Ask a roomful of true believers to settle the breakfast sandwich and the bagel wins before lunch. Among the regular breakfast sandwich buyers we talked to, the bagel's the go-to bread for 54%, more than croissant, sourdough, English muffin, and biscuit combined.
The rest of the order's just as opinionated. Bacon takes the protein crown, cheddar runs the cheese board, avocado's quietly muscled its way onto the build, and just about everyone agrees a breakfast sandwich is way too good to save for breakfast. The one thing that unites the whole table? The price tag. Cross $8 and the love starts to wobble.
The bagel, and it's not close. It's the top pick in every region, and it gets more popular with every generation.
We gave buyers ten breads and made them commit to just one. The bagel pulled 54% of the vote. The croissant, its closest rival, managed 14%. Sourdough, English muffin, and biscuit split most of what was left. For a category that loves to argue, that's about as close to consensus as breakfast gets.
There's no regional bagel divide here. From the Northeast to the West, the bagel grabs roughly half the vote, so the authority on breakfast bread is national, not coastal. The real split is generational: Gen Z backs the bagel at 33%, while Boomers hit 58%. It's a habit that just deepens over a lifetime.
One stat says it all. Asked which bread they'd turn down even for free, only 1% pointed at the bagel. The tortilla wrap? That's the one most likely to get sent back.
The bagel rules every generation, but Gen Z hedges. Only 33% of them pick it, with croissant (23%) and sourdough (20%) pulling real interest. By the time you reach Boomers the bagel takes 58% and the trendier breads fade. Bread loyalty narrows as buyers get older.
Bacon, cheddar, and more and more, avocado. It's comfort food with one modern twist.
Once the bread's settled, the build gets personal. Bacon's the runaway protein pick at 34%, but the egg-only crowd is real and grows with every generation. On cheese, cheddar wins easily, and for a quarter of buyers it's simply non-negotiable. The surprise is in the extras: avocado's now the most requested add-on, just ahead of the folks who want nothing on it at all.
Avocado at 44% outranks every classic condiment, ketchup and hot sauce included. At the same time, 34% want nothing extra at all. So the category's splitting into two happy camps: purists who want bacon, egg, cheese, and quiet, and builders who treat the sandwich like a canvas. A smart menu serves both without making anyone choose.
Bacon holds steady near a third of buyers in every age group. The meatless, egg-only sandwich is a different story: it jumps from 3% among Gen Z to 20% among Boomers.
Steak is a South and West move, around 8% to 9%, and barely registers in the Midwest or Northeast. Pork sausage is a heartland thing, strongest in the Midwest and South. And the meatless, just-egg sandwich skews coastal, peaking in the Northeast. The Northeast figures sit on a small base, so read them as directional.
Half of Gen Z piles on the avocado, and it tapers steadily to 40% among Boomers. It's a West Coast signature too, where 50% want it, the highest of any region.
A fair price lands around $5. The too-pricey line shows up fast at $8.
We asked about two prices: what feels fair for an egg, cheese, and meat sandwich from a chain, and the point where that same sandwich starts to feel like too much. Fair clusters tightly between $4 and $6. Resistance builds quickly above $7, and by the time a sandwich hits $8, nearly three-quarters of buyers say it's gone too far.
The $8 threshold is the clearest pricing signal in the whole study. Add up everyone who flags trouble at $7.99 or below and you're already at 54%. By $8.99 it's 74%. For menu and pricing, $8 is the wall, so the play is to make the value obvious before anyone even sees the price.
Southern and Western buyers are the most comfortable paying $5 or more, both above half. The Northeast looks more price-sensitive at 33%, though with just 18 respondents there, treat it as directional.
Gen X and Boomers are the most price-sensitive: 58% and 56% say a breakfast sandwich is already too expensive once it reaches $8. Gen Z and Millennials give more runway, with about 44% tapping out by then. Younger buyers have made their peace with premium prices.
Loyalty's the norm here, not the exception. The longest-tenured buyers are the most devoted to the bagel, and they've got strong opinions about where the category should head.
Just 13% of buyers switched their go-to spot in the past year. Nearly half stayed put, and the rest just float. Loyalty tracks with experience too: the longer someone's been buying breakfast sandwiches, the more likely the bagel's their answer, climbing to 59% among buyers of more than 20 years.
Nearly 6 in 10 buyers say a breakfast sandwich is just as good for lunch or dinner, which stretches the category way past the morning rush. Pair that with high loyalty and a deep bench of long-time fans, and the read is pretty clear: this is a base worth keeping, and an all-day occasion worth owning.
Millennials are the cohort most willing to trade up: 46% say they'd pay more for higher-quality ingredients, well above any other generation, and they're the pickiest too. The all-day habit grows with age and tops out at 64% of Boomers.
Nearly half of Midwest buyers (47%) say they have no regular place, the highest of any region, which makes them the easiest to win over. Southern buyers are the most settled, with just 33% unattached.
When we asked veterans what they'd love the category to bring back or build next, three themes kept coming up: bigger portions, real ingredients, and the freedom to build their own.
This crowd keeps a wide rotation, with the big quick-service names firmly in the mix.
Respondents came from the Einstein Bros. and Bagel Brands loyalty community, so naturally a high share name Einstein Bros., Bruegger's, or Noah's as a spot they buy from. That makes the chart below a picture of this crowd's rotation, not a category market-share read. The interesting part is the competitive set around it: McDonald's, Starbucks, and Chick-fil-A all show up a lot, and local bagel and coffee shops hold real ground.
This is what regular breakfast sandwich buyers told us they want: a great bagel, real ingredients, an honest price, and the freedom to build it their way. At Einstein Bros. Bagels, that's been the order since day one.
Find your bagelThe State of the Breakfast Sandwich is based on a conversational survey of 502 respondents fielded in June 2026. Participants were recruited from the Einstein Bros. and Bagel Brands loyalty community and answered under neutral research branding to preserve honest responses. Of the 502, 466 completed the full survey. The rest answered the opening questions only: 29 reported eating a breakfast sandwich less than once a month and so were not asked the preference questions, and 7 identified as under 18 and answered the age question alone. Substantive findings on bread, protein, cheese, price, loyalty, and attitudes reflect the 466 regular buyers who completed the survey. Frequency and demographic splits reflect everyone who answered those questions.
Single-select percentages are rounded to sum to 100% using largest-remainder rounding and may differ from raw figures by a point. Multi-select questions allow more than one answer, so their totals exceed 100% by design. Because the sample was drawn from a loyalty community rather than a nationally balanced panel, regional and tenure cuts are reported as directional. Base sizes vary by question: the generation split uses all 502 respondents, region and frequency use the 495 who answered those questions, and the preference questions use the 466 who completed the full survey. The Northeast preference subsample (n = 18) is small and should be read as directional only. Where respondents named a specific brand in their own words, quotes are reproduced with light edits for spelling and length and attributed by generation, region, and tenure. Generations are mapped from the age bands collected in the survey: Gen Z (18 to 27, including a small number of respondents under 18 who completed only the age question), Millennials (28 to 43), Gen X (44 to 59), and Boomers (60 and older).