Facing Heaven
Photograph: SAM A HARRIS
Photograph: SAM A HARRIS

The best vegan restaurants in London

Vegan food isn't just for veganuary - find perfect pizzas and standout small plates at these plant-based restaurants

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Its official: London is experiencing a fast-mushrooming plant-based restaurant boom. Across the city, creative chefs are showing off their prowess with plants, creating pitch-perfect imitations of meaty comfort food classics, or dreaming up new vegetable-based delights. Whether youre after a lavish night of culinary theatre, a delicate Middle Eastern spread, a carb-coma-inducing full English breakfast, or brisket at a vegan smokehouse, youll find it in our list of Londons best vegan restaurants. Read on to plan your next plant-free feast.

RECOMMENDED: London’s best restaurants for vegetarian food.

Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.

Top vegan restaurants in London

  • Chinese
  • Angel
  • price 2 of 4

Mention this place to in-the-know vegans and their eyes will glaze over in blissed-out memory of the gorgeous dishes this Islington restaurant serves up. Its menu is packed with classic Chinese dishes crafted from mock meat, tofu, and beancurd galore, but somehow that description doesn't do justice to the exhilarating textures and flavours this joint serves up. Don't miss the twice-cooked 'fish', with its crisp batter coating and meltingly soft interior. 

  • Caribbean
  • Islington
  • price 2 of 4

Siblings Jordan and Chyna opened Jam Delish off the back of stints at Kerb and a well-received six-month residency at Soho’s Sun and 13 Cantons pub. Here, at their permanent spot in Angel, the kitchen is headed up by Bajan-Jamaican chef Nathan Collymore. Food here is a vegan, relatively unadorned amble through West Indian classics like jerk 'chicken', 'goat' curry, 'saltfish' tostones, 'beef' patties and so on, but Collymore is doing seriously alchemical things with seitan, tempeh, jackfruit and soy. Try the silken 'oxtail' stew, with a wildly flavourful liquor, studded with cassava dumplings and served with perfect rice and peas.

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  • Vegetarian
  • Peckham

Part of the green wave of vegan restaurants that's currently breaking in Peckham, Naïfs is a family-run small plates spot tucked away on a quiet residential street. Chef Tom Heale used to be a sous chef at much-missed, much-garlanded veggie restaurant Vanilla Black. Now, he runs Naïfs with his brother Finn alongside him in the kitchen, serving up Middle Eastern-inspired small plates in a low-key but romantic setting.

  • Tulse Hill

As well as spots at Brixton's Ritzy Cinema and in Peckham and Clapham, En Root have taken over the kitchen at this friendly Tulse Hill boozer. Their Indian-inspired comfort food includes the likes of crunchy plantain chaat, tandoori oyster mushroom wings, jerk dosas and pakora burgers. Our favourite? The Tulse Hill thali, with golden rice, dhal, saag aloo, jerk plantain mushroom mix, rainbow salad, pickled cabbage & plantain. Don't miss the piña colada pani puri for pud.

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  • Vegan
  • Hackney
  • price 1 of 4

A cheery hipster hangout in Hackney that really nails it with a short menu of terrific Sichuan dishes. Current hits range from smacked cucumber with black vinegar, sesame oil and crushed garlic to dan dan noodles topped with vegan mince made to a secret recipe. Prices are pay-packet-friendly.

  • Vegetarian
  • Mayfair

Sesame-speckled purple sweet potatoes, mouth-puckering ferments and lip-smacking tiramisu are all on the menu at Chef Rishim Sachdeva’s brilliant (mostly) vegan small-plates restaurant Tendril. This dimly-lit, gently romantic spot makes meat-free dining both relaxing and unquestionably delicious: you won't believe you're just minutes away from the madness of Oxford Circus

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  • French
  • Soho
Gauthier Soho
Gauthier Soho

Alexis Gauthier is a vegan chef who practises what he preaches. His classy Soho townhouse restaurant satisfies plant-crazy evangelists as well as fans of Gallic gourmandising. The vegan line-up might run from golden glazed swede with citrus marmalade and miso-infused dressing to tempeh and corn with kaffir lime, popcorn and bean shoot salad. 

  • Vegan
  • Soho

After beginnings at summer music festivals, pub pop-ups and Hackney supper clubs, Club Mexicana is in Soho, permanently packed with happily seitan-stuffed burrito fiends. The al pastor taco is still a must-order. But there are other highlights, like the ingenious tofish taco and jackfruit 'ribs'. Another outpost can also be found in Spitalfields.

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  • Vegan
  • Portobello Road
  • price 3 of 4
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Holy Carrot is prim as a perfume shop, fronting a menu that is plant-forward, ‘root to peel’ and sustainable. It comes from Daniel Watkins, formerly of ACME Fire Cult in Dalston, who brings his ‘fire and ferment’ ethos across the capital from one neighbourhood of cool to another. It has plenty of his signature punch and cocktails come courtesy of Hackney’s uber cool A Bar With Shapes For a Name.

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Ed Cunningham
News Editor, UK
  • Breweries
  • London Fields

Come to this heavy metal-adjacent brewery by London Fields to experience London's first ever vegan smokehouse. Run by LD’s Kitchen, there's a full southern states-style menu here, with faux-meat brisket and ribs served alongside creamy (and equally plant-based) mac and cheese, corn, baked beans, slaw and more, as well as peach cobbler for pudding. 

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  • Middle Eastern
  • London Fields
  • price 1 of 4

Fried potatoes, fresh houmous, pickled mango sauce - just a taste of what’s in store at this street-stall gone permanent. After a long wait, Pockets has opened its first restaurant due to the popularity gained from their infamously good falafel-stuffed pitta breads. These entirely plant-based pittas are known to attract extensively long queues - and who could resist these perfect parcels of massive flavour? With a simple but perfected menu, Pockets do falafel better than anyone in London. 

Eva Walsh
Contributor
  • Vegetarian
  • Covent Garden
  • price 2 of 4

London institution Mildred’s dates back to 1988, an era when vegetarians were shunned, reviled and closeted, which is perhaps why it wears the 100% plant-based nature of its offering so lightly: it’s just a classy, casual-ish restaurant with a diverse, international menu that happens to include no meat. You can expect the likes of Sri Lankan sweet potato curry, tempeh mushroom yaki udon, grilled artichoke caesar and a menu staple; sausage and mash. Their pan-global menu is always fun. Branches also in Camden, Soho, King’s Cross and Dalston.

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  • Vegan
  • Camden Town

The name means ‘purity’ and that’s what you get at this London outpost of the UK’s first vegan pizzeria. The setting is buzzy, modern and relaxed, while the terrific plant-based toppings involve everything from wood-smoked tofu and shaved seitan to rice-based mozzarella and beetroot carpaccio. You can also indulge in some good old-fashioned gluttony by ordering a wicked Oreo pizza for pud.

14. King CookDaily

Vegan chef King Senathit has been bouncing around Hackney for a few years now – since 2015 – serving up steaming bowls of curries and noodles; all dripping with crunchy fresh veg. His latest outlet is in Spitalfields. Drop by for a massive bowl of high grade; a sweet and sour BBQ dish with hemp seeds and oil that comes with vegan chicken or tofu. Fast food with soul. 

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  • Vegan
  • Clapton
  • price 1 of 4
Black Cat
Black Cat

Run as a not-for-profit workers’ cooperative, this ethical vegan-only café and bookshop in Clapton is a top spot for budget plant-based food. The menu always features a beef-style seitan and soya-mince burger, a barbecue tofu sandwich, pancakes, curries and meatless lasagne, plus a host of seasonal salad plates involving kale, beetroot, quinoa, noodles and other hip favourites

  • Japanese
  • King’s Cross
Itadaki Zen
Itadaki Zen

Japanese, vegan and organic? What’s not to love – and, rest assured, we do love this cool little miracle near King’s Cross station. Only the slurping of udon noodles disturbs the Zen-like tranquillity, as punters dip into a virtuously healthy menu that makes the most of a few key ingredients (expects lots of tofu and seaweed). Laid-back staff go with the flow.

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  • Vegan
  • Holloway Road
Loving Hut
Loving Hut

The London outpost of a small chain that focuses on vegan dishes inspired by pan-Asian cuisine, Loving Hut in Archway professes to use organic vegetables and non-GMO products, with ingredients sourced locally where possible. You'll probably recognise much of the menu – including barbecue vegetable ribs and crispy aromatic ‘duck’, as well as a vegan cheesecake.

  • Vegan
  • Canary Wharf
  • price 2 of 4

Mallow – an offshoot of longstanding London veggie spot Mildred's – has a menu that spans cuisine from all over: Middle Eastern, Italian, Indian, Malaysian – or just burger and chips. The small plates are by far what Mallow does best; shiitake miso croquettes, pea and mint tortelloni, and tasty sourdough. There's another branch in Borough Market

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  • Vegan
  • Hackney
  • price 1 of 4
Temple of Seitan
Temple of Seitan

London’s first vegan chicken shop (yes, you heard right) was born out of Hackney’s Temple of Seitan street stall. It’s all about ‘meaty’ wheat gluten (aka seitan) here, whether you order peppery popcorn-style nuggets, battered strips or a burger. Add-ons such as zingy red slaw or vegan mac ’n’ cheese with smoky facon cubes are bang-on too. If you want indoor seating and a tad more comfort, try Temple’s sibling in Camden.

  • British
  • Hoxton
  • price 2 of 4
Unity Diner
Unity Diner

‘The future is vegan’, says a neon sign on the wall of Unity Diner – a hugely popular Hoxton eaterie that donates all its profits to an animal rights charity. Fake burgers, dogs and wings make inventive use of seitan, and the menu also touts poké bowls and creative salads involving in-vogue ingredients such as tempeh. Lovely staff add to the feelgood vibe.

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  • Vegan
  • Hackney

The name is an acronym for We Are Vegan Everything, and this trendy café fproves its point with a menu of brekky bowls, Bali bowls, mac ’n’ cheeze, mock-salmon bagels, innovative salads and mighty looking freakshakes. With its chic but cosy tropical-meets-Scandi decor, this is a strong shout for a vegan lunch in Hackney, especially if you stick to the savouries.

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