Not affiliated with JD Wetherspoon plc
Updated June 2026
Wetherspoons doesn't serve a traditional Sunday roast — the full main menu is available from 11:30am, and breakfast runs until 12 noon. The all-day brunch is a popular Sunday choice. This page covers everything available on the wetherspoons sunday menu for 2026.
Not affiliated with JD Wetherspoon plc. Prices for reference only.
The wetherspoons sunday menu is the same as the full regular menu — there's no special Sunday-only roast at Wetherspoons. What you get is the full menu from 11:30am, breakfast until 12 noon, and all the usual weekday options including the pub classics, burgers, curries, pizza and deli deals. The afternoon deal (2–5pm, Mon–Fri) doesn't run on Sundays.
If you want something roast-adjacent on a Sunday, the steak and ale pudding (with mash and gravy, from £9.26 with a soft drink) or the bangers and mash (from £9.26) are the closest Wetherspoons comes to traditional Sunday pub food.
Let me clear up the most common Sunday question first: Wetherspoons does not serve a traditional Sunday roast. There's no roast beef, no Yorkshire puddings, no roast potatoes. What you get on a Sunday is the full regular menu from 11:30am, with breakfast running until noon — exactly the same as any other day.
That sounds like a downside, but in practice it means you've got the entire menu to choose from, which is plenty. If you want something that feels roast-adjacent, the steak and ale pudding with mash and gravy is the closest thing — a proper suet-pastry pudding that scratches the Sunday-lunch itch for me. The bangers and mash is the other good shout, and the all-day brunch is a popular Sunday late-morning choice.
Sunday mornings have a nice rhythm at Wetherspoons. Breakfast until noon means you can roll in for a Traditional Breakfast at £5.19 — still one of the best-value cooked breakfasts I know of — and there's that 30-minute overlap from 11:30 where you could technically order a bacon butty alongside a burger if the mood takes you.
One thing to note: the afternoon deal that runs Monday to Friday doesn't apply on Sundays, and the Monday small plates deal obviously doesn't either. So Sunday isn't a deal day as such, but the everyday prices are low enough that it doesn't really matter. My honest recommendation for a Sunday: go for the breakfast before noon if you're early, or the steak and ale pudding for lunch if you want that traditional Sunday feel. Just don't turn up expecting a carvery — that's the one thing Wetherspoons doesn't do, and it's better to know that going in than to be disappointed at the table.
My overall Sunday verdict: treat Wetherspoons as a relaxed, well-priced all-rounder rather than a roast destination, and you'll have a good time. The breakfast before noon and the steak and ale pudding for lunch are my two go-to Sunday orders, and the full menu being open means whoever you're with can find something they fancy. Just set expectations on the roast question before you arrive, and the rest takes care of itself.
So while you won't find a carvery, a relaxed Sunday at Wetherspoons still works brilliantly — the full menu, breakfast until noon, and prices low enough that it doesn't matter there's no special Sunday deal. Set expectations correctly and it's one of the easiest, best-value places to eat on a Sunday, whatever you're in the mood for.
On a Sunday, I'd either go for the Traditional Breakfast before noon (£5.19, genuinely one of the best pub breakfasts at this price) or the Steak and Ale Pudding for lunch — proper suet pastry with ale gravy and mash. It's as close as Wetherspoons gets to a traditional Sunday lunch feel. For the full menu, see the Wetherspoons menu homepage.