Vegan when traveling: airports, road trips, and hotel breakfasts
What to actually order at the airport, on the highway, and at the hotel breakfast bar when the choices look bleak at first glance.
The hardest moments to be vegan are not at home and not at the dedicated plant-based restaurants you scouted in advance. They are at the airport gate at 6 a.m., at the highway service plaza at 10 p.m., and at the hotel breakfast bar that boasts a continental spread of bagels, eggs, and yogurt. Here is what we have learned about all three after a couple of years of traveling and running scans for road-trip diners.
Airport food: the better-than-expected list
Major US airports have shifted toward more grab-and-go salads, hummus packs, and pre-built grain bowls in the last few years. Look first at HMSHost-run kiosks and Hudson News locations - both stock pre-packaged vegan options that travel well past security.
Reliable airport orders: bean burrito fresco style at Taco Bell terminals, plant-based sausage breakfast burrito at Starbucks (without cheese, without egg - confirm this version is in stock), Oatmilk lattes everywhere now, soft pretzels at Auntie Anne's are usually vegan as written, fries at Five Guys (cooked in dedicated peanut oil at most locations).
What to avoid: most pizzas are easier to skip than rebuild on a deadline, most sit-down terminals will not customize fast enough for a tight gate, and the airport sushi case is more likely to be cross-contaminated than worth it.
Road trips: the chain map
The chains we scan most for highway diners: Taco Bell, Chipotle, Subway, Panera, Wendy's (the spicy black bean burger when in season, the baked potato year-round), Burger King (the Impossible Whopper without mayo), Starbucks (oatmilk lattes plus the impossible breakfast wrap without cheese and without egg), Cracker Barrel (surprisingly, the fresh fruit plus oatmeal plus dry toast combo holds up).
The chains where the safe-vegan options are sparse enough that we recommend skipping in favor of a gas-station snack rotation: Bojangles, Chick-fil-A (the only vegan items are a side salad without cheese and waffle fries from a shared fryer), most regional barbecue chains, most regional breakfast diners.
Hotel breakfasts: read the bar from the side
Most continental breakfast bars at chain hotels look bleak at first glance because eggs and meat take up most of the visible counter space. Walk past those first. The vegan-friendly items at almost every Holiday Inn Express, Hampton Inn, Hilton Garden Inn, Hyatt Place, and similar bar lineup: oatmeal, bagels, peanut butter, jelly, fresh fruit, juice, coffee, soy or oat milk if available.
The DIY combo we run when traveling: bagel toasted, peanut butter, sliced banana, plus a fruit cup and a coffee with whatever non-dairy milk they have. It is not glamorous, but it is calorically real and beats skipping breakfast.
The waffle iron station usually offers a vegan-friendly batter option at certain hotel chains - ask the front desk before assuming. If the only batter contains milk and egg, skip and stack at the bagel station instead.
Drinks while traveling
Almost every drive-thru coffee chain in the US now offers oatmilk, soymilk, or both. Starbucks, Dunkin', and Caribou Coffee are universal here. Local chains and gas-station coffee bars are improving - we now find oatmilk at most Casey's, Sheetz, and Wawa locations.
What to skip: drive-thru smoothies at chains that do not advertise dairy-free options. Many of those are built on yogurt or sherbet by default, even when the smoothie sounds fruit-only.
Pack a TSA-friendly snack base layer
Even with airport food improving, the highest-leverage move is the snack you bring from home. The goal is not gourmet; it is having calories you trust if the gate moves and the food court closes early.
Reliable vegan items that survive a long travel day: a sealed bag of trail mix (skip the honey-roasted variety), an apple or an orange, an unopened squeeze pack of nut butter (3.4 oz fits the TSA liquids rule), a couple of Larabars or Clif bars, mushroom-jerky or pea-protein-jerky if you want savory. None of these melt, leak, or get crushed in a backpack.
Refillable water bottle filled past security saves the $4 vending-machine purchase and keeps you from grabbing a non-vegan snack out of dehydration. Most major US airports now have refill stations; if yours does not, fill in the bathroom sink before boarding.
Convenience stores and gas stations as a base layer
Highway gas stations and convenience-store chains have improved more than airport food has in the last few years. Wawa runs a sizable vegan hot bar with a build-your-own bowl that takes the same modifier rules as Chipotle: rice, beans, vegetables, salsas, no cheese, no sour cream. Sheetz lets you customize a hoagie on the touch screen with hummus, vegetables, and avocado, and it works as a real meal rather than a snack. Casey's pizza will build with no cheese and almost any topping; the dough is vegan at most stores.
7-Eleven now stocks pre-packaged hummus, fresh fruit, vegan jerky, and an assortment of dairy-free milks. The unspectacular but reliable rule: if a regional convenience chain has a hot bar plus a deli counter, you can usually build a vegan meal there that is better than the worst sit-down terminal at the airport you came from.
Buc-ee's deserves a separate note: the deli counter has good options if you skip the meats and ask for the brisket-free chopped salad bowl, plus the snack aisle stocks more vegan jerky and trail-mix variants than most airport stores do.
Pre-trip prep that saves the most time
The two-minute pre-trip habit that saves the most time on the road: open Vegan Recon, scan each chain on the route, and screenshot the safe-orders list to your phone. Screenshots survive when you have no signal at the gas station, when you have a tired brain at 10 p.m., or when the hotel breakfast bar Wi-Fi is captive-portal-locked.
Pin them to a Notes-app file labeled by trip name. Add a second column with the cross-streets for each stop you actually expect to hit. When the diner you planned for is closed, the next-best option is already in your screenshot stack.
The other habit: search the chain plus city name in the Vegan Recon catalogue rather than running a fresh scan. We cache scrapes for thirty days, and somebody else on the same chain probably already triggered the scan you would otherwise wait on. The cached result loads instantly even when you only have one bar of LTE.
Wrap up
Travel is one of the few places where the pre-trip scan saves the most time - airport menus and rest-stop chains are the cases where you do not want to read fine print on a phone in line. Open Vegan Recon before you leave, scan the chains on your route, screenshot the safe orders, and pack a TSA-friendly base layer. The hardest part of vegan travel is not finding food; it is making the next decision when you are already tired. Pre-loaded screenshots and a known snack bag remove most of those decisions before they happen.
★ About the author ★
Dorian started Vegan Recon after one too many evenings squinting at a chain restaurant menu, trying to work out which sauces were dairy-free. He runs True North Technology from Michigan and spends most of his time tightening the scan pipeline so the next vegan diner does not have to do that work twice.
★ Find Dorian elsewhere ★
FAQ
What can I eat at airports as a vegan?
Most US airports have at least one chain with a reliable vegan order: Cava, Chipotle, Sweetgreen, Starbucks (oat-milk drinks plus a few snacks), and Auntie Anne's pretzels in many concourses. Pre-built sandwich kiosks usually carry a hummus wrap or a fruit-and-nut tray. Avoid the sit-down pasta restaurants without a vegan option pre-confirmed - airport menus usually run smaller than the chain's flagship menu.
Are there reliable vegan options at highway rest stops?
Yes, but the list is short. Subway (veggie sub, oil and vinegar, no cheese), Taco Bell (bean burrito fresco), Chipotle when on the route, and gas-station coolers (peanut butter, pretzels, fruit, plain bagels). Cracker Barrel has a small vegan list as well - see the chain guide. Burger King fries have been vegan in the US since 2020 if no other option exists.
Is hotel breakfast usually vegan-friendly?
The reliable hotel-breakfast vegan items are oatmeal (ask for water, not milk), fresh fruit, plain bagels, peanut butter, and toast. Avoid the eggs, the bacon, the buttered biscuits, and the cereals served with milk by default. Most hotel breakfast bars have plant milk if you ask the front desk - it is often kept in the back rather than out on the bar.
What snacks should I pack for a vegan road trip?
A TSA-friendly base layer covers most fail cases: peanut butter (in single-serve packets to clear airport security), trail mix, granola bars (Larabar, Clif), instant oatmeal cups (just need hot water), dried fruit, and a few pieces of fresh fruit. Pack a reusable spoon and a collapsible bowl and you can build a meal from any gas-station cooler in five minutes.
Do vegan options vary by US region?
Yes. The Northeast, Pacific Northwest, and major California cities have the densest vegan-friendly chain coverage. The South and Midwest skew toward Cracker Barrel, Olive Garden, and chain pizza for reliable options. Rural areas often default to Subway and Taco Bell as the most reliable bets. Pre-scan the chains on your route before leaving so you are not making decisions at exit signs.
Run the same audit on your menu
Paste any restaurant menu URL into Vegan Recon and the scan surfaces the safe orders for you, with the exact order script per item.
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