Not affiliated with JD Wetherspoon plc
Updated June 2026
Desserts at Wetherspoons are genuinely better than most people expect from a pub. The warm chocolate brownie with Belgian chocolate sauce is £6.02 and hard to fault. The mini desserts from £2.40 are smart if you want something sweet without committing to a full pudding. This covers the full 2026 desserts menu with prices and calories.
Not affiliated with JD Wetherspoon plc. Prices for reference only.
I've worked through most of the Wetherspoons desserts menu at this point and I'd say the range is better than most people give it credit for. The warm desserts — brownie, cookie dough, sticky toffee pudding — are all proper comfort food and consistently well executed. The apple crumble with vanilla ice cream is seasonal-standard quality at a price well below what a restaurant charges.
Desserts are priced standalone — no drink is included. Mini desserts from £2.40 are a good option if you want something small to finish a meal. Prices may vary slightly between pubs.
Desserts at Wetherspoons are better than most people expect from a pub, and the split between full and mini options is genuinely useful once you know it. If you've had a big main, the mini desserts let you finish on something sweet without committing to a full 800-calorie pudding — and they start at just £2.40.
The warm chocolate brownie is the one I order most. A rich, fudgy brownie with glossy Belgian chocolate sauce and cold vanilla ice cream — the hot-and-cold contrast is exactly right, and at £6.02 it's hard to fault. The salted caramel sticky toffee pudding is the runner-up, and the British Bramley apple crumble is the comforting, slightly-less-indulgent option that I'd happily order on a cold day. It's restaurant-standard at a pub price.
On the mini side, the Cookie Crunch at £2.40 is remarkable value — two scoops of ice cream, a chocolate cookie and chocolate sauce, all for under two-fifty and just 287 calories. The mini warm brownie and mini cookie dough sandwich are the move if you want something warm but small. These are the desserts I order when I'm full but still want a little something, which is most visits, honestly.
A practical note: desserts aren't included in the meal-drink deal, so they're priced on their own. And while everything is marked vegetarian, the desserts contain dairy, so they're not vegan — the closest vegan option is the fresh fruit without ice cream. If you're sharing, ordering a couple of minis across the table works better than one full dessert each, and it lets you try more than one. For the price and the quality, the dessert menu is a genuinely strong finish to a meal, and the warm options in particular are worth saving room for.
If you're ordering for a table, my move is to get two or three minis to share around rather than a full dessert each — it lets everyone try more than one, and at £2.40 a mini it barely costs more than a single full pudding. The warm minis come out hot and the ice cream cold, so you get the same hot-and-cold contrast as the full-size versions. For a relaxed end to a meal with friends, that's the order I'd recommend every time.
The Warm Chocolate Brownie at £6.02 is the one I order most. Belgian chocolate sauce with cold vanilla ice cream is a combination that just works, every time. For something smaller, the Mini Cookie Crunch at £2.40 (287 kcal, two ice cream scoops, chocolate cookie, Belgian chocolate sauce) is genuinely great value for under £2.50. The British Bramley Apple Crumble at £6.29 is underrated — it's the kind of thing you'd pay £9 for in a restaurant. See the full Wetherspoons menu.