Hole Foods

Behold, the Best Doughnuts in Seattle

Sprinkled, glazed, and occasionally topped with bacon: These are the city’s most impressive practitioners of fried dough.

By Allecia Vermillion Photography by Amber Fouts January 16, 2024

Whether you're into cake or raised—or mochi—it's hard to resist the fried charms of a doughnut. And whoa, has Seattle got breadth in this department. 

We've got classic sinker shops, not to mention wait-in-line temples of brioche artistry. Newcomers are tracing Latin American flavors onto careful yeasted dough. Seattle's even home to a century-old company that's the biggest worldwide manufacturer of doughnut-making machines. Our town's relationship with doughnuts has been evolving since the 1990s. What hasn't changed: They're always better fresh.


Aurora Donuts

Bitter Lake

The parking lot–scape of northerly Aurora Avenue looks much as it did when American autos ruled American life. Ditto, to the max, for the doughnut shop perched in a shopping center parking lot, only a smidgen removed from a past identity as a Dunkin’. These days, family owners make classics with care: double chocolates, twists, a half dozen types of doughnut holes, and a really lovely honey-dipped. Cake doughnuts and old-fashioneds come out of the fryer with a bit more crunch than they do elsewhere, a nice change of pace. Prices remain as retro as the atmosphere.

Lemon custard is always on the menu at General Porpoise.

General Porpoise

Capitol Hill, Denny Regrade, LAurelhurst, Pioneer Square

The famed brioche rounds from London’s St. John bakery inspired Renee Erickson’s handful of doughnut shops. The menu is focused: maybe five flavors of cream, jam, or curd filled sugar-dusted brioche moons. A few seasonal flavors (quince jam, pistachio cream, tiramisu) rotate among standards like vanilla custard and the lemon curd that tastes like British springtime. Hot pink La Marzocco espresso machines drive a multi-roaster coffee program that’s every bit as impressive as the doughnuts. Visit the Laurelhurst location early enough and you can snag some unfilled less-than-perfect doughnuts from the main kitchen.

Mighty-O is a plant-based doughnut disguised as a party.

Mighty-O Donuts

Various

In the early aughts, Mighty-O set out to make organic doughnuts that reflected careful sourcing and environmental sensibilities. The result turned out to be plant-based recipes, an unintended boon to Seattle’s sweet-toothed vegans. The lineup of mostly cake doughnuts (plus the requisite raised twists, bars, and fritters) is equally beloved by omnivores, who appreciate the texture, and familiar, yet finessed flavors like chocolate topped with peanut butter, or raspberry-glazed vanilla. Early experiments pouring chai into doughnut mix yielded the epically excellent french toast doughnut.

Family Donut

Northgate

At a traffic-addled crossroads, in a strip mall storefront the size of a guest bedroom, owner Pete Thav and his siblings box up fresh doughnuts for fiercely loyal regulars. The family gets cranking not long after midnight to fill trays with multiple styles and endless variations on the classics. A rainbow of icing (Lemon! Orange! Blueberry!) coat tender cake doughnuts; twists glisten with chocolate or vanilla. Apple fritters are practically pizza-size. The decision-making process would be overwhelming if Thav weren’t there to help you decide between plain chocolate, chocolate-coconut, or chocolate with sprinkles.

Donut Factory

University District, Lynnwood

Bakers work nearly around the clock to produce an astonishing 60-plus doughnut varieties. By morning, cake doughnuts sport every sprinkle iteration you can imagine, while rows of raised doughnuts are bedecked in flair—smoky bacon, Fruity Pebbles, even a full-size peanut butter cup on a field of chocolate glaze. Customers can also special order alphabet-shaped doughnuts to spell out prom asks, birthday wishes, or other salutations that might benefit from fried dough. Not that Donut Factory is all about novelty: The case contains exemplary crullers, fritters, Bavarians, cinnamon roll–esque Pershings, and the shops’ best seller, a feather-light classic maple bar.

At Raised Doughnuts, Mi Kim does magical things with freeze-dried raspberry dust.

Raised Doughnuts

Central District

Genuinely original creations hail from the busy mind of co-owner (and former Macrina head pastry chef) Mi Kim. While Raised does right by a few classics, good luck passing up monthly specials like caramel crunch crullers, or an orange-glazed classic topped with a squiggle of burnt sugar. Kim was also an early Seattle proponent of mochi doughnuts, with their singular texture. Even her doughnut holes, coated in freeze-dried raspberry dust, make innovation delicious. Kim posts each month’s flavors about 10 days in advance, but the weekend specials—a Friday cruller, Saturday’s furikake mochi number, and a filled confection on Sundays—are similarly adventurous. Raised now occupies a serene storefront in the Midtown Square complex.

Top Pot makes a slew of old-fashioneds.

Top Pot Doughnuts and Coffee

Various

Two decades in, Seattle’s hometown doughnut chain is as much part of the city as the Seahawks. (Aww, remember when rookie player Golden Tate got busted trespassing in search of a fresh Top Pot maple bar. Seventeen shops from Bothell to Tacoma offer sleek design and an emphasis on cake doughnuts and old-fashioneds (not to mention Ovaltine lattes). The feather boa, a classic cake round tricked out with icing and a flurry of shaved coconut, might be the closest thing Seattle has to a hometown doughnut.

Dona Queen Donut and Deli

SoDo

The chipped pink counter and dimly lit seating area hearken back to the era when people still called doughnuts “sinkers” and dunked them in strong coffee before heading off to work in SoDo’s industrial environs. This Fourth Avenue South strip mall kitchen has an alter ego, Deli Seoul, that puts out bulgogi and kimchi fried rice (not to mention the occasional BLT). The shop now makes mochi doughnuts, but other styles are as Americana as they come: fritters, and cream-filleds transcend bougie doughnut trends, but are made with care, and all the more pleasure for costing about $2 a pop. 

Erik Jackson and Alison Odowski make classic doughnuts with the occasional smart (and salty) twist.

Good Day Donuts

White Center

Erik Jackson and Alison Odowski had fried nary a twist or bear claw when they bought this amiable White Center doughnut shop situated next to a weed store and laundromat. Now, Good Day is both a neighborhood hub and a culinary landmark for doughnut fans who appreciate Jackson’s chef sensibility; he previously headed the kitchen at Vendemmia. Jackson keeps things classic (this is a no-bacon zone), and scratch-made (the pink glaze on the Homerian sprinkle doughnuts tastes of real raspberries). The couple’s culinary background is still evident—in the breakfast sandwiches, the lunchtime subs, and the sea salt–glazed doughnuts that aren’t technically a classic. Yet.

Dochi's Matcha Mochi, topped with pistachios.

Dochi

Chinatown–International District, TUkwila

The Orlando-based brand expanded first to Chinatown–International District (in Uwajimaya’s food court), then to Tukwila, inside the shiny new Lam’s Seafood. Dochi is all about the mochi doughnut: fried pop bead rings of glutinous rice that deliver a chewy, complex experience, rather than bear claw–style sugar saturation. With a few thrilling exceptions (say, anything that involves cookie butter), adventurous icing combos like matcha Oreo and taro pebbles remain mostly a flavor footnote to that awesome texture. See you in line.

Half and Half Doughnut Co.

Capitol Hill

Top Pot cofounder Michael Klebeck partnered with Christine Cannon for this unrelated doughnut counter. It’s less about classics and more about caramelized pineapple cronuts, almond joy old-fashioneds, and stuffed “bombas” inspired by desserts like s’mores or bananas foster. Though Half and Half’s at its best when it remixes nostalgia, lacing mini doughnuts with cherry cola, or finding flavor inspiration in banana pancakes. Mini cronuts and old-fashioneds let you partake without needing an immediate nap.

The Flour Box's filled doughnuts are worth the wait. (And you will definitely wait.)

The Flour Box

Hillman city

It’s pretty incredible that owner Pamela Vuong taught herself the art of ethereal brioche doughnuts, which she pipes full of sophisticated cross-cultural combos like coconut milk pudding with tapioca balls, Thai tea cream, or roasted banana, each doughnut’s contents poking from the top with some sort of artful flourish. The Flour Box began as a popup, then transformed into an inviting Hillman City bakery. Managing the crowds is Vuong’s forever challenge; lines build down the block before the shop opens at 10am. Consult her handy FAQ before you queue (ordering a coffee drink online helps keep things moving).

Zuri's Donutz

Lynnwood

Vincent Davis’s strip mall doughnut paradise gets a lot of attention for unexpected flavors like torched buttercream or peach cobbler or chicken and waffles, but his combos never feel like gimmicks. Zuri’s makes its own icing—coffee, horchata, ube, mango—and produces a rotating cast of 50-plus doughnut varieties. Davis applies a similar enthusiasm to the Kona coffee and providing allergen-free options.

King Donuts has set up shop in a new location on Rainier, but the doughnuts (and even the display case) are the same as you remember.

King Donuts

Rainier Beach

The longtime Rainier Beach neighborhood hub now has a new home in the former Beach Bakery location. Owner Hong Chhuor and his husband, Razz Hass, have taken over from Chhuor’s extended family. The laundry machines and teriyaki machines are long gone; the coffee program reflects Chhuor’s barista background. But it’s still an easy gathering spot for the neighborhood. And the doughnuts, thankfully, remain the platonic ideals of themselves, from cake doughnuts with Seahawks-themed sprinkles to buttermilk bars, twists, and jelly filled. Pickings get slim by about 10am.

Damian Castillo and Claudia Monroy make Latin American–inspired doughnuts at their new shop, Doce.

Doce Donut Co.

Wallingford

A family with roots in Argentina and Venezuela produces ornate brioche doughnuts in flavors representing pastry traditions from across Latin America. Cuban pastelitos de guayaba y queso make fine inspiration for a doughnut, as do churros and Mexican chocolate. The doughnut version of tres leches cake is a marvel of both physics and flavor. Founders Damian Castillo and Claudia Monroy convinced Castillo’s parents to transplant their decades of baking experience from Miami to Seattle; they developed a brioche dough that ferments for 24 hours, at once strong and airy. Doce’s doughnuts feel more like carefully crafted dessert than on-the-go breakfast. But they’re also great with coffee.

Dough Joy

Capitol Hill, West Seattle

A pair of joyful pink doughnut shops make brioche dough that manages to be both totally vegan and totally delicious. Fanciful flavors include vanilla biscoff, strawberry milkshake, everything bagel, and carrot cake, but the classics are just as compelling. Lots of customers don’t even realize the doughnuts are egg- and dairy-free, but they definitely notice the tiny one that comes stuck on the straw or stir stick of every coffee drink.

Mochinut

Various

A fast-growing chain serves mochi doughnuts in a rainbow of flavors. (Pistachio! Strawberry funnel cake! Yakult! Fruity Pebbles!) The texture is exemplary, simultaneously crisp and chewy. Toppings like pretzels, candy canes, or Teddy Grahams just ratchet up the fun factor.

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