Sydney's Top Restaurants
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$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
Bennelong
Dining inside an Opera House sail, with harbour views that reduce grown adults to silence. The most theatrical address in Australian fine dining — and the kitchen deserves the stage.
Aria
Twenty-five years of Harbour Bridge views and Matt Moran's celebrated Australian larder. The room where Sydney's power players close every significant deal worth closing.
Saint Peter
Josh Niland's fin-to-scale revolution changed how the world cooks fish. Three Chef Hats. Restaurant of the Year 2025. A nine-course tasting menu that makes you reconsider everything you thought you knew about seafood.
Sixpenny
Thirty-four seats, a heritage terrace in Stanmore, and the most intelligent use of fermentation in Australia. Sixpenny proves that three-hat dining doesn't need harbour views — just genius.
Rockpool Bar & Grill
A 1936 art deco masterpiece, ironbark charcoal grills, and Australia's finest wagyu. Ranked one of the top 15 steakhouses on earth. The kind of room that commands respect before you've ordered a drink.
Icebergs Dining Room
Bondi's most iconic address. Perched above the famous pool, the Pacific rolling in below. Modern Italian done with conviction, and a view so good it would forgive a mediocre risotto — though Icebergs never serves one.
OTTO Ristorante
Twenty-five years on the wharf, and Sydney still comes back. One-hat Italian on the water, where the pasta is non-negotiable and the sunset over the city skyline does the decorating.
Midden
Chef Mark Olive's love letter to the oldest food culture on earth, served inside the Opera House with native Australian ingredients you won't find anywhere else. Profound, original, and impossible to compare.
Catalina
The flying-boat hangar on Rose Bay — Sydney Harbour stretching before you, planes landing on the water, and a kitchen that has been doing the harbour-view thing longer and better than anyone.
Bathers Pavilion
The heritage-listed pavilion on Balmoral Beach, with a terrace that catches the harbour light all afternoon. One of Sydney's most consistently excellent kitchens — and the best Sunday lunch in the country.
Nomad
The Surry Hills fire-kitchen that turned sharing plates into an art form. Wood-roasted, housemade charcuterie, natural wines. The room that made the eastern suburbs look west for influence.
Nour
The most seductive dining room in Sydney. Chris Benikos reimagines the Levantine table with the discipline of a European-trained chef and the warmth of a Lebanese grandmother. Every dish a revelation.
Bistecca
The CBD's Italian steak obsession — a 1.2kg Florentine T-bone carved tableside, fries cooked in wagyu fat, and a Chianti list that goes dangerously deep. Carnivores' church. Sunday service only.
Lucio's
Paddington's gallery-restaurant where walls hung with Arthur Boyd and Brett Whiteley compete with plates of silky handmade pasta. Lucio Galletto's 40-year institution. The soul of Italian Sydney.
Flying Fish
Jones Bay Wharf stretching into Darling Harbour, the city skyline doing exactly what it should. Flying Fish serves the freshest seafood in Sydney with a theatre that makes every catch feel like an event.
Bert's Bar & Brasserie
The Northern Beaches' most seductive escape. Pittwater glittering below the deck, a French-leaning brasserie menu, and the Merivale group's unfailing ability to make every table feel like the best in the house.
Longrain
The converted warehouse where Martin Boetz built Sydney's finest Thai kitchen. Communal long tables, crackling pork hock, and lemongrass cocktails. The group booking that always works.
Firedoor
Lennox Hastie's hymn to fire. Everything cooked over wood and embers in open kitchen view — an exacting philosophy that produces some of the most primal, deeply satisfying plates in the country.
Monopole
The Potts Point wine bar that redefined what a first date can look like. Helm's serious natural wine list, small plates executed with care, and the intimacy of a room built for conversation not performance.
Buon Ricordo
Armando Percuoco's Paddington terrace has been cooking the truffle-buried egg pasta since 1987. A Sydney institution defined by a single dish that no one has ever successfully replicated. Come for the ritual, stay for the theatre.
Best for First Date in Sydney
See AllSydney's waterfront settings, candlelit Italian rooms, and intimate tasting-counter experiences make it one of the world's great first-date cities. The harbour does half the work for you.
Sixpenny
Thirty-four seats, seven courses, and enough to talk about for months. The most intimate three-hat experience in Australia.
Icebergs Dining Room
The view sells itself. The pasta earns its keep. Bondi's most romantic table.
Nour
Sydney's most seductive dining room. Levantine warmth with European discipline — the perfect combination for a first date.
Best for Business Dinner in Sydney
See AllSydney's power-dining circuit runs from Circular Quay's harbour-view institutions to the CBD's historic steakhouses. These are the rooms where reputations are made and deals are sealed.
Aria
The power table above the Opera House steps. Twenty-five years of closing deals over exceptional food and Harbour Bridge views.
Rockpool Bar & Grill
The art deco room that commands instant respect. One of the world's top 15 steakhouses — this is where Sydney does its most serious business.
Bennelong
The Opera House address that signals you take hospitality — and your client — seriously. An unreplicable location matched by kitchen substance.
The Sydney Dining Guide
Sydney does not need a Michelin Guide to tell it how well it eats. This is a city where the harbour itself sets the standard — where the greatest restaurants in Australia sit within minutes of each other along Circular Quay, where a Bondi clifftop terrace can make Italian food taste better than Italy, and where a converted terrace in Stanmore holds its own against the finest tasting menus on earth. Sydney dining has always operated on its own terms, and those terms are, by any measure, extraordinary.
The city's rating system — the Good Food Guide's coveted Chef Hats — awards three hats to just a handful of venues each year. In 2025, those honours went to Bennelong at the Opera House, Saint Peter in Paddington, and Sixpenny in Stanmore. These are the restaurants that define what Australian fine dining has become: technically rigorous, ingredient-obsessed, and distinctly of this place, this coastline, this latitude.
But Sydney's dining identity extends far beyond its hatted rooms. The city has one of the most diverse food cultures in the Asia-Pacific, shaped by waves of Italian, Chinese, Lebanese, Japanese, and Vietnamese immigration that have created neighbourhood dining scenes of remarkable depth. Surry Hills remains the city's most exciting food quarter — Firedoor, Nomad, Nour, and Longrain all within walking distance. Paddington offers the old Italian guard in Lucio's and Buon Ricordo alongside Josh Niland's revolutionary Saint Peter. And the waterfront — from Rose Bay to Woolloomooloo — remains incomparable.
Best Neighbourhoods
Circular Quay & The Rocks — Sydney's most celebrated dining addresses cluster here. Bennelong, Aria, and the Opera Bar all occupy the harbour foreshore. Book well in advance, dress accordingly, and accept the premium. You are paying for one of the world's great dining settings.
Surry Hills — The city's beating culinary heart. Restaurants open and close here at pace, but the standard remains remarkably high. Firedoor, Nomad, Nour, and Longrain all call this suburb home. Walk-in friendly later in the week; book ahead for Friday and Saturday.
Paddington — Old-school Sydney Italian in Lucio's and Buon Ricordo, the world's most innovative fish kitchen in Saint Peter, and boutique bars threading through the terrace houses. The Eastern Suburbs' dining quarter for serious eaters.
Bondi & Eastern Beaches — Icebergs defines the area, but the coastal strip from Bondi to Coogee offers beachside dining that trades on its views and the relaxed confidence of Sydney's beach culture. Less formal, often excellent.
Reservations & Etiquette
Book Ahead — Sydney's best restaurants fill weeks in advance. Bennelong and Saint Peter routinely book out a month or more. Use the restaurant's own booking system or Resy for most venues; OpenTable covers a broader range. Call for large groups.
Dress Code — Sydney is less formal than European equivalents but more considered than its reputation suggests. Smart casual is appropriate for most hatted restaurants. Jackets are rarely required but always respected. No activewear at anything above one hat.
Tipping — Australia does not operate a tipping culture. Service charges are not added to bills. A tip of 10% is appreciated for exceptional service but never expected. Do not feel obligated; wages are included in menu prices.
Wine — Australian wine lists in Sydney are among the best in the world. The Hunter Valley is 90 minutes north — Semillon and Shiraz on home turf. Sommelier recommendations are worth taking. Corkage is available at many venues, typically AUD $15–$35.