Secondary electrospray ionization coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (SESI-HRMS) is a powerful method for the analysis of exhaled breath in real time. However, feature annotation is challenging due to the flow-injection nature of the technique. To evaluate alternative methods for enhancing feature annotation, a study was conducted where the exhaled breath of sixteen subjects was condensed and analyzed using dynamic headspace vacuum in-trap extraction gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (DHS-V-ITEX-GC–MS) and liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (LC-MS) using polar and reverse-phase conditions along with a data-independent MS2-acquisition method based on multiple injections. The annotation results obtained from these methods were compared to those from SESI-HRMS. The use of these techniques on breath condensate is unprecedented. The GC–MS method primarily detected compounds of exogenous origin, particularly additives in oral hygiene products like menthol. On the other hand, LC-MS detected a vast number of features, especially with the utilized data-independent acquisition method. Chemical classes to these features were assigned in-silico. In positive ion mode, mostly amino acids and amines were detected, while the largest group in negative ion mode consisted of carboxylic acids. Approximately 25% and 5% of SESI features had a corresponding match with LC-MS and GC–MS. While both GC–MS and LC-MS methods partially overlapped with the SESI features, there was limited overlap of both in the mass-to-charge range from 150 to 200. In conclusion, both GC–MS and LC-MS analysis of breath condensate can serve as supplementary tools for annotating features obtained from SESI-MS. However, to increase confidence in the annotation results, combining these methods with additional on-line fragmentation techniques is recommended.