The Best 24-Hour Breakfast Spots in the Valley That Aren’t a Chain

There’s something almost sacred about a good breakfast at 2 in the morning. No judgment, no rush, just eggs and coffee and the soft hum of a diner that never sleeps. The San Fernando Valley has always had that energy – a sprawling, underrated corner of Los Angeles where the best food hides in strip malls and on side streets, far from the tourist maps.

Here’s the thing: you don’t need a chain to get a great all-day breakfast. In fact, honestly, the chains are almost never the answer. The Valley’s independent spots have personality, history, and food that actually tastes like someone cared. So let’s get into it.

1. Crave Café, Sherman Oaks – The All-Night Neighborhood Anchor

Crave Café, located at 14504 Ventura Blvd in Sherman Oaks, is a popular spot known for its cozy and welcoming atmosphere, offering an extensive menu that includes a variety of breakfast items, sandwiches, wraps, salads, and a wide selection of coffee and tea beverages. The café is open 24 hours, except on Sundays when it closes at midnight. It has a college-town feel and is perfect for a quick meal with a little bit of everything, from eggs to omelets, pancakes, bagels and lox, and chicken with waffles, while the popular crepes offer a choice of sweet and savory flavors and come with a side salad.

2. Crave Café, Studio City – The Late-Night Local Staple

Family owned and operated, and always favoring fresh and local ingredients, Crave Studio City serves up some of the best local fare in Studio City 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. They also deliver and have plenty of vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options, as well as a huge variety of upscale cafe fare, and have partnered with Groundwork to provide patrons with organic coffee that is bold, fresh, and unique. Crave has become a Studio City staple for late-night food and enjoyment. Note that while the two Crave cafés share a name, the Crave in Studio City is no longer associated with the Sherman Oaks Crave Café.

3. Nat’s Early Bite Coffee Shop, Sherman Oaks – The Legend of the Strip Mall

Nat’s Early Bite anchors a slightly nicer than mediocre mid-Valley corner strip mall, but walk inside and you immediately know it’s a big step above ordinary – a spacious, down-home restaurant with just enough stripped-down country kitsch to give it that authentic city diner feel. There’s also a great backstory: over the years, owner Nat Elias formed a close bond with 18-year-old Mexican busboy Victor Carlos, an eager immigrant working his way up the restaurant’s ladder, and when Elias finally decided to retire, he sold the restaurant to Carlos in a special arrangement, allowing Carlos to make payments over time. Most breakfast dishes come with house-made cinnamon rolls or muffins and are served with home fries, hash browns, grits, or toast, and all jams are made in-house as well.

4. Foxy’s Restaurant, North Hollywood – The Family-Owned Fox on Sherman Way

Originally opened in 1940 and rebuilt after a fire in 1990, this family-owned restaurant on Sherman Way with worn green trim and a fox logo is a place you won’t likely forget, with a menu that offers lots of choices, including variations of waffles, pancakes, eggs and omelettes, including some unique dishes such as a veggie omelet with Thai sausage, plus a good bagel, lox, cream cheese, chicken and waffles, and matzo brie. Jams are homemade. That kind of heritage is rare. A place that has survived since 1940, including an actual fire, is a place that genuinely means something to its community.

5. Bobby’s Coffee Shop, Woodland Hills – The Neighborhood’s Living Room

Bobby’s Coffee Shop is a real community coffee shop located at 22821 Ventura Boulevard in Woodland Hills, not just for the early bird special crowd, and is perfectly set up for a bottomless cup of coffee, some crispy bacon, and a stack of flapjacks. It’s the kind of place where regulars sit at the same stool every single morning, and the staff already knows their order before they open their mouth. That dynamic is hard to manufacture and impossible to replicate at a chain. The 818 has always been better at this than people give it credit for.

6. Du-Par’s Restaurant and Bakery – The Valley’s Most Storied All-Night Diner

Du-par’s was founded in 1938 by restaurateurs James Dunn and Edward Parsons, who combined portions of their surnames to create the name, and quickly became a staple of Los Angeles dining culture, emphasizing hand-prepared ingredients like quality meats, fresh vegetables, fruits, and daily-baked pastries. The original Studio City location at 12036 Ventura Boulevard, which opened in 1948, served as a 24-hour diner staple for nearly 70 years before closing on December 31, 2017, primarily due to a lease termination in favor of a Sephora store amid rising rents. Filmmaker David Lynch and author Mark Frost started conceiving their cult TV show Twin Peaks while having lunch at Du-par’s on Ventura Blvd, and a similar diner called Double R featured prominently throughout the series. The original Farmers Market location remains open and 24-hour accessible, keeping the legacy alive even though the Valley lost its own outpost.

7. EAT at the NoHo Arts District – The Bohemian Corner Diner

If you’re going to name a restaurant EAT, it had better live up to its name, and this NoHo Arts District eatery surely does – the small space conjures a cross between a New York diner and a San Francisco bohemian vibe, with friendly service, counter seating, and indoor and outdoor tables. Breakfast items with eggs come with bread and a choice of fruit, hash browns, or Ned’s Shreds, which are shredded zucchini prepared just like hash browns, while the flapjack menu includes choices like Oreo pancakes, chocolate chip, banana nut caramel, and Hawaiian with pineapple and coconut. Crab lovers shouldn’t miss the blue crab benedict.

8. Jinky’s Café, Sherman Oaks – The Valley’s Beloved Multi-Location Original

With locations in Sherman Oaks, Studio City, Santa Monica, Agoura, and Thousand Oaks, this long-running restaurant still has its homegrown charm with wood tables and country chairs, and the extensive menu suits every diner and craving. Whether you want something with a kick or a fully gluten-free pancake stack, they have you covered. The San Fernando Valley is one of the largest regions in LA County, so naturally it deserves an epic dining landscape for breakfast. Jinky’s fits perfectly into that landscape as one of the Valley’s most enduring independent names.

9. Bea Bea’s, Burbank – Where the Studio Crowd Eats Pancakes

If pancakes are your thing, Bea Bea’s is one of the best restaurants in Toluca Lake to enjoy these fluffy morning treats, and this buzzy, studio-adjacent breakfast and lunch spot located in a Burbank shopping center off Pass Avenue is known for its outrageously decadent pancake, waffle, and French toast concoctions. Writers, directors, actors, and parents with kids in tow can all be found at this predominantly outdoor café with covered and garden patios, plus a cozy reading room, and at key hours a line files out the door, but it moves quickly. It’s not 24 hours, but its late-morning magic is unmatched, and the Valley’s creative class treats it like a second office.

10. The Horseless Carriage Restaurant, San Fernando Valley – The Hidden Time Capsule

Listed among Yelp’s best diners in the San Fernando Valley as recently as November 2025, the Horseless Carriage Restaurant continues to earn its place alongside long-established Valley dining names. It’s the kind of place you stumble into once and end up telling everyone about. Think retro atmosphere, generous portions, and that particular brand of Valley diner warmth that no algorithm can recommend properly. If there’s one thing worth driving into the Valley for, it’s breakfast, and the 818 is rife with all sorts of spots to get your morning meal on. The Horseless Carriage is proof that the best discoveries in the Valley are still made the old-fashioned way: word of mouth…

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