Best Breakfast and Brunch in Siena: Where Locals Start Their Day

Best Breakfast and Brunch in Siena: Where Locals Start Their Day

Redazione Visit Siena Guide··4 Min. Lesezeit

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Forget hotel buffets. Here is where Sienese actually eat breakfast — from historic cafes serving ricciarelli to modern brunch spots with avocado toast.


Italian breakfast is not American breakfast. It is a cappuccino and a cornetto at a bar counter, consumed in under five minutes while standing. But Siena has evolved. A handful of spots now serve brunch-style spreads that bridge Italian tradition and Anglo-American expectations. Here is where to go, depending on what kind of morning you want.

Traditional Italian Breakfast

Nannini — Via Banchi di Sopra 24 The most famous pastry shop in Siena, founded in 1909. Order a cappuccino and a ricciarelli (soft almond cookie) or cavallucci (anise and walnut biscuit). Stand at the bar like a local; sitting at a table costs extra. Open from 7:30 AM.

Bar Pasticceria Morbidi — Via Banchi di Sopra 75 Less touristy than Nannini and arguably better for cornetti. The pistachio cream filling is made in-house. A coffee and pastry costs 3 to 4 euros at the bar.

Brunch With a View

La Prosciutteria — Via Vallerozzi 7 A modern wine bar that opens at 10:00 AM with brunch boards: prosciutto, pecorino, scrambled eggs, and toast. The back room has a fireplace. Budget 15 to 20 euros. Reservations recommended on Sundays.

Pastry-Forward Mornings

Forno de' Campi — Via delle Sperandie 13 No sign, no website, just a wood-fired oven and locals queuing for ciaccini and schiacciata. Open from 7:00 AM. The ricciarelli here are baked fresh every morning and sell out by 10:00 AM.

The Hotel Alternative

Most hotels inside the walls charge 15 to 25 euros for breakfast. The quality varies. If your hotel breakfast is uninspiring, skip it and spend 5 euros at a bar instead. You will eat better and experience the morning rhythm of the city.

What to Expect

  • Cappuccino is only drunk before 11:00 AM. After that, locals switch to espresso.
  • Standing at the bar is cheaper than sitting at a table — usually 1.50 euros versus 3.50 euros for the same coffee.
  • Eggs for breakfast are a recent import. Traditional Sienese breakfast is sweet, not savory.
  • Brunch as a concept is growing but still concentrated in a few spots. Do not expect avocado toast on every corner.

Our recommendation: Start with a traditional bar breakfast at Nannini or Morbidi on day one. Try La Prosciutteria for brunch on day two. And if you are near the Aquila contrada before 10:00 AM, hunt down Forno de' Campi for the most local experience of all.