Arôme Bakery

Arôme Bakery on Mercer Street in Covent Garden earns its place in London's serious bread conversation with a 4.9 Google rating across more than 2,600 reviews and a 2025 Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in Europe recognition. Chef Alix Andre leads a tight operation that draws consistent queues, placing it firmly in the category of daytime destinations worth planning a visit around.
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- Address
- 9 Mercer St, London WC2H 9QJ, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 20 4553 6470
- Website
- aromebakery.co.uk

Mercer Street in the Morning
Covent Garden's retail core tends to empty out between the breakfast rush and the theatre crowd, but Mercer Street holds its own outside those windows. Arôme Bakery sits at number 9, and the queue that forms before the door opens most mornings is a reliable indicator of where London's bread-serious crowd has redirected its attention. The street itself is a short walk from the main piazza, which means foot traffic here is mostly intentional rather than accidental, people are arriving with a destination in mind, not stumbling past.
That kind of purposeful patronage matters in London's bakery category, where the gap between a neighbourhood regular and a destination draw is increasingly well-defined. Arôme sits in the latter group, drawing visitors from across the city rather than solely from WC2H postcodes, and its Google rating of 4.6 from 2,396 reviews reflects strong approval at this volume.
Where Arôme Fits in London's Bakery Conversation
London's independent bakery scene has matured considerably over the past decade. What began as a sourdough-led corrective to industrial bread has expanded into a broader set of propositions: grain-focused cafés like 26 Grains, heritage-process specialists like E5 Bakehouse in London Fields, Scandinavian-inflected operations like Fabrique, neighbourhood anchors like Fortitude Bakehouse, and Danish-chain crossovers like Ole & Steen. Each occupies a distinct position in the market, and together they represent a city that now takes morning pastry seriously enough to support genuine differentiation.
Arôme's OAD Cheap Eats in Europe recognition for 2025 is a meaningful signal in this context. For a bakery in central London, that credential places Arôme in conversation with operations that are doing something worth attention at the category level, not just at the neighbourhood level.
For wider context on where bakeries sit inside London's broader dining picture, see our full London restaurants guide.
The Booking Reality: How to Actually Get Here
The editorial angle on Arôme is largely a logistics story, because what determines the quality of your visit here is less about what you order and more about when you arrive. This is not a venue with a reservation system, it operates on a first-come basis, and the most sought-after items sell through early. That dynamic is worth understanding before you plan around a visit.
Mercer Street is accessible on foot from Covent Garden station on the Piccadilly line, which keeps arrival direct from most of central London. The practical discipline is arriving with enough lead time that the counter still has depth. Mid-morning on a weekday offers a different experience from a Saturday at noon, and the gap between those two visits matters at a bakery operating at the volume Arôme handles.
Chef Alix Andre leads the operation, and that named accountability at the kitchen level is a consistent factor in how London's better independent bakeries maintain standard as they scale in reputation. The question of whether quality holds when demand outstrips comfortable production capacity is one every successful small bakery faces, and Arôme's sustained rating across a substantial review count suggests that tension has been managed rather than avoided.
The Wider Frame: Cheap Eats Recognition in Context
It is worth placing the OAD Cheap Eats credential in its frame: a recognition for accessible dining judged by serious eaters.
That places Arôme among critically engaged daytime operations across European cities. For a London bakery, the comparison is with operations making a strong argument for why a daytime counter deserves serious critical consideration. That is a different competition, and Arôme is competing in it with credibility.
Internationally, Radio Bakery in New York City and Andersen Bakery in Copenhagen offer useful comparison points for how the serious independent bakery format is playing out in other cities.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 9 Mercer St, London WC2H 9QJ
- Nearest station: Covent Garden (Piccadilly line)
- Booking: Walk-in only; no reservations taken
- Leading timing: Early arrivals access the fullest counter; popular items sell through before midday on busy days
- Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in Europe (2025)
- Google rating: 4.6 from 2,396 reviews
- Chef: Alix Andre
Same-City Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Arôme BakeryThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Bakery | |
| The Ledbury | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | ££££ |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Modern French | ££££ |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British | ££££ |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Contemporary European, French | ££££ |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Modern British, Traditional British | ££££ |
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