What’s Vegetarian at Jersey Mike’s? (Updated for 2026)

Looking for Jersey Mike’s vegetarian options? Here’s the full list: the chain has one dedicated meatless sub, the #14 The Veggie, plus a build-your-own path that works for most plant-based eaters. Jersey Mike’s is a meat-forward sub shop, so there’s no Beyond or Impossible deli meat here and no separate vegan menu. This 2026 guide covers the meat-free options on the current menu and the best vegan swaps. It also flags the breads and sauces that work, plus the cross-contact issues to know before you order. If you want more meatless restaurant rundowns, start with What’s Vegetarian?

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Jersey Mike’s Vegetarian Options — What to Order

A Quick Look at Jersey Mike’s

Jersey Mike’s traces back to 1956, when Mike Ingravallo opened a small sub shop on Trenton Avenue in Point Pleasant, New Jersey. Peter Cancro built the brand you know today. He bought the shop in 1975 at age 17, raising roughly $125,000 in three days. His high school football coach, who happened to be a banker, helped him get the loan. Cancro rebranded the shop Jersey Mike’s and stayed involved as it grew into a national name. That origin story is still a big part of the chain’s identity.

The company changed hands in a big way in late 2024. Private equity firm Blackstone bought a majority interest in a deal worth roughly $8 billion. That sale closed in early 2025, and Charlie Morrison took over as CEO on April 28, 2025. The footprint is large and still growing. As of April 2026, ScrapeHero counted about 3,371 U.S. locations, up from roughly 3,256 a year earlier. The global total runs north of 3,500 across the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, with European expansion announced. The chain adds roughly 300 stores a year, so there’s a good chance one is near you.

Jersey Mike’s Vegetarian Options: What to Order

The Jersey Mike’s menu is built around cold cuts and hot subs, but you’ve got one dedicated vegetarian sub and a flexible cold-topping bar to work with. The table below covers the realistic meat-free picks on the current 2026 menu. It also shows whether each one can go vegan with the standard swaps. The table stays conservative. An item earns the vegan check only when it’s confirmed dairy- and egg-free, and a few breads carry undisclosed-enzyme caveats covered further down.

Menu ItemVegetarianVegan
#14 The Veggie (with cheese)
#14 The Veggie (no cheese, vegan bread)⚠️ (see enzyme caveat)
Build-your-own cheese & veggie sub
Build-your-own veggie sub, no cheese (vegan bread)⚠️ (see enzyme caveat)
Grilled Portabella Mushroom sub⚠️ (availability varies)⚠️ (no cheese; verify in-store)
Wraps (white, wheat, garlic herb, spinach herb, tomato basil)⚠️ (palm oil; enzyme caveat)
Seeded Italian / white bread⚠️ (enzyme caveat)
Wheat bread loaf❌ (contains honey)
Gluten-free bread❌ (contains egg)
Avocado / guacamole
Chips (varies by bag)⚠️⚠️ (some contain milk)

The #14 The Veggie and Build-Your-Own Subs

The #14 The Veggie is the flagship meatless option and the one item on the menu designed without meat. It’s a cold sub, and the standard build is straightforward.

  • #14 The Veggie: Provolone and Swiss cheese, green bell pepper, lettuce, tomato, and onion, finished “Mike’s Way” with the chain’s juice (a red wine vinegar and olive oil blend), salt, and oregano. As served it’s vegetarian thanks to the two cheeses. Add avocado if you want more substance.
  • Build-your-own veggie sub: You’re not stuck with The Veggie. Order any sub without meat — a cheese-and-veggie sub on the bread of your choice, loaded from the full cold-topping bar. This is the most flexible route and lets you stack peppers, pickles, banana peppers, and more.
  • Grilled Portabella Mushroom sub: Here’s a catch. PETA still lists a grilled portabella option (mushrooms, peppers, onions; order without cheese). But veggl reports the chain discontinued the mushroom sandwich, and the official menu page didn’t render for a direct check. Treat it as regionally variable — ask your location whether it’s still available before you count on it.

One note for strict vegetarians who avoid animal rennet. Jersey Mike’s hasn’t said whether its provolone and Swiss use microbial or animal rennet, so the source is unconfirmed. If that matters to you, check the allergen guide or ask your store.

Breads, Wraps, and Sauces

Your bread and sauce choices do most of the work when you’re eating vegan here, and there are a couple of traps worth flagging. The biggest one: don’t confuse the wheat wrap with the wheat bread loaf.

  • Vegan-considered breads and wraps: Seeded Italian bread and white bread count as vegan, as do all five wraps — white, wheat, garlic herb wheat, spinach herb, and tomato basil. Cross-checked across godairyfree, veggl, and PETA.
  • Breads to skip if you’re vegan: The wheat bread loaf contains honey, and the gluten-free bread contains egg. Neither is vegan. Again, the wheat wrap is fine; the wheat loaf is not.
  • Enzyme and palm oil caveats: godairyfree and veggl both note the dough conditioners list “enzymes from an unknown source,” which may or may not be animal-derived. Veggl also flags palm oil in the wraps. Strict vegans may want to assess these personally.
  • Vegan sauces and condiments: BBQ sauce, Buffalo sauce, hot chopped pepper relish, the olive oil blend, red wine vinegar, spicy brown mustard, and yellow mustard are all vegan. Teriyaki is regionally sourced — verify in-store.
  • Sauces to avoid (they contain egg): Mayo, chipotle mayo, and Thousand Island all have egg. These are the easy-to-miss traps on an otherwise plant-friendly sub.

Toppings and Sides

The cold-topping bar is where Jersey Mike’s gets generous for plant-based eaters. Pile it on at no real cost to your build.

  • Vegan toppings: Avocado or guacamole, lettuce, tomato, onion, grilled onion, green bell pepper, pepper strips, banana peppers, jalapeños, mushrooms, dill pickles, sauerkraut, oregano, and salt are all plant-based.
  • Chips: per godairyfree, dairy-free bags include Baked Lays, Fritos, Lays (BBQ, Classic, Salt & Vinegar), Miss Vickie’s (Sea Salt, Spicy Dill), Ruffles, and Sun Chips. But PETA warns some chip varieties contain milk, so read the specific bag rather than assuming. Don’t expect french fries — the standard U.S. menu doesn’t feature them.

What’s Vegan at Jersey Mike’s?

Vegan eating at Jersey Mike’s is entirely a customization job. As of mid-2026, PETA notes there’s no dedicated vegan sub yet, and the chain offers no branded plant-based meat. Your one realistic vegan main is the #14 The Veggie. Order it with no cheese, on a vegan bread or wrap, with vegan sauces and toppings. Add avocado for some staying power, and you’ve got a solid sandwich.

What you want to avoid is short and specific. Skip the cheese, since provolone and Swiss are standard on The Veggie. Skip mayo, chipotle mayo, and Thousand Island, which all contain egg. And skip the wheat bread loaf (honey) and gluten-free bread (egg). Stick to the seeded Italian, white bread, or any wrap. Lean on mustard, vinegar, BBQ, Buffalo, or the olive oil blend for flavor. The one caveat you can’t fully resolve at the counter is the undisclosed bread enzymes — if you’re strict, the allergen guide is your friend.

Special Dietary Requirements and Allergies

Jersey Mike’s is a sub shop where meat and cheese share equipment, so cross-contact is the main thing to plan around. The chain discloses its own allergen information, and you should pull it up before ordering if you have a serious allergy or a strict diet. A few specifics matter most:

  • Shared slicer: This is the big one. Jersey Mike’s slices meat and cheese on the same slicer, and staff sanitize it only periodically, not between every use. So even a no-cheese veggie sub can carry meat cross-contact. This is the chain’s own disclosure and matters most for strict vegans.
  • Gluten-free: A gluten-free bread is offered, but it contains egg (not vegan), and the kitchen isn’t a dedicated gluten-free environment — shared prep surfaces introduce cross-contact. If you have celiac disease, ask the team to change gloves and use clean utensils.
  • Egg: Found in mayo, chipotle mayo, Thousand Island, and the gluten-free bread.
  • Dairy: Leave the provolone and Swiss off The Veggie for a dairy-free or vegan build.
  • Honey: In the wheat bread loaf only.
  • Soy: Refined soy oil appears in many items, which matters only if you’re soy-sensitive — it’s not a vegan blocker.

Tips for Vegetarians at Jersey Mike’s

  • Start with the #14 The Veggie. It’s the one sub designed without meat, and the two cheeses plus Mike’s Way juice make it a real meal rather than a sad pile of vegetables.
  • Build your own when you want more. Any sub can be ordered without meat. Load it from the full cold-topping bar — peppers, pickles, banana peppers, jalapeños, sauerkraut — for no real upcharge.
  • Add avocado for substance. Especially on a vegan build with no cheese, avocado or guacamole gives the sandwich some body and healthy fat.
  • Watch the egg-in-sauce traps. Mayo, chipotle mayo, and Thousand Island all contain egg. Reach for mustard, vinegar, BBQ, Buffalo, or the olive oil blend instead.
  • Know your bread. Seeded Italian, white bread, and the wraps are vegan-considered; the wheat loaf has honey and the gluten-free bread has egg. The wheat wrap is fine — the wheat loaf isn’t.
  • Check the chip bag. Most chips are vegetarian, but some contain milk, so read the ingredients if you’re strict about dairy.
  • Ask about the slicer if you’re strict. Because meat and cheese share the slicer, request a clean slice or fresh gloves if cross-contact is a dealbreaker.

Jersey Mike’s vegetarian options: frequently asked questions

Conclusion

Jersey Mike’s is a meat-heavy sub shop with a thin but workable lineup for vegetarians. The #14 The Veggie, a loaded build-your-own veggie sub, and the full cold-topping bar will keep most vegetarians happy, and a few simple swaps — no cheese, a vegan bread, egg-free sauces — take that build vegan. Just keep the shared-slicer disclosure and the egg-in-sauce traps in mind, and read the allergen guide if you’re strict. For more chains broken down the same way, see our guide to eating vegetarian and vegan at restaurants or browse the rest of the Restaurants archive. If you want to compare sub shops, check out what’s vegetarian at Togo’s and Jimmy John’s.

What's Vegetarian at Jersey Mike’s license plate
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Eric
Eric Rosenberg is a mostly vegetarian financial writer, speaker, and consultant based in Ventura, California. He is an expert in banking, credit cards, investing, cryptocurrency, insurance, real estate, business finance, and financial fraud and security. His work has appeared in many online publications, including Time, USA Today, Forbes, Business Insider, Nerdwallet, Investopedia, and U.S. News & World Report. Connect with him and learn more at EricRosenberg.com.
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