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Artisan Bakery & Café
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CuisineBakery
Executive ChefAmanda Michael -
Price≈$15
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCounter Service
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Opinionated About Dining

Jane The Bakery on Guerrero Street has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings in North America, #343 in 2024 and #354 in 2025, placing it inside a tight comparable set of Mission District bakeries that the city's serious food infrastructure takes seriously. Open seven days a week from 7am, it operates at the intersection of neighbourhood utility and craft-baking ambition that defines the Mission's most durable food addresses.

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Address
1000 Guerrero St, San Francisco, CA 94110
Phone
(415) 654-5270
Jane The Bakery restaurant in San Francisco, United States
About

Guerrero Street and the Mission's Morning Architecture

The stretch of Guerrero Street where Jane The Bakery sits is one of those San Francisco addresses that works on multiple registers simultaneously. The Mission District has long organised its food identity around daily-use spots that happen to be serious about their craft, taquerias with decade-long queues, coffee roasters that supply half the city's restaurants, and bakeries that feed both the neighbourhood's longtime Latino residents and the wave of food-industry professionals who moved in during the past fifteen years. Jane at 1000 Guerrero occupies that overlap point. It's the kind of corner that functions as a community anchor on Tuesday morning and draws visitors tracking Opinionated About Dining recommendations on Saturday.

That dual role matters for understanding where this bakery sits in San Francisco's broader food structure. The Mission isn't Hayes Valley, with its tourist-friendly concentration of boutique food shops, and it isn't the Dogpatch, where industrial-scale production bakeries have set up in warehouse spaces. It's a working neighbourhood where a bakery either earns its place through daily relevance or doesn't survive. Jane has navigated that test across multiple years of editorial recognition.

Where It Sits in the San Francisco Bakery Tier

San Francisco has developed one of the most competitive artisan-baking scenes in North America, built partly on the city's sourdough heritage and accelerated by the post-2010 wave of craft producers who treated bread and pastry with the same ingredient-sourcing rigour applied to tasting menus. That context sets the bar for any bakery operating here at a level most American cities don't approximate.

Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats list for North America is one of the more credible signals in this category. Placement reflects peer regard as much as popular traffic. Jane The Bakery has appeared on that list three consecutive years: Recommended in 2023, ranked #343 in 2024, and #354 in 2025. That sustained presence across three cycles indicates consistent execution rather than a single strong year. The 2025 figure represents the list's fuller field of entries, so a numerical position shouldn't be read as decline, the consistent appearance is the signal worth tracking.

Within San Francisco's bakery peer group, Jane occupies territory alongside Arsicault Bakery, b. patisserie, Craftsman and Wolves, Neighbor Bakehouse, and the benchmark operation at Tartine Bakery a few blocks away on 18th Street. Each of those addresses occupies a specific niche, Tartine's country loaves and afternoon bread windows have set a Bay Area template that most serious bakeries now measure themselves against, while Arsicault built its reputation almost entirely on the croissant before expanding its range. Jane's positioning in the OAD Cheap Eats tier rather than a fine-dining adjacent category signals that its value proposition is closer to the daily-rotation model than the destination-pastry model.

The Bakery as Neighbourhood Infrastructure

Seven-day service, 9am to 2pm across the full week without a mid-week break, is an operational commitment that distinguishes serious neighbourhood bakeries from the more selective opening schedules common at craft-focused peers. Some of San Francisco's most recognised bakers operate abbreviated weeks or specific-day bread windows that require planning. Jane's consistent daily availability positions it as functional infrastructure, the kind of spot that anchors a morning routine rather than requiring a visit to be calendared around production schedules.

The Mission District's character reinforces this. The neighbourhood runs on foot traffic from a resident population that covers an unusually wide economic range by San Francisco standards, and the food businesses that last here tend to be the ones that earn a place in daily life rather than primarily targeting out-of-neighbourhood visitors. That's a different operating logic from the weekend-only bread-window model, and it shapes both what a bakery offers and how it's perceived by the OAD professional community.

San Francisco Bread City: The Broader Context

Californian baking as a category has a specific identity in the American food conversation, lighter integration of European techniques with local grains and produce, an emphasis on morning pastry formats alongside serious bread programs, and a price-point expectation that sits above most of the country but below the luxury tier occupied by hotel patisseries. That positioning means a well-executed San Francisco bakery competes on craft credentials with operations in New York, Chicago, and London, even when its price points stay in the accessible range.

For comparison beyond the local market, bakeries operating at the craft end of the Cheap Eats tier in major cities include Radio Bakery in New York City and 26 Grains in London, both of which have developed editorial profiles through consistent execution rather than single breakthrough moments. The pattern across that comparable set is similar: neighbourhood anchoring, daily-use reliability, and sustained professional regard tracked through lists like OAD rather than traditional restaurant guides.

San Francisco's fine-dining end of the spectrum occupies a different register entirely, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and the city's own Michelin-decorated tables like Benu and Atelier Crenn serve a different function in the food infrastructure. The OAD Cheap Eats framework specifically carves out space for operations like Jane that the standard fine-dining recognition apparatus isn't designed to capture.

Planning a Visit

DetailJane The BakeryTartine BakeryArsicault Bakery
NeighbourhoodMission (Guerrero St)Mission (18th St)Inner Richmond
Opening days7 daysVariable / selectiveVariable
Opening from7am dailyAfternoon bread windowMorning
OAD Cheap EatsYes (2023 to 2025)Separate recognition tierYes
Price tierCheap Eats categoryCheap Eats categoryCheap Eats category
Google rating4.4 (375 reviews)Not listed hereNot listed here

Jane The Bakery is at 1000 Guerrero Street, San Francisco, CA 94110. Weekend mornings at Mission bakeries at this calibre tend to draw queues; the 9am opening gives early arrivals the clearest run at full selection.

Signature Dishes
Almond Twice Baked CroissantSourdough LoafVegan Blueberry MuffinCinnamon RollsCoffee Cake
Frequently asked questions

Where the Accolades Land

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Casual
  • Cozy
  • Lively
Best For
  • Brunch
  • Casual Hangout
  • Solo
Experience
  • Standalone
Drink Program
  • Beer Program
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleCounter Service
Meal PacingQuick Bite

Bright, simple counter-service operation with limited seating; busy and popular with consistent lines, energetic but unpretentious.

Signature Dishes
Almond Twice Baked CroissantSourdough LoafVegan Blueberry MuffinCinnamon RollsCoffee Cake