Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Bakesale Betty
150Pearl PointsFour hours a day. Plan around it.

About Bakesale Betty
Bakesale Betty is a walk-in sandwich counter open just four days a week in San Francisco's Mission Bay, with three consecutive years of recognition on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list. It's worth building your Thursday-to-Sunday lunch itinerary around if you're in the Chase Center area — just arrive early, as there's no reservation option and a limited service window.
Verdict: A Sandwich Counter Worth Timing Your Day Around
Three days a week, four hours a day — that operational window tells you everything about Bakesale Betty's approach. If you're in the Chase Center area on a Thursday through Sunday between 10:30 am and 2 pm, this is one of the more practically useful lunch stops in San Francisco's Mission Bay. Ranked #378 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America in 2024, then climbing to a recommended position in prior years before landing at #464 in 2025, it has a track record in the OAD cheap eats category that most sandwich counters never approach. The question isn't whether the food is credible — it is. The question is whether you can get there when it's open.
What Bakesale Betty Actually Is
Bakesale Betty, run by Alison Barakat, is a daytime sandwich operation at 1 Warriors Way, San Francisco, adjacent to Chase Center. It runs on a schedule that would be considered aggressively limited even by lunch-counter standards: closed Monday and Tuesday, open four-hour windows Wednesday through Sunday. That constraint isn't a flaw, it's a filter. The people who eat here have planned for it, and the kitchen is operating for a focused, defined service window rather than trying to cover all-day demand.
The cuisine is direct sandwiches, positioned firmly in the cheap eats tier. OAD's cheap eats list is a useful calibration tool here: it surfaces places that deliver quality at accessible price points, and three consecutive years of recognition suggests Bakesale Betty is doing something right at its price level, not just riding a one-season wave of attention.
Private and Group Dining at Bakesale Betty
To be direct: Bakesale Betty is not a private dining venue. There is no private room, no group booking infrastructure, and no multi-course format that lends itself to occasion dining in the traditional sense. If you're researching it as an option for a hosted lunch or group meal, the practical reality is that you're looking at a counter-service sandwich operation with the corresponding physical setup. Groups can eat here, but they're eating alongside the general lunch crowd, not in a dedicated space.
For groups visiting the Chase Center area, particularly around event days, it can function as a practical pre-event lunch stop, but arrive early in the service window. The four-hour service period and the venue's proximity to a major arena create the conditions for a busy midday rush. If your group needs a more structured sit-down lunch with table service, our full San Francisco restaurants guide covers options across all formats and price tiers in the city.
Booking and Timing
No reservation is required or available, this is a walk-in counter operation. Booking difficulty is effectively zero, which is a genuine advantage given the limited hours. The practical challenge is the schedule itself: three operating days per week, with no evening service at any point. If you're visiting San Francisco for a longer stay and want to work this into your itinerary, Thursday through Sunday between 10:30 am and 1 pm is the window to target. Arriving toward the end of the service window risks items selling through.
The address at 1 Warriors Way places it in Mission Bay, close to Chase Center. On event days at the arena, foot traffic in the area increases substantially, factor that into your timing if you're visiting on a Warriors game day or during a concert run at the venue. For context on the broader area and what else is worth doing nearby, see our full San Francisco experiences guide.
How Bakesale Betty Fits Your Trip
If you're a food-focused traveler working through San Francisco's independent lunch scene, Bakesale Betty earns a spot on the itinerary specifically because of its OAD track record in the cheap eats category, that's a credentialed signal in a city full of lunch options. It's not comparable in format or ambition to destination restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, but that comparison is beside the point. Within its category, quick, affordable, independently operated sandwiches, it has earned recognition that most comparable operations haven't.
For sandwich-focused travelers benchmarking against other cities: Alidoro in New York City and Pane Bianco in Phoenix offer useful reference points for what serious independent sandwich operations look like at the regional level. Locally, The Sentinel is a San Francisco lunch counter worth comparing directly.
Quick Reference
Open Thursday–Sunday, 10:30 am–2 pm only. Walk-in, no reservations. Located at 1 Warriors Way, Mission Bay. OAD Cheap Eats North America ranked (2023–2025). No private dining available.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Bakesale Betty good for solo dining?
Yes — it's one of the better solo lunch stops in San Francisco's Mission Bay area. There's no reservation to coordinate, no minimum spend, and a walk-in counter format that works well for one person. OAD has ranked it among North America's top cheap eats three years running, which gives solo food travelers a concrete reason to prioritize it.
Can I eat at the bar at Bakesale Betty?
Bakesale Betty is a sandwich counter operation, not a bar or sit-down restaurant. Expect a daytime counter format rather than bar seating. If you need a seated dining room or bar environment for lunch, this is the wrong venue — look elsewhere in Mission Bay.
What should I wear to Bakesale Betty?
Whatever you'd wear to grab lunch near a stadium. Bakesale Betty is a casual daytime counter — there's no dress code, no evening service, and no formality of any kind. Come as you are.
What are alternatives to Bakesale Betty in San Francisco?
If you want a step up in format or a full sit-down lunch, the Mission Bay and SoMa areas have options worth researching. For award-recognized cheap eats in San Francisco more broadly, OAD's Cheap Eats North America list — where Bakesale Betty ranked #378 in 2024 — is a practical starting point for peer comparisons. Bakesale Betty's advantage is its specific combination of limited hours and consistent recognition, which distinguishes it from generic counter spots.
Is lunch or dinner better at Bakesale Betty?
Lunch only — Bakesale Betty does not serve dinner. It operates Thursday through Sunday, 10:30 am to 2 pm exclusively. If you're planning an evening out near Chase Center, you'll need a different venue entirely.
Is Bakesale Betty good for a special occasion?
Not in any conventional sense. There's no private dining, no multi-course format, and no evening service. If a special occasion means a relaxed, food-focused daytime stop that happens to be OAD Cheap Eats North America ranked, it can work — but don't choose it for a celebratory dinner or group milestone event.
How far ahead should I book Bakesale Betty?
You don't book at all — Bakesale Betty is walk-in only, no reservations available or needed. The practical planning question is timing: it runs Thursday through Sunday, 10:30 am to 2 pm, and arriving closer to opening gives you the best chance of a shorter wait.
Location
1 Warriors Wy, San Francisco, CA 94158
San Francisco, United States
Compare Bakesale Betty
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bakesale Betty | Sandwiches | Easy | |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ | Unknown |
How Bakesale Betty stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
- Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
- Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$
Comparing Bakesale Betty directly to Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, or Saison is not the right frame, these are $$$$ tasting-menu restaurants operating in a completely different price tier, format, and occasion category. All five require advance reservations, deliver multi-course experiences, and sit at the top of San Francisco's fine dining market. If your question is where to spend an evening with serious cooking and full table service, any of those five is the right conversation. Bakesale Betty answers a different question entirely.
Within the lunch and sandwich category in San Francisco, the useful comparison is The Sentinel, which operates on a similar daytime-only, counter-service model. Both are credentialed independent operations with limited hours, and both reward planning. Bakesale Betty's OAD Cheap Eats recognition gives it a verifiable benchmark that casual lunch spots typically don't have, that's the differentiator if you're choosing between informal options in the city.
The bottom line: if you want tasting-menu ambition and a full evening of cooking, book one of the $$$$ options above and plan two to four weeks out at minimum. If you want a recognized, no-reservation lunch stop that operates in a compressed window and delivers at the cheap eats level, Bakesale Betty is the more practical call for visitors in the Mission Bay area. They are not competing for the same diner or the same occasion.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- Closed
- Thursday
- 10:30 am–2 pm
- Friday
- 10:30 am–2 pm
- Saturday
- 10:30 am–2 pm
- Sunday
- 10:30 am–2 pm
Recognized By
Explore San Francisco
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