are lighter, with a toasted surface and an even egg-to-bread ratio. Expect more toasty bits and thinner texture.

Value check and availability

Wraps can cost more. A tasting note showed an egg cheese wrap at about $9.49 versus an egg cheese sandwich at $5.79, partly because wraps use three eggs to sandwiches’ two. Decide if the extra egg and portability are worth the price difference for your time and appetite.

Format Portability Egg count Typical price
Sandwich Low 2 $5.79
Wrap High 3 $9.49
Flatbread Medium 2–3 Varies

If morning service is essential, call ahead or check the app. Not every franchise serves breakfast since 2018. A smart sauce or one extra topping often fixes blandness fast.

Breakfast sandwiches roundup: taste, texture, and price highlights

This short roundup zeroes in on what stands out in each sandwich: flavor, texture, and value. Use these notes to pick the one that matches your morning mood.

Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese sandwich

Most balanced. The smoky-savory ham pairs well with gooey melted cheese. Eggs add heft without getting rubbery.

At $5.99 in the cited tasting, this sandwich feels like the best overall value.

Bacon, Egg & Cheese sandwich

Comfort classic. Bacon is not too crisp and leans toward salty-sweet. Bread can dominate unless the bacon portion is generous.

Also priced at $5.99, it’s a familiar pick when you want a cozy, reliable bite.

Egg & Cheese sandwich

Simple and mild. This is the no-fuss egg cheese sandwich for sensitive stomachs or light appetites.

At $5.79 it’s the cheapest and delivers a smooth, melty cheese sandwich experience.

Steak, Egg & Cheese sandwich

Hearty but uneven. The steak reads like chopped beef rather than a true steak flavor. That difference makes the $6.19 price feel weaker for some diners.

  • If you want savory balance with little fuss, pick the ham.
  • For comfort, bacon is your go-to.
  • For plain and gentle, choose the egg & cheese.
Sandwich Price (San Diego) Quick notes
Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese $5.99 Smoky ham, melty cheese, best balance
Bacon, Egg & Cheese $5.99 Classic comfort, bacon not too crisp
Egg & Cheese $5.79 Simple, mild, easy on the stomach
Steak, Egg & Cheese $6.19 Hearty but less steak-like; lower value feel

Breakfast wraps and flatbreads roundup: hearty options with higher prices

A freshly prepared egg cheese wrap displayed on a rustic wooden table. The wrap is golden-brown, showcasing a blend of fluffy scrambled eggs and melted cheddar cheese peeking out from the sides. In the foreground, several vibrant ingredients like diced peppers, tomatoes, and spinach are artistically arranged around the wrap, creating a burst of color. The middle of the scene includes a small bowl of salsa for dipping and a steaming cup of coffee, enhancing the breakfast vibe. Soft, natural lighting illuminates the dish, highlighting its textures and inviting an appetizing feel. The background is softly blurred, depicting a cozy café ambiance with warm-toned decor. The overall mood is inviting and hearty, perfect for a breakfast treat.

Wraps add a third egg and a tighter roll, which changes both price and feel. You get more heft and a different chew compared with a 6-inch sandwich.

Bacon, Egg & Cheese wrap

Classic breakfast flavors in a hand-rolled lavash-style wrap. The bacon wrap reads as true morning food. Observed price: $9.79 (San Diego, 2026).

Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese wrap

Smoky and savory. The wrap feels hearty but can seem less intentional than a bread-based ham sandwich. Observed price: $9.79 (location-dependent).

Egg & Cheese wrap

Simple and filling thanks to the extra egg. It can taste plain without toppings and feels pricey at $9.49 in recent testing.

Steak, Egg & Cheese wrap

The priciest wrap option at about $10.09. Often generous, it may need sauce to avoid dryness.

Flatbread options

Flatbreads land between sandwiches and wraps. They are usually cheaper and toastier. Examples observed: Egg & Cheese flatbread $4.79, Bacon flatbread $4.79, Steak flatbread $4.99.

Item Format Observed price (example)
Egg & Cheese Wrap $9.49
Bacon, Egg & Cheese Wrap $9.79
Steak, Egg & Cheese Wrap $10.09
Egg & Cheese Flatbread $4.79
Steak, Egg & Cheese Flatbread $4.99

Best and worst value picks when you compare price, portions, and satisfaction

Value shows up when price, portions, and flavor land in balance.

Start with a clear winner and a clear loser. Tasting Table (Jan. 12, 2026) ranked the Black Forest ham, egg & cheese sandwich best for flavor, texture, and price. The steak sandwich ranked worst because the beef reads like general chopped meat rather than a true steak bite.

Why Black Forest ham often feels best-balanced

Black Forest ham brings a smoky-savory note that shines even with simple egg and cheese. It adds flavor without extra toppings. That balance makes a 6-inch sandwich feel satisfying for the price.

When steak lands as the least “steak-like” bite (and how to improve it)

Steak can taste generic and dry. Fix it by adding a creamy aioli or a richer sauce. Toss in some peppers or onions for texture and moisture. Those small changes make the higher price feel worth it.

Why wraps can cost more even if they don’t feel twice as filling

Wraps often use three eggs and sometimes more meat, which raises cost. The handheld format and extra egg change texture but not always fullness. Rule of thumb: choose a 6-inch sandwich or flatbread for value. Move to a wrap when portability matters most.

Pick Why it’s good Example price
Black Forest ham sandwich Balanced flavor & texture $5.99
Steak sandwich Less steak-like; needs sauce $6.19
Egg & cheese wrap More eggs, pricier handheld $9.49

Build your ideal egg and cheese breakfast with breads, toppings, and sauces

A close-up, appetizing view of a freshly made egg and cheese sandwich on a toasted, golden-brown bread roll. In the foreground, the sandwich layers show a perfectly cooked sunny-side-up egg, melted cheddar cheese, and vibrant greens like spinach or arugula. The middle ground features various toppings like sliced tomatoes, avocado, and crispy bacon strips artistically arranged around the sandwich. The background is softly blurred, showcasing a bright, inviting café setting with warm natural light streaming through a window, creating a cozy, welcoming atmosphere. The image is taken from a slight angle, emphasizing the richness of the ingredients, with a shallow depth of field to draw attention to the delicious sandwich.

A few simple swaps turn a plain egg and cheese into a meal you’ll actually crave. Start with one bread change, add a free topping or two, and pick a single sauce to finish the bite.

Bread and wrap swaps that matter

Choose Artisan Italian for pillowy comfort. It soaks up melted cheese and feels familiar in a sandwich.

Pick Italian Herbs & Cheese when you want extra flavor without extra toppings. It adds savory notes on its own.

Use the lavash-style flatbread wrap when you need a thinner, tighter handheld option. It keeps fillings neat and raises portability.

Free topping upgrades for better flavor and texture

  • Spinach for freshness and a slight crunch.
  • Tomatoes for acid and contrast to melted cheese.
  • Parmesan sprinkle as an easy, no-cost flavor boost.

These toppings lift the soft egg texture and make a wrap or sandwich feel complete without extra spend.

Sauce strategy: richness, heat, and balance

Pick one sauce and stop. Too many sauces drown the egg and make a wrap soggy.

Baja chipotle adds bold, smoky heat. Pepper jack pairs well if you want extra bite from the cheese side.

Use sauce to add richness or a little heat. Let toppings handle texture and freshness.

Swap Best for Effect
Artisan Italian Comfort Pillowy, soaks cheese
Italian Herbs & Cheese Extra flavor Savory without toppings
Lavash-style flatbread Portability Thinner, neater handheld

Nutrition snapshot: calories, protein, sodium, and what they mean for breakfast

Here’s a quick nutrition snapshot to match what you eat with how your morning feels. The numbers help you pick a lighter, higher-protein, or lower-sodium meal depending on plans and hunger.

Wrap nutrition examples

Wraps are the heftier format. They use more eggs and often more meat, which raises calories and sodium.

Key tested examples (white American cheese used):

Item Calories Protein Sodium
Egg & Cheese Wrap 700 30g 1,230mg
Bacon, Egg & Cheese Wrap 860 40g 1,570mg
Steak, Egg & Cheese Wrap 820 47g 1,680mg
Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese Wrap 770 40g 1,720mg

Flatbread nutrition examples

Flatbreads are a lighter type overall. They usually fall far below wrap calories but still provide solid protein.

Item Calories Protein Sodium
Egg & Cheese Flatbread (6-inch) 360 16g 650mg
Bacon, Egg & Cheese Flatbread 440 21g 820mg
Steak, Egg & Cheese Flatbread 430 26g 920mg
Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese Flatbread 400 21g 900mg

What this means in plain language: protein helps you stay full until lunch, but sodium can add up fast in one wrap. If you want fewer calories, pick a flatbread. If you need protein, the steak wrap is high but also high in sodium.

Note on cheese: the cited panels use white American cheese. That helps explain both higher fat and sodium numbers in several tested items.

Quick takeaway: choose a flatbread for everyday calorie control and a wrap when you need more fuel. Add veggies and skip extra sauces to keep sodium and calories in check.

Make your Subway breakfast choice with confidence before you order

A simple rule helps you order in under a minute. Pick format, pick protein, then add one topping or sauce.

Default best bet: go with Black Forest ham for the most flavor per bite. It hits salty-smoky notes without extra fuss.

Value move: choose a sandwich or flatbread first, then use free toppings to boost taste and texture. That keeps price down.

Commute move: pick an egg cheese wrap when you need neat portability. It costs more, but it stays tidy on the go.

Texture tells the story: bread gives pillowy comfort, wraps feel tighter, and flatbread is lightly toasted. Bit-by-bit fixes: add one sauce if bland, a richer sauce if dry, or crisp veggies if mushy.

Check local availability before you order. With the right format, protein, and one small tweak, you get a steady, familiar fast food meal that works most mornings.

FAQ

What items are included in the Subway breakfast lineup right now?

The current lineup centers on egg and cheese as the base with four sandwich choices and four wrap/flatbread choices. Core proteins are bacon, Black Forest ham, steak, and an egg & cheese-only option. Each comes on your choice of bread, wrap, or flatbread with standard cheese.

What is the core build of these morning sandwiches?

Each sandwich starts with folded eggs and melted cheese. Then you choose a protein—bacon, Black Forest ham, or steak—or keep it simple with just egg & cheese. From there you pick bread, veggies, and sauces to round out the bite.

How do I pick between a sandwich, wrap, or flatbread for my commute?

Choose a sandwich (6-inch) for lower cost and familiar texture. Go for a wrap if you want a tighter, handheld bite and slightly different mouthfeel. Flatbread offers a softer, chewier base and often feels heartier. Consider how you eat on the go and how filling you want to feel.

Which protein gives the best balance of flavor and value?

Black Forest ham often feels like the best-balanced meat. It offers a mild, smoky flavor and a leaner texture that pairs well with eggs and cheese without overpowering them. It also tends to be cost-effective versus steak.

When does steak feel underwhelming, and what fixes help?

Steak can taste less “steak-like” when it’s thinly sliced and reheated. Boost it with savory toppings: extra cheese, grilled onions, or a peppery sauce. Adding a toasted bread option helps texture and gives the meat more presence.

Why do wraps sometimes cost more than a 6-inch sandwich?

Wraps and flatbreads often use different dough or preparation that raises price. They may also be marketed as a larger or premium format. Compare portions: a wrap can feel pricier even if it’s only slightly bigger.

Are morning offerings available at every location?

Not always. Availability varies by store and by franchise hours. Check with your local restaurant for exact times and whether they serve the morning lineup that day.

What are typical taste and texture cues to look for in each format?

Sandwiches deliver pillowy bread and familiar chew. Wraps give a thin, slightly chewy tortilla bite with less bulk. Flatbreads are softer and denser with toasty edges when warmed. Melted cheese adds creaminess across all formats.

Which sandwiches are on the sandwiches roundup?

The lineup features Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese; Bacon, Egg & Cheese; Egg & Cheese; and Steak, Egg & Cheese. Each brings different salt and fat levels—ham is salty and lean, bacon is crisp and smoky, steak is savory and denser, and egg-only keeps it simple.

What wrap and flatbread options are available?

Options include Bacon, Egg & Cheese; Black Forest Ham, Egg & Cheese; Egg & Cheese; and Steak, Egg & Cheese in wrap and flatbread versions. Flatbreads aim for a fuller mouthfeel, while wraps focus on a compact, portable form.

How should I upgrade breads and toppings for better flavor?

Swap to Artisan Italian or Italian Herbs & Cheese for more crust and aroma. Choose a lavash-style flatbread for a softer chew. Add free toppings like tomato, spinach, or grilled peppers for freshness and texture without much added cost.

Which sauces pair best with egg and cheese without overwhelming them?

For richness, try mayonnaise or a light aioli. For balance, add deli mustard or sweet onion sauce. For heat, a dash of sriracha or chipotle yields spice without hiding the eggs.

How do calorie and protein numbers generally compare across items?

Egg & cheese sandwiches and wraps provide moderate calories and a decent protein boost from eggs. Adding bacon or steak raises calories, fat, and sodium. Ham options usually add less fat than bacon but increase sodium. Flatbreads and wraps often carry slightly higher calories than a 6-inch sandwich.

Can you give a quick nutrition example for wraps versus flatbreads?

Egg & cheese wraps and flatbreads both offer similar protein from eggs and cheese. Bacon or steak versions add more calories and sodium. Exact numbers vary by size and toppings—ask the location for real-time nutrition facts if you need precise counts.

Any value tips when ordering?

For the best balance of portion and price, the Black Forest ham sandwich is often the top pick. Skip premium add-ons if cost is a concern. Consider a 6-inch sandwich over a wrap for lower price with similar satisfaction.

How do I make a satisfying egg and cheese build at the counter?

Start with your format choice, pick Black Forest ham or bacon if you want salt and texture, add American cheese for melt, choose a hearty bread, and finish with fresh veggies and a light sauce. Toasting brings everything together and adds toasty bits.

Where can I find current prices for these items?

Prices change by location and in real time. Ask the store directly or check the brand’s official app or website for current local pricing and any deals.

Similar Posts