06 February 2024
22 mins Read
It’s not hard to land on a rooftop bar Melbourne locals and visitors alike would deem the “best” in town. They’re everywhere. And from Collingwood to Abbotsford, this famously hip concrete jungle hosts a spread of epic rooftop bars that are every bit as valuable to the city’s cultural identity as its famous collection of laneway bars.
While most Melbourne rooftop bars can be found scattered around the CBD, just about every major suburb has at least a few of these pushing towards the sky. Whether it’s looking over the picturesque Melbourne skyline, spritz in hand while you toast to the sunset, or bunkering down for an alfresco all-nighter, these rooftop bars will have you falling in love with the city each and every time.
Best for: A buzzing social scene and elevated bar snacks.
Head to the 11th floor at the swanky QT Melbourne and this recently remodelled rooftop bar opens you to the city’s most glamorous social scene. It feels like an exclusive all-day club up here, yet the unpretentious modern design, bespoke art, friendly service, and wide-ranging drinks list keep things approachable and fun.
Executive chef Nic Wood’s elevated bar snacks, like Abrolhos Island scallops with sea urchin butter and a prime rib burger on a potato bun, also mean this CBD rooftop bar works just as well for dinner as it does sundowners that bleed well into the night.
Address: 11/133 Russell St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Day drinking in the heart of Melbourne CBD.
Carving out an 8th-floor terrace above Melbourne CBD, with 260-degree views of the city’s most impressive buildings, The Stolen Gem wears its New York City influence proud. And it’s these humble balcony bars that really make Melbourne’s personality shine, getting its sense of place from views of the iconic Bourke Street Mall and the distant skyscrapers.
Most regulars would come here during the day when the transparent windows pull in plenty of natural light. Service is relaxed but attentive, with staff more than willing to guide newcomers through a fine selection of Australian craft spirits, paired with canape-style share plates.
Address: 8/388 Bourke St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Bird’s eye views of Melbourne in an elegant setting.
Climb to the 80th floor of The Ritz-Carlton Melbourne for a drink at the refined Cameo. Adjacent to Atria, the hotel’s excellent fine-dining restaurant, this elegant bar matches a jaw-dropping view over Melbourne with an upscale drinks list favouring hard-to-find wines, premium spirits, and a selection of simple yet flashy signature cocktails.
Service is clearly held to a high standard and the hotel’s location on Lonsdale Street, only a light walk from Southern Cross Station, means you can easily fit a few drinks at Cameo into a bigger night on the town. Just note that the party is over at 11pm each night and Cameo is closed on Mondays and Tuesdays.
Address: 650 Lonsdale St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Delicious Thai food and playful service atop a historic building.
HQ Group, the crew behind the famous Arbory Afloat, has crowned its ambitious five-level hospitality project with the aptly titled Her Rooftop. Art and light installations reminisce on the building’s importance to Melbourne’s achingly cool art scene, while a custom-lit stairwell means a grand entrance.
Thai BBQ comes from BKK Kitchen one floor below, while the lively bar offers mostly natural wines and cocktails led by fresh produce. Considering the building’s other drinking and dining spaces, including the vinyl-obsessed Music Room, this all-weather rooftop bar often follows a night snaking through HQ Group’s various drinking and dining concepts on a Friday or Saturday night into the early morning.
Address: 270 Lonsdale St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: A decadent night out with breathtaking views from Rialto Towers.
Neighbouring the acclaimed Vue De Monde, Lui Bar sits on the 55th floor of Rialto Towers and is often referred to as one of the more luxurious Melbourne rooftop bars.
Dramatic floor-to-ceiling windows maximise the inspired views, complementing the sophisticated atmosphere. One should always observe the smart casual dress code, and prepare to spend big on lavish signature cocktails smartly paired with simple snacks like fried chicken and chocolate lamingtons.
But don’t expect stuffy service. Despite the high standards, Lui Bar’s affable staff are as attentive as they are relaxed, building the kind of playful, homely atmosphere Melbourne locals expect.
Address: 525 Collins St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Classic American cocktails and comfort food favourites.
Full Moon Fever, an extension of the popular Lulie Tavern, is the kind of hidden gem Abbotsford locals would rather keep quiet. But it’s hard not to rave about this Cali-style enclave, where bright op-shop fashion clashes with heritage details from the building’s history as a bank. Think large warehouse-style windows and exposed brick, elevated with timber booths and well-placed day beds.
Named after a Tom Petty album, the vibe up here is very much rock & roll, pitched as more a rooftop saloon with American bar classics and a neat drinks dispenser shaped like a cactus. For food, expect big, over-the-top burgers and comfort classics like Southern fried buffalo wings.
Address: 225 Johnston St, Abbotsford VIC 3067
Best for: Mixing with locals and soaking up classic Melbourne views.
You’ll find Siglo above Melbourne Supper Club, still as spritely and generous as it was when it first opened in 2008. Suits and hipsters alike call this sun-soaked drinking hole home on any given day, where caviar is served until late and best paired with premium choices from the extensive wine list.
The vista of old-world Melbourne takes in St Patrick’s Cathedral and Parliament House, giving Siglo a strong sense of place for when you want a Melbourne rooftop bar that feels like it couldn’t be repeated anywhere else in the world.
Address: 2/161 Spring St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: An Italo-disco vibe on Sunday afternoons.
A top choice for anyone who has just gorged themselves on pasta at Hope St Radio, Runner Up is the creative crown of the Collingwood Yards precinct and wears its hipster reputation proudly. The cheap and cheerful wine list is the biggest lure for the former caretaker’s residence, best explored in the open-air courtyard which looks out over one of Melbourne’s trendiest suburbs.
A healthy spread of cumquat and fig trees were planted by the owners to introduce a Mediterranean feel, set against cloud-covered walls that bounce sound from vintage horn-shaped JBL speakers imported from Japan. Music plays a big role, with Sundays often bringing in some of the city’s best local DJs.
Address: Level 2/35 Johnston St, Collingwood VIC 3066
Best for: Pre- or post-gig drinks after a show at The Toff.
Sitting atop the historic Curtin House, this slick spot created the appetite for Melbourne rooftop bars with its cool, airy interior looking over Central Melbourne. There weren’t many rooftop bars in Melbourne back when the bluntly named Rooftop Bar opened in 2006, so this spot is often postured as a pioneer.
Testament to its timeless nature, Rooftop Bar is still one of the most popular bars in Melbourne. It certainly helps that the excellent Cookie is right below. Local brews are the way to go up here, marched from a busy, well-tapped bar by mostly gig-goers who’ve come up from The Toff. It’s the one rooftop Melbourne locals will never tire of.
Address: 248–256 Swanston St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: A premium dining experience and creative signature cocktails.
Slightly whimsical and beautifully designed 13 floors above Lonsdale Street, Fable closes the gap between bars and rooftop restaurants in Melbourne by offering the best of both. Dinner up here is just as viable as a round of cocktails, with the kitchen handling a menu that includes dishes like buttered prawns with saffron paprika, and slow-roasted lamb shoulder with labne, cucumbers, and black sesame.
Each signature cocktail is accompanied by an elaborate story with fan-favourites like the Fall of Icarus, which interprets the Greek fable with a build of VSOP brandy, Port Charlotte 10-year-old Scotch, maraschino, Pedro Ximenez sherry, sugar, and fire.
Address: 13/168 Lonsdale St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Spanish food and wine in a small space.
Bombabar gets by on its personality, diminutive size and obsession with projecting old-school black-and-white films on the building opposite. Think of Bomba as the complete antithesis to expensive fit-outs and elaborate drinks lists, favouring minimalism and keeping the focus on good times, good tunes, and moreish Spanish food.
The bar also mixes up an excellent Sangria and makes its influence obvious when it comes to a list of hard-sourced imported wines from Spain.
A retractable roof helps push Bomba as a year-round destination, but it’s most valuable during summer when you’ve got various tapas and a paella of lamb shoulder, cavalo nero, and labneh sitting in front of you while the sun rains down on the local crowd.
Address: 103 Lonsdale St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: A big sense of community and bold signature cocktails.
Pick a Melbourne local, ask them to take you to their favourite rooftop, and you’ll likely find yourself posted up at Union Electric Bar & Gin Beer Garden in Chinatown. Shouting-grade music pumps through the speakers while speedy bartenders echo a preference for fresh, fruity flavours, simple bar snacks, and eccentric builds like a signature martini using Never Never Oyster Shell Gin with Lillet Blanc and lime bitters.
You’ll find plenty of Tiki bars across Melbourne, but Union Electric holds a special place for locals. It’s affordable, the focus is kept almost entirely on cocktails, and there’s a real sense of community that ensures a long list of regulars.
Address: 13 Heffernan Ln, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Weekend bottomless brunch in an industrial rooftop setting.
You might not see much of Melbourne’s skyline from The Provincial, but this bustling rooftop bar in Fitzroy offers a charming industrial vibe that bounces from the walls of all the surrounding redbrick buildings.
After-work drinks are most popular up here, but where this rooftop really shines is during the weekend when groups hang for bottomless brunch with a full menu by the team at 78 degrees, paired with cocktail jugs and premium drops of prosecco. Service is consistently hands-off, but staff are more than happy to guide you through the drinks list of rotating local brews.
Address: 299 Brunswick St, Fitzroy VIC 3065
Best for: Art and design lovers with a taste for fancy wines.
Loop Roof and Loop Top are so distinctive they could be considered two vastly different rooftop bars, equally beloved by Melbourne locals for their affordable drinks and vast greenery. Those illustrious city vistas, however, are best angled from Loop Roof where kitschy lawn furniture, day beds and a well-sourced wine list help reiterate this garden oasis as the quintessential Melbourne rooftop bar.
The arts play a big part in the Loop Project, so you’ll often find the aesthetic changes constantly depending on what’s being showcased on any given day. The versatility keeps Loop front of mind when locals debate about what the best rooftop bar in Melbourne is. And it’s hard to argue against this one.
Address: 3/23 Meyers Pl, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Making new friends and indulgent Spanish-flavoured food.
Fitzroy’s best rooftop bar still dominates Brunswick Street with attractive weekly specials and a solid list of around 20 infused vodkas playing around with flavours like cherry ripe and Turkish delight. You’ll never find the spot empty, which makes it perfect for mingling with locals, but does mean the bar can get quite busy.
Spanish and Australian flavours dance across the food menu, which is best enjoyed on the quieter side of the bar that looks out over the Dandenongs, away from the typical Melbourne skyline views. If you do want those urban vistas, however, you’d need to arrive early and stake your claim – Naked Upstairs is consistently the busiest rooftop bar in Melbourne.
Address: 285 Brunswick St, Fitzroy VIC 3065
Best for: Long client lunches and incredible wide-ranging bay views.
Strato attracts a mostly corporate crowd and is ideal for those long client lunches or after-work drinks on the 40th floor of Oakwood Premier Melbourne in Southbank. The sleek space also hosts a separate modern Australian restaurant and two private function areas, but it’s the outdoor lounge that gets the most traction with wide-ranging views across Port Phillip Bay and the Yarra River.
Given the clientele, drinks and service are pushed to a high standard so you’ll find expensive bottles of wine and elegant bar snacks compared to the usual round of cheap and cheerful brews that define most rooftop bars in Melbourne.
Address: 40/202 Normanby Rd, Southbank VIC 3006
Best for: Unobstructed skyline views atop a modern English-style pub.
An extension of the old-school English pub ambience that once sat on this site, Harlow carries the legacy of the grungy Great Britain Hotel with a modern sense of style. While locals usually head downstairs to the basement bar, the real reward is in the opposite direction with a modest rooftop, powered by unobstructed Melbourne skyline views.
Efficient staff serve chicken parmas and pies straight from the kitchen downstairs, content with nothing but elevated pub food matched with a tight wine list and local craft beers. Melbourne does prefer simplicity at the best of times, and Harlow represents that preference exceptionally well.
Address: 447 Church St, Richmond VIC 3121
Best for: A quiet night out with dumplings and vegan bar snacks.
You’ll find Goldilocks Bar on the fourth floor of the Denyers Building, above a Cantonese diner in the heart of Swanston Street. Signature cocktails with gin, blood orange, and passionfruit are the way to go in this diminutive space, which sports a minimal design with a hut-like interior leading to a small AstroTurfed terrace.
The Melbourne CBD rooftop bar is far from fancy. Instead, locals generally favour Goldilocks for its privacy, whereas interstate and international visitors typically prefer flashier venues like Rooftop at QT and Fable.
Although anyone looking for vegetarian and vegan bar snacks would be wise to hit this spot up and spend the night drinking with Melburnians, with opening hours stretched until 3am on weekends and 1am every other day.
Address: Denyers Building Level 5/264 Swanston St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Located above the Carlton Club on Bourke Street, Palmz Rooftop Bar plays into Melbourne’s undying love of tropic-themed rooftops and gaudy cocktail jugs. The extensive menu serves up mid-range pub grub, pushing the affordable approach to help quell the cost of living chaos.
Service is always friendly, mirroring the relaxed ambience built with features like plastic pink flamingos and a head-turning bamboo Tiki bar that stays open until 3am on Fridays and Saturdays.
Address: 193 Bourke St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Late-night karaoke in the heart of the city.
Karaoke, dumplings, and skyline views. Heroes is all about an excellent night out, squeezing into the same category as Melbourne’s classiest early-morning establishments like Revolver Upstairs and Sub Club.
Heroes is only open on Fridays and Saturdays. But it doesn’t shut up shop until 3am, meaning you and your mates have plenty of time to perfect your group rendition of Teenage Dirtbag while scoffing down platters of BBQ pork buns and fried chicken baos.
Address: 188 Bourke St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Friendly service, dancing and mingling until early morning.
Plenty of interstate visitors would claim Dom’s Social Club as the best of all the many rooftop bars Melbourne CBD has to offer. And, look, they wouldn’t be wrong. While “best” is always going to be contentious, it’s hard to deny the staying power of this triple-tiered ode to Melbourne’s vintage charm.
Up top is where the magic happens, with excellent signature cocktails and pizza floating around, always served up with a smile as staff tend to treat each and every guest like an old friend. Great service makes an immense difference, and Dom’s Social Club has always been proof of that.
Address: 1/301 Swanston St, Melbourne VIC 3000
Best for: Late-night jazz with upscale Italian food and classic cocktails.
Coming from the same team behind Bar Carolina and Sarti, Tetto di Carolina is a convivial jazz bar unlike anything else in Melbourne. It’s a bit more upscale than the city’s usual hipster haunts, swapping the cheap tinnies and kitschy decor for a solemn attempt at recreating the dapper rooftop bars you’ll find at swanky luxury hotels in the USA.
As such, food is just as much of a focus as the cocktails, best taken with house-made flatbread served around appetisers like tinned anchovies, cacio e pepe snow, and a chef’s selection of cured meats. The cocktails are treated with a similarly high standard, favouring classics done beautifully with premium Australian spirits.
Address: 48 Toorak Rd, South Yarra VIC 3141
Best for: Dinner and drinks by the fire during winter.
Part of the multi-million-dollar refurbishment of Chadstone, Cityfields has already become one of the best restaurants in the area. But not many locals are aware that you can also head upstairs to The Terrace, flowing on from the Euro-inspired brasserie with the same menu.
That means massive 1.2-kilogram T-bones and handmade pasta like a signature cacio e pepe can be enjoyed while looking out over Melbourne. In the colder months, the team even build a fire pit so you can sip classic whisky cocktails while shrugging off Melbourne’s temperamental weather.
Address: 1341 Dandenong Rd, Chadstone VIC 3148
Best for: Classic pub food and mixing with locals.
While visitors to Fitzroy may make a beeline for Naked Upstairs, it’s Marquis of Lorne where you’ll usually find an exclusively local crowd.
Sitting atop the three-level heritage pub, the deck up here doesn’t try to be anything more than a good, ol’ fashioned rooftop bar with the winning trifecta of inspired skyline views, a healthy list of craft beers and cocktails, and upscale pub grub highlighting local produce.
A wise choice would be to pair Marquis of Lorne with Naked Upstairs, which most locals do on the weekends when hitting Fitzroy on a Friday.
Address: 411 George St, Fitzroy VIC 3065
Best for: Italo-disco bangers and limoncello margaritas.
As the top level of the historic King & Godfree complex in Carlton, Johnny’s Green Room provides the perfect sunset vista, tunes favouring Italo-disco, and some of the best Italian food in the area.
After a brief closure in early 2023, celebrity chef Karen Martini has come on board, leaning more towards pizza and cicchetti to give Johnny’s Green Room a culinary makeover. Bar Americano’s Matt Bax has also stepped up to the plate, maintaining the beloved drinks program but introducing show-stealers like a limoncello margarita and Sgroppinos – which, for the uninitiated, is lemon sorbet with vodka and prosecco. Who needs the Amalfi Coast anyway?
Address: Level 2/293-297 Lygon St, Carlton VIC 3053
Best for: A vegan-friendly dining menu and efficient service.
The rooftop that sits on The Cornish Arms Hotel is spacious, has a high staff-to-guest ratio and a drinks list that mirrors the best of Australia’s many craft breweries and distilleries. When asking after the best rooftop bar in Brunswick, it shouldn’t be a surprise when you’re pointed straight in this direction.
And that’s equally due to the Vegan-friendly menu. The Cornish Arms Hotel is one of the best pubs Melbourne has to offer for anyone with dietary needs, although the full menu is only served on select days throughout the week.
Address: 163A Sydney Rd, Brunswick VIC 3056
Best for: Beachside vibes and summery cocktails.
Reaching out to St Kilda Beach, Captain Baxter feels like it could have been ripped straight from the scenes of Sydney. Of course, that luscious golden sand has a lot of do with the vibe, offering a wide-ranging view of one of Melbourne’s best beaches with summery drinks served year-round.
Few Melbourne rooftop bars feel as liberating, maximising the open air and mirroring the ocean with blue-and-white striped cushions, which are begging for a post-swim spritz paired with fresh seafood.
Space out here is limited compared to inside, so it’s always advised to get in early.
Address: 10/10-18 Jacka Blvd, St Kilda VIC 3182
Best for: Refined Italian snacks and a sense of discovery.
While you’ll meet no shortage of choices when searching for a good rooftop bar in Melbourne CBD, you’ll have to look at bit harder when you’re out in a suburb like Thornbury. And that just makes it all the more rewarding when you stumble upon something as fun and truly hidden as Gigi Rooftop.
This tiny rooftop haunt sits above Umberto Espresso Bar and is only accessible via the cafe’s dining room. The best time to head along is in the late afternoon, just before sunset to watch the sun sink behind the trees with a grapefruit house spritz in hand and a fried ‘nduja soldier in the other. Just note that the party’s over at 11pm and Gigi isn’t open on Mondays and Tuesdays.
Address: Level 2/917 High St, Thornbury VIC 3071
Best for: A big night out in the middle of the dancefloor.
Make way for one of South Yarra’s liveliest venues and head straight to the top. The Emerson Rooftop Bar has the distinction of also hosting a nightclub, so late-night weekend dances are law after you’ve worked your way through the Japanese-flavoured bar snacks.
Much like Palmz Rooftop Bar and Heroes, The Emerson requires a lot of energy. There’s no sitting around quietly sipping on cocktails at this buzzy Melbourne rooftop bar, which values fun above all else and provides the perfect atmosphere to match.
Address: 141-145 Commercial Rd, South Yarra VIC 3141
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