Melbourne's Top Restaurants
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$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
Vue de Monde
Three Hats. The 55th floor of the Rialto. Chef Hugh Allen conjures a progressive tasting menu that reads like a love letter to Australia's untamed larder — from saltbush to finger lime. The most commanding dining room in the country.
Attica
Ben Shewry's Ripponlea shrine has spent a decade on the World's 50 Best list. Ingredients foraged from native gardens, a menu that evolves with the season, and an intimacy — 40 covers, dark charred-timber walls — that makes every visit feel conspiratorial.
Minamishima
Three Hats. The most revered omakase counter in Australia, and a credible argument that Melbourne eats better Japanese than Tokyo. Master Koichi Minamishima's 4 Lord Street counter seats 18 and changes the conversation with every piece.
Gimlet at Cavendish House
Andrew McConnell's greatest achievement: a 1920s heritage building transformed into Melbourne's most sophisticated power-dining room. Black marble bars, burgundy leather booths, wood-fired proteins, and a wine list that takes no prisoners.
Flower Drum
Good Food Guide's Restaurant of the Year 2026. Open since 1975, still the most elegant Cantonese restaurant in the southern hemisphere. Peking duck, baked crab, and a service standard that makes every guest feel like a dignitary.
Kisume
Three levels of Japanese theatre on Flinders Lane. A Chablis Bar with 80 chardonnays, a raw bar piled with the finest seafood in the city, and a kaiseki counter upstairs for the serious convert. Melbourne's most architecturally arresting Japanese.
Society
Chris Lucas's two-hat showpiece at 80 Collins. Grand proportions, impeccable service, and a kitchen that swings between confident classicism and genuine surprise. The address Melbourne's corporate elite chooses when the deal must close.
Cutler & Co
Andrew McConnell's flagship in a converted Fitzroy metalworks. Two Hats. Winner of Melbourne's Best Fine Diner Award multiple times over. Raw industrial bones, refined cooking, and a party energy that never tips into noise.
Lee Ho Fook
Victor Liong's extravagant contemporary Chinese is the most flavour-dense dining experience in Melbourne's CBD. Two Hats. A tasting menu that explodes with MSG-free umami, rare technique, and an irreverence that keeps every course thrilling.
Maison Bâtard
Chris Lucas's four-level ode to French indulgence. Rooftop oysters and chartreuse Martinis, lobster croquettes below, Tournedos Rossini at the white-cloth tables. The most extravagantly romantic address in Melbourne.
Grossi Florentino
Melbourne's grand dame of Italian fine dining. Open since 1928, Two Hats, and still the non-negotiable address for serious business entertainment. White gloves, handmade pasta, and a mural dining room that commands silence and reverence.
Ishizuka
Two Hats. A basement lane-way kaiseki that Melbourne's inner circle guards jealously. Elaborate, theatrical, and profoundly satisfying — a procession of courses that reveals a master's philosophy one lacquered bowl at a time.
Navi
Julian Hills's two-hat Yarraville destination makes the pilgrimage worthwhile. An intimate 30-seat room, an evolving degustation driven by hyper-seasonal produce, and a quiet intensity that rewards those willing to leave the CBD behind.
Ides
Peter Gunn's two-hat Collingwood tasting menu operates like a secret society for people who take food seriously. Staff-driven, ingredient-obsessed, and deeply personal — a dinner that feels like a letter addressed specifically to you.
Amaru
Scored 19/20 by the Good Food Guide. Clinton McIver's open-kitchen Armadale degustation is as precise and beautiful as any restaurant in Australia. One of the most intimate proposal settings in the country.
Kazuki's
Kazuki Tsuya's two-hat South Yarra fusion — where French technique meets Japanese precision — produces cooking of breathtaking refinement. A tasting menu that leaves guests with the particular silence of a meal they cannot explain.
Aru
Two Hats. The best modern Indian restaurant in Australia, full stop. Chef Nic Poelaert's Aru rewrites subcontinental cooking through the lens of fine dining technique without sacrificing a single note of fire, spice, or soul.
Greasy Zoe's
Two Hats and a waitlist that suggests the whole city is in on the secret. Casual, convivial, and quietly brilliant — cooking of real wit and pleasure. The counter seat here beats half of Melbourne's tasting menus on pure joy.
Atria
80th floor of the Ritz-Carlton. The only restaurant in Australia where the view outcompetes the cooking — which itself is remarkable. The city fans out beneath you in every direction. Order champagne. Slowly.
Rockpool Bar & Grill
Neil Perry's Crown flagship is the steakhouse for people who don't think of themselves as steakhouse people. David Blackmore wagyu, a raw bar of extraordinary depth, and a 400-bin wine list. The deal-closer at the end of every serious Melbourne negotiation.
Best for First Date in Melbourne
Melbourne's laneway culture gives the first date a built-in advantage — the city is constructed for discovery. From Attica's intimate 40-cover charred-timber room in Ripponlea to Kisume's dramatic Flinders Lane descent, these are the restaurants that set the scene for everything that follows. The common thread: conversation-friendly acoustics, food that creates talking points, and a sense of occasion without the pressure of formality.
Attica
The most intimate destination in Australian fine dining. Forty covers, a garden-to-plate story that unfolds all evening, and an atmosphere that demands you pay close attention to everything.
Kisume
A theatrical descent into three levels of Japanese brilliance. The architecture does the work on the first date; the food seals the second.
Maison Bâtard
Start on the rooftop with oysters and a chartreuse Martini. Descend level by level through escalating French indulgence. The architecture of the evening does all the romantic heavy lifting.
Best for Close a Deal in Melbourne
Melbourne takes its business dining seriously. The power addresses — Vue de Monde with its 55th-floor command of the skyline, Gimlet with its marble bars and burgundy leather, Society's grand Collins Street proportions — are not merely restaurants. They are instruments of persuasion. The city's corporate elite knows exactly which table to book when the outcome matters.
Vue de Monde
The 55th floor and Three Hats communicate one thing unambiguously: you are serious. No client who dines here leaves uncertain about your commitment to excellence.
Gimlet at Cavendish House
Black marble, leather, and wood smoke. The private dining room upstairs closes more Melbourne deals than any boardroom. Mezzanine booths for discretion; the bar for celebration after.
Society
The address Melbourne's corporate elite chooses when image matters as much as the food. Grand dining room, impeccable service, and a kitchen that never embarrasses the host.
The Melbourne Dining Guide
Melbourne operates on a quiet certainty about its own standing. No other city in the southern hemisphere — and few in the world — can point to a dining culture of this breadth, this obsessiveness, and this sustained critical level. While Sydney claims the harbour view and the tourist headline, Melbourne has the chefs, the producers, the wine list depth, and the laneway address that requires you to actually know where you're going.
The foundation of Melbourne's restaurant culture is the Chef Hat system, administered by the Good Food Guide. Three Hats — held in 2026 by Vue de Monde, Minamishima, and regional powerhouse Brae — is the local equivalent of three Michelin stars. The rating is taken with corresponding seriousness by chefs, critics, and the well-heeled regulars who build their dining calendars around hat announcements each spring. Australia's absence from the Michelin map is, to Melbourne, a largely irrelevant footnote.
Geographically, Melbourne's finest restaurants are distributed in a way that rewards exploration. The CBD — particularly Collins Street and Flinders Lane — contains the grand institutional dining rooms: Vue de Monde, Society, Gimlet, Kisume, Grossi Florentino. The inner suburbs each carry their own culinary identity: Fitzroy for considered, chef-driven cooking (Cutler, Ides); Collingwood for the edgier newcomers; Richmond for Minamishima, which requires its own pilgrimage; Ripponlea, a residential suburb 9km from the centre, hosts Attica — among the most important restaurants in the country.
Reservations at the top tier require planning. Minamishima and Attica book out weeks ahead; same-day tables at Gimlet are available only for those willing to eat at the bar. The city rewards the prepared guest and punishes the impulsive one. Plan accordingly.
Key Neighbourhoods
The CBD and Southbank contain Melbourne's grand dining rooms and hotel restaurants. Fitzroy and Collingwood represent the creative edge — chef-driven, independent, ambitious. South Yarra and Armadale offer refined neighbourhood dining. Richmond is the destination for serious Japanese. Ripponlea requires commitment but rewards it with Attica, the city's most globally celebrated address.
Reservation Tips
Minamishima and Attica require advance booking of 4–8 weeks. Gimlet releases tables online at 10am; refreshing at opening time is advised. Society and Vue de Monde have private dining coordinators for corporate bookings. Resy and the individual restaurant websites handle most reservations directly. Tipping is appreciated but not mandatory — 10% is considered generous.