Choosing the best restaurants in Melbourne means navigating what Good Food and The Age have, for 30+ years, ranked as Australia’s most serious dining city. Melbourne has more restaurants per capita than any comparable city in Asia-Pacific, an unmatched depth of migrant cuisines — Italian, Vietnamese, Greek, Lebanese, Chinese, Japanese, Ethiopian, Sri Lankan — and a distinctive local sensibility that favours produce-driven cooking, natural wine and small-plates informality over white-tablecloth formality. This 2026 guide breaks down where, what and how to eat across 150+ standout restaurants, cafés, bars and markets.
Unlike competitor lists (Broadsheet, Good Food, Time Out) that rank restaurants in a single long list, we’ve organised this guide by three lenses: price tier, cuisine, and neighbourhood. That way you can find the answer to “best restaurants in Melbourne under $50” as easily as “best Japanese restaurant in Fitzroy.” We’ve also included booking tips, dress code, and reasons not to bother with certain overhyped spots.
A note on methodology: every restaurant mentioned has been independently reviewed, awarded in the Good Food Guide hat system, or is a landmark in Melbourne’s living food culture. Tourist traps and reputation-only legacy venues are deliberately excluded. Prices reflect 2026 norms — Melbourne’s dining has moved firmly upmarket post-COVID, with mid-range mains now $38–$55 in most quality venues.

Table of Contents
- Melbourne’s food scene at a glance
- The 10 most important restaurants in Melbourne right now
- Best fine dining restaurants in Melbourne
- Best mid-range restaurants
- Best cheap eats and casual picks
- Best Italian restaurants
- Best Asian restaurants (Japanese, Chinese, Thai, Vietnamese, Korean)
- Best modern Australian restaurants
- Best Middle Eastern and Greek restaurants
- Best vegan and vegetarian restaurants
- Best cafés and brunch spots
- Best coffee in Melbourne
- Best food markets in Melbourne
- Best restaurants by Melbourne neighbourhood
- Best bars, wine bars and rooftop bars
- Booking tips and dress code
- Restaurants and strips to skip
- Frequently asked questions
Melbourne’s food scene at a glance
Melbourne’s food identity is built on four pillars: coffee, migrant cuisines, native produce, and wine-bar culture. Specialty coffee started with Italian migrants in the 1950s, was formalised by pioneers like Mark Dundon (Seven Seeds) and Matt Perger (St Ali) from the mid-2000s, and is now central to almost every café. Migrant restaurants fill in the middle tier — from 60-year-old Italian trattorias to family-run Vietnamese pho shops. At the top end, Modern Australian cuisine pulls from native ingredients (saltbush, finger lime, wattleseed, kangaroo) and executes with European technique. And everywhere, small, loud, informal wine bars with 10-seat kitchens have reshaped how people eat out.

The Good Food Guide awards “hats” — one, two or three — as Australia’s equivalent of Michelin stars. Three-hatted restaurants are the country’s absolute top tier; Melbourne consistently has 6–8 three-hatted venues, more than Sydney. Two-hatted restaurants (roughly 20–25 in Melbourne in any given year) are the sweet spot for most special-occasion visitors — world-class cooking without the three-hour degustation commitment.
The 10 most important restaurants in Melbourne right now
If you only ate at ten places during your visit, these would make the shortlist. Between them they cover the best restaurants in Melbourne across fine dining, mid-range, and informal wine-bar cooking:
- Attica (Ripponlea) — Three hats. Ben Shewry’s flagship restaurant has been on the World’s 50 Best list for over a decade. Native Australian ingredients executed at the highest level. 10-course tasting $345pp, book 2–3 months ahead.
- Cutler & Co. (Fitzroy) — Andrew McConnell’s landmark Gertrude Street restaurant. Modern Australian, three hats in the past. Sunday lunch is legendary.
- Minamishima (Richmond) — Japanese omakase. 14-seat sushi counter, $280pp. Considered the best sushi in Australia.
- Flower Drum (CBD) — Cantonese. Open since 1975 and still one of the best Chinese restaurants outside Asia. Famous Peking duck.
- Supernormal (CBD) — Also McConnell. Modern Asian. Flinders Lane. No bookings after 6pm — line up or go early.
- Gimlet at Cavendish House (CBD) — Andrew McConnell’s bistro. Open kitchen, French-ish, excellent for solo diners at the bar.
- Cumulus Inc. (CBD) — Also McConnell (he dominates this list for a reason). Brunch institution. Lunch is better than breakfast for most diners.
- Chin Chin (CBD) — Modern Thai. No bookings, always a line, always worth it. Great share plates for groups.
- Embla (CBD) — Natural-wine-focused small plates on Russell Street. Among the best restaurants in Melbourne for solo dining.
- Maha (CBD) — Shane Delia’s Middle Eastern flagship. Feast menus are the move for groups.
Best fine dining restaurants in Melbourne
Melbourne’s fine dining scene clusters in two zones: the CBD high-rises (Vue de Monde atop the Rialto, Lui Bar, 28) and the inner suburbs’ destination restaurants (Attica, Brae a regional drive but associated with Melbourne). Expect $200–$400 per person for degustation + wine matches. Bookings essential; most three-hats are booked 4–8 weeks out.
- Attica (Ripponlea) — covered above. The flagship.
- Vue de Monde (Rialto, CBD, level 55) — French technique + Australian produce + 360° views. $295pp degustation. Best dress code: smart.
- Cutler & Co. (Fitzroy) — Modern Australian bistro-grand format.
- Society (CBD, Manchester Unity Building) — Chef Martin Benn (ex-Sepia Sydney). Mediterranean-leaning fine dining in a glamorous Art Deco setting.
- Lûmé (South Melbourne) — Modernist tasting menu with theatrical flourishes.
- Amaru (Armadale) — Two-hatted small restaurant, $250pp degustation. Chef Clinton McIver is a rising name.
- Brae (Birregurra, 90 min west) — Dan Hunter’s farm-to-table destination. Stay overnight. Probably Australia’s best “country” restaurant.
- Brunetti Classico’s sister, Sunda (CBD) — Modern South-East Asian, two hats. Less formal but intensely creative.
Best mid-range restaurants ($60–$100 per person)
The sweet spot for most visitors looking for the best restaurants in Melbourne without committing to a degustation. A two-course-plus-wine dinner in this bracket should run $70–$110 depending on choices.
- Tipo 00 (CBD) — Modern Italian pasta bar on Little Bourke. Pasta $28–$34, expect a 30-minute wait.
- MoVida (CBD) — Frank Camorra’s Spanish tapas. Original on Hosier Lane is still the best.
- Sunda (CBD) — Modern South-East Asian.
- France-Soir (South Yarra) — Classic French bistro. Open since 1986. Steak frites, frogs legs, the full experience.
- Longrain (CBD) — Modern Thai. Famous share plates.
- Pastuso (CBD) — Peruvian in AC/DC Lane. Pisco sours and ceviche.
- Mamasita (CBD) — Upscale Mexican. Corn queso fundido is an institution.
- Entrecôte (South Yarra) — Single-dish French steak frites. $44. Wait on weekends.
- Hawker Hall (Windsor) — Andrew McConnell’s casual Southeast Asian.
- Embla (CBD) — Natural wine bar with serious food.
- Lee Ho Fook (CBD) — Modern Chinese. Crispy eggplant is a must-order.
- Scopri (North Fitzroy) — Family Italian, Sardinian accent. Locals-heavy.
Best cheap eats and casual picks ($10–$30)
Melbourne has never lost its migrant-built cheap-eat culture. The best places for a $15 lunch still come from Vietnamese, Italian, Middle Eastern, Chinese and Thai communities. These are among the best restaurants in Melbourne for budget travellers and locals in the know.
- Nhu Lan Bakery (Richmond) — $8 banh mi. The GOAT of Melbourne banh mi.
- Mamak (CBD) — Malaysian roti. Line up on Lonsdale Street.
- HuTong Dumpling Bar (CBD) — Xiao long bao soup dumplings in Chinatown. $14 for 10.
- Gami Chicken & Beer (CBD) — Korean fried chicken, multiple locations.
- Pho Bo Ga Mekong (Richmond, Victoria St) — $16 pho. Open since 1999.
- Easey’s (Collingwood) — Burgers served from inside decommissioned train carriages on a rooftop.
- Stalactites (CBD) — Souvlaki institution, open 24 hours in the CBD.
- Lentil As Anything (Abbotsford, Footscray) — Pay as you feel vegetarian buffet at the Abbotsford Convent.
- Bao 101 (Kensington / CBD) — Best Taiwanese bao in the city.
- Old Town Hong Kong Cuisine (Chinatown) — Cantonese BBQ, char siu pork.
- A1 Bakery (Brunswick, Sydney Road) — Lebanese pizzas and pide.
- Falafel Kingdom (Coburg / North Melbourne) — Best falafel in the city, $12 wrap.
Best Italian restaurants

Italian is Melbourne’s deepest-rooted migrant cuisine — arrivals began in the 1890s and peaked in the 1950s. Lygon Street is the famous strip but the best Italian has long since diversified. Today’s key spots:
- Tipo 00 (CBD) — Modern pasta bar. Tagliatelle ragù is a house classic.
- Scopri (North Fitzroy) — Sardinian family restaurant. Outstanding wine list.
- Grossi Florentino (CBD) — 1928 institution. Formal dining room upstairs, casual grill downstairs.
- Osteria Ilaria (CBD) — Sister to Tipo 00, slightly more polished.
- D.O.C. Pizzeria (Carlton) — Neapolitan pizza certified by the AVPN.
- King & Godfree (Carlton) — Italian grocer downstairs, Agostino restaurant upstairs.
- Osteria Bimbo (St Kilda) — Southern Italian, beach-adjacent.
- Bar di Stasio (St Kilda) — Italian bar with espresso and negronis, one of Melbourne’s most elegant rooms.
- Lâneway (CBD) — Modern Italian trattoria on Little Bourke.
- 48h Pizza (multiple) — 48-hour fermented dough Neapolitan pizza.
Best Asian restaurants

Japanese
- Minamishima (Richmond) — World-class omakase.
- Kisumé (CBD) — Lucas Group’s glamorous three-level Japanese.
- Komeyui (multiple) — Modern Japanese sharing plates.
- Kazuki’s (Carlton) — Intimate Japanese-Australian fusion, two hats.
- Toshi (Fitzroy) — Casual izakaya on Johnston Street.
Chinese

- Flower Drum (CBD, Chinatown) — Classical Cantonese.
- HuTong (CBD) — Xiao long bao.
- Lee Ho Fook (CBD) — Modern Chinese.
- Old Town Hong Kong Cuisine (Chinatown) — Char siu and roast duck.
- Shandong MaMa (Chinatown) — Dumplings, always a queue.
Vietnamese
- Pho Bo Ga Mekong (Richmond) — Classic pho.
- Thanh Phong (Richmond) — Grilled pork vermicelli.
- Annam (CBD) — Upscale modern Vietnamese.
- Uncle (St Kilda) — Vietnamese hawker-style.
- Misschu (multiple) — Fast-casual Vietnamese chain that actually delivers.
Thai
- Chin Chin (CBD) — Modern Thai share plates.
- Longrain (CBD) — Modern Thai.
- Soi 38 (CBD) — Thai street food in a car park (literally).
- Cookie (CBD) — Loud rooftop Thai in Curtin House.
Korean
- Gami Chicken & Beer (multiple) — KFC-style.
- Hanok (CBD) — Modern Korean small plates.
- Gogi Korean BBQ (CBD) — Tabletop grilling.
Best modern Australian restaurants
Modern Australian cuisine (sometimes “Mod Oz”) is where Melbourne’s top chefs express a distinctly local voice — native ingredients, seasonality, French/European technique.
- Attica — Three hats.
- Cutler & Co. — Two hats.
- Gimlet at Cavendish House — CBD bistro.
- Marion (Fitzroy) — McConnell’s Gertrude Street wine bar.
- Cumulus Inc. — CBD brasserie.
- Gazi (CBD) — George Calombaris-style modern Greek-Australian.
- Embla — Wine bar format.
- Entrée (CBD) — New on the scene, modern produce-driven.
Best Middle Eastern and Greek restaurants
- Maha (CBD) — Shane Delia’s Middle Eastern flagship. Two hats.
- Biggie Smalls (Fitzroy) — Mediterranean small plates.
- Stalactites (CBD) — 24-hour Greek souvlaki.
- Eastern Beach Cafe (Northcote) — Greek-Cypriot.
- Gazi (CBD) — Modern Greek.
- Hellenic Republic (Kew, Brunswick) — George Calombaris Greek taverna.
- Shane Delia’s George Street (CBD) — Middle Eastern wine bar.
- Babylon Cafe (Brunswick) — Lebanese mixed grills.
Best vegan and vegetarian restaurants
- Smith & Daughters (Fitzroy) — Vegan Latin-Spanish, internationally acclaimed.
- Smith & Deli (Fitzroy) — Sister sandwich shop.
- Lentil As Anything (Abbotsford Convent, Footscray) — Pay-as-you-feel vegetarian.
- Serotonin Eatery (Burnley) — All-day brunch, plant-based.
- Moroccan Soup Bar (Fitzroy North) — Legendary vegetarian. Cash only, no menu.
- Transformer (Fitzroy) — Modern vegetarian on Rose Street.
- Shakahari (Carlton) — Since 1972. Melbourne’s original vegetarian restaurant.
- Attica’s lunch — Not strictly vegan but has the best veg-focused tasting menu option.
Best cafés and brunch spots

Melbourne’s café scene is arguably its most distinctive food export. These are the standouts across brunch, all-day dining and specialty coffee:
- Auction Rooms (North Melbourne) — Melbourne brunch classic since 2007.
- Top Paddock (Richmond) — Famous ricotta hotcakes.
- Higher Ground (CBD) — Cathedral-ceilinged former power station, $28 brunch dishes.
- Kettle Black (South Melbourne) — Instagram brunch institution.
- Proud Mary (Collingwood) — Specialty coffee roaster café.
- Industry Beans (Fitzroy) — Coffee-focused brunch spot.
- Hardware Societé (CBD) — French-style breakfasts, no bookings.
- Cumulus Inc. (CBD) — Multi-room brasserie brunch.
- Addict Food & Coffee (Fitzroy) — Brunch with brunch portions.
- Brother Baba Budan (CBD) — Tiny coffee bar on Little Bourke.
- Market Lane Coffee (multiple, inc. Queen Vic Market) — Specialty roaster.
- Sir Charles (Seddon / Yarraville) — Western-suburbs brunch favourite.
Best coffee in Melbourne

Top specialty roasters: Seven Seeds (Carlton), Market Lane (several locations), Proud Mary (Collingwood), St Ali (South Melbourne), Patricia (CBD), Brother Baba Budan (CBD), Small Batch, and Padre Coffee (Brunswick). For a local’s pour-over crawl, start at Market Lane Prahran, walk to Patricia in the CBD, and finish at Brother Baba Budan.
Best food markets in Melbourne

- Queen Victoria Market (CBD) — Since 1878. Deli hall, meat hall, fresh produce. Open Tue, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun.
- Prahran Market (South Yarra) — Smaller, more curated. Tue, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun.
- South Melbourne Market (South Melbourne) — Since 1867. Famous for dim sims and specialty food traders. Wed, Fri, Sat, Sun.
- Footscray Market (Footscray) — Multicultural wet market, amazing Asian and African produce.
- Abbotsford Convent Farmers Market (Abbotsford) — Saturdays.
- Caulfield Farmers Market — Sunday mornings.
Best restaurants by Melbourne neighbourhood
A quick at-a-glance summary of where to eat in each suburb (for the full breakdown of each area see our Melbourne neighbourhoods guide):
- CBD: Supernormal, Chin Chin, Gimlet, Tipo 00, Flower Drum, Cumulus Inc.
- Fitzroy: Cutler & Co, Marion, Smith & Daughters, Scopri, Industry Beans, Black Pearl bar.
- Collingwood: Easey’s, Proud Mary, Stomping Ground Brewery.
- Carlton: D.O.C. Pizzeria, King & Godfree, Shakahari, Brunetti.
- Brunswick: A1 Bakery, CIBI, Padre Coffee, Pope Joan.
- Richmond: Minamishima, Pho Bo Ga Mekong, Top Paddock, Nhu Lan Bakery.
- South Yarra / Prahran: France-Soir, Entrecôte, Kong BBQ, Prahran Market food hall.
- St Kilda: Bar di Stasio, Stokehouse, Uncle, Claypots.
- Southbank: Hana, Rockpool Bar & Grill, Tonka.
- South Melbourne: St Ali, South Melbourne Market food stalls, Lûmé.
Best bars, wine bars and rooftop bars

Cocktail bars
- The Everleigh (Fitzroy) — Classic cocktail lounge, perennially on World’s 50 Best Bars.
- Eau de Vie (CBD) — Hidden speakeasy on Malthouse Lane.
- Black Pearl (Fitzroy) — Fitzroy institution for 20+ years.
- Lui Bar (Rialto, CBD) — Level 55, impeccable cocktails with views.
- Romeo Lane (CBD) — Tiny and perfect.
Wine bars

- Embla (CBD) — The natural wine gold standard.
- Bar Liberty (Fitzroy) — Natural wine + snacks.
- Marion (Fitzroy) — McConnell wine bar.
- Bar di Stasio (St Kilda) — Elegant Italian-leaning.
- Gerald’s Bar (North Carlton) — Neighbourhood classic.
Rooftop bars
- Naked for Satan (Fitzroy) — Brunswick Street rooftop with bay views.
- Siglo (CBD) — Spring Street rooftop overlooking Parliament.
- Madame Brussels (CBD) — Astroturfed rooftop on Bourke Street.
- Rooftop at QT (CBD) — Hotel rooftop with skyline views.
- Lui Bar (CBD) — Level 55 at the Rialto.

Booking tips and dress code
- Most fine-dining venues: book online 4–8 weeks out (Attica 2–3 months). Walk-ins rarely work.
- Chin Chin, Supernormal, Cumulus Inc., HuTong: no bookings after 6pm. Either go early (5:30pm) or queue.
- Tipo 00, MoVida, Tipo’s overflow Osteria Ilaria: bookings possible; walk-ins work off-peak.
- Dress code: Melbourne is relaxed by global standards. “Smart casual” covers almost every top restaurant. Jackets not required. Clean trainers are fine except at Vue de Monde, where smart dress is requested.
- Tipping: not expected. Australian hospitality wages are legally high. 5–10% for excellent service is appreciated but not obligatory.
- Corkage: rare at top restaurants (most are BYO-free). At mid-range Italian restaurants on Lygon and Carlton, BYO is often still allowed for $8–$15 corkage.

Restaurants and strips to skip
Where not to eat matters as much as where to eat. A few honest notes:
- Lygon Street’s main tourist strip — the restaurants with hosts pulling tourists in from the footpath are generic and overpriced. Walk one block further or eat on Faraday/Elgin Streets instead.
- Crown complex food court — overpriced and generic. Crown’s signature restaurants (Nobu, Rockpool, Bistro Guillaume) are excellent; avoid the rest.
- Harbourside/Docklands waterfront restaurants — mostly chain-owned and underwhelming. Great view, mediocre food.
- Southbank’s Southgate food court — tourist-priced. Cross to the CBD for better value.
- Chapel Street’s Thai/Chinese budget restaurants — nothing terrible but better Thai exists in the CBD.
Frequently asked questions
What is the most famous restaurant in Melbourne?
Attica in Ripponlea is internationally the most famous — on the World’s 50 Best Restaurants list for over a decade. Flower Drum in Chinatown is the most famous classical institution (since 1975).
What food is Melbourne known for?
Coffee (specialty roasters), brunch culture (smashed avo originated here), Vietnamese pho (from the refugee community), Italian pasta (century-old roots), and “Mod Oz” — Modern Australian cooking using native ingredients.
Where do locals eat in Melbourne?
Locals eat in Fitzroy (Cutler & Co, Smith & Daughters, Scopri, Bar Liberty), North Melbourne (Auction Rooms, Minh Tan), Richmond (Minamishima, Thanh Phong) and Carlton (D.O.C. Pizzeria, Shakahari). They rarely eat at the tourist strips on Lygon or Chapel unless it’s a specific favourite.
How much does dinner cost in Melbourne?
Cheap eats $15–$25 per person (Vietnamese, Thai, banh mi). Mid-range $70–$110 (two courses + wine). Fine dining $200–$400 per person (degustation + matched wines).
Do Melbourne restaurants close on Sundays or Mondays?
Many top restaurants close Sunday-Monday or Monday-Tuesday. Always check opening hours before planning. Supernormal, Chin Chin and most market brunch spots are open 7 days.
Is Melbourne more expensive than Sydney for dining?
Roughly equivalent at the high end, slightly cheaper at the mid-range. Melbourne has more variety of cheap-eats and ethnic cuisines than Sydney.
Are Melbourne restaurants BYO?
Some mid-range Italian and Asian restaurants still allow BYO with a corkage fee of $8–$15 per bottle. Fine dining and wine-focused places typically do not.
Where should I eat near the MCG before a game?
Swan Street in Richmond has the best pre-game pubs (Corner Hotel, The Mountain View). For sit-down dinners, walk into the CBD and eat on Flinders Lane.
What are the best restaurants in Melbourne for a first date?
Embla (wine bar energy, small plates, great for conversation), France-Soir (romantic French), Bar di Stasio (elegant Italian in St Kilda), Marion (Fitzroy wine bar), or Tonka (Indian-inspired with skyline views).
Final picks: 5 restaurants to prioritise in 2026
If you’re deciding among the best restaurants in Melbourne and only have five bookings to make, our 2026 recommendation: (1) Attica for a once-in-a-lifetime three-hat dinner if you can get a table; (2) Cutler & Co. for the best restaurants in Melbourne experience at a (slightly) more accessible level; (3) Embla for the small-plates wine-bar format that defines modern Melbourne; (4) Pho Bo Ga Mekong for a $16 pho that will stay with you; and (5) Auction Rooms or Cumulus Inc. for the brunch culture that made Melbourne famous. Between them you’ll have experienced the full range of what makes the best restaurants in Melbourne worth the trip.
Plan the rest of your trip with our things to do in Melbourne guide, pick the right month in our best time to visit Melbourne guide, and figure out where to base yourself with our where to stay in Melbourne guide.
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