A craft brewery trail through Margaret River

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Come for the wine, stay for the craft beer: your guide to the best craft breweries in the Margaret River region.

A world-class wine region with a dramatically beautiful coastline and lush green interior, it’s little wonder that the Margaret River has won over the heart of many a traveller. But while wine (and in more recent times, its winery restaurants) might be the region’s major calling card, it’s far from being the only reason to visit. This bucolic corner of WA is also home to a burgeoning craft brewery scene that’s slowly turning heads nationwide.

From a microbrewery located in an industrial precinct to a cosy taphouse that’s housed in the head brewer’s old family home, and a brewpub that’s set on an old dairy farm amid rolling pastureland, Margaret River’s breweries are as diverse as they are plentiful.

For a point-to-point guide that takes in the best of the brewery offering in Margaret River, follow our carefully curated craft brewery trail below.

Shelter Brewing Co, Busselton

The first cab off the rank is Shelter Brewing Co. Located right by the water on the Busselton foreshore, you’ll not only get to sip stellar beers, but also soak up ocean views and relaxed beachy vibes. Their selection of sips includes various styles, catering to different tastes and preferences, such as the light and refreshing Juicy Juicy XPA (Extra Pale Ale) or the malty Red Ale with caramel and dried fruit flavours.

Shelter Margaret River

Enjoy mouthwatering pizzas and an impressive array of craft beers. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

There are also a range of wines and cocktails to choose from. Everything is to be enjoyed with a range of wood-fired, classic pizzas that are made in an imported Italian Marana Forni pizza oven.

Shelter Brewing Co

Craft beer meets stunning coastal views. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

Rocky Ridge Brewing Co, Busselton

If walking into Rocky Ridge Brewing Co feels like you’ve arrived home, you wouldn’t be mistaken: this inviting Busselton brewery’s taproom is in fact located within the former family home of its owners, the Coates family.

Rocky Ridge Brewing Co Brewery

Discover why Rocky Ridge Brewing Co. has amassed a cult following.

The building dates back to the 1930s, and was revamped and opened in its current guise, as a temple to beer, in 2019. It’s since gone from strength to strength, earning a legion of loyal fans from near and far who come for the slow-brewed, preservative-free and unpasteurised beers served from its 25 rotating taps, as well as its burger menu.

Rocky Ridge Brewing Co Burger

Sink your teeth into the burgers at Rocky Ridge Brewing Co.

You’ll find all the usual suspects here (hazy IPAs, unfiltered lagers, pale ales) as well as a raft of unconventional limited edition releases – think maple bacon stout and an imperial dragon fruit sour. Pull up a pew at one of the long tables running down the side of the house, watch the world go by from the high-top tables in the paved front yard, or cosy up under the heaters in the back garden.

Rocky Ridge Brewing Co Beers

Find out what all the fuss is about and taste these top local brews for yourself.

Not only is the Coates family serious about beer, but they’re pretty serious about sustainability too. Their off-site Jindong brewery is completely off-grid and achieved carbon-neutral status in 2021.

The Sophisticated Beast, Vasse

It’s an easy 15-minute drive from Busselton’s Rocky Ridge to this Vasse microbrewery, where small-batch, wild ferment, farmhouse-style beers reign supreme.

The self-proclaimed smallest brewery in Western Australia, The Sophisticated Beast lies hidden in the unlikely location of an industrial estate. And true to owner-operator Ryan White’s word, the brewery and its cellar door are wildly modest, with room for just a handful of guests.

Swing by for a fruited sour, gluten-free IPA, or even a cold-brew coffee. Time your trip right and you may even land a sneaky sample of oak-aged beer straight from the barrel. Opening hours are extremely limited (and subject to change) so it pays to check them in advance.

Cheeky Monkey HQ Taphouse, Vasse

Just a few doors down from The Sophisticated Beast (quite literally a four-minute walk away) lies Cheeky Monkey HQ Taphouse (currently undergoing renovations and set to reopen in November 2022). Much like its neighbour, the hours at this Margaret River brewery and taphouse are a touch out of the norm and there’s also an industrial bare-bones aesthetic.

The Cheeky Monkey Taphouse in Vasse

The Cheeky Monkey HQ Taphouse in Vasse delivers an industrial bare-bones aesthetic. (Image: Lewis French)

On the flip side, you can sink a cold pint of an uncomplicated crisp multi-award winning XPA while admiring the inner workings of a working brewery, from mammoth gleaming fermentation vessels to the bottling line.

Cheeky Monkey Beer

Sink a cold pint of Cheeky Monkey’s multi-award-winning XPA. (Image: Lewis French)

Play a game of pool, work your way through the pizza menu, and pick up a few takeaway tinnies before hitting the open road once again.

The brewery also has a sprawling, mother venue in Wilyabrup, known as the Caves Road Brewpub, that’s a fine spot to visit on a sunny day with 16 extravagantly crafted beers on tap.

Cheeky Monkey Taphouse Wilyabrup

Get out to the Cheeky Monkey in Wilyabrup too. (Image: Lewis French)

Eagle Bay Brewery Co, Eagle Bay

This family-owned brewery in Eagle Bay is more than just a brewery. Onsite you’ll also find a restaurant, garden bar, veggie garden and vineyard. This ultra-modern establishment boasts sweeping views of farmland, bushland, Cape Naturaliste, and the Indian Ocean. The microbrewery produces a range of handcrafted beers on-site from the unique Cacao Stout (5.5% ABV) to the tropical fruity My Friend Nelson IPA.

Nab a spot outside and nibble on woodfired pizzas, gourmet share platters, and salads. There’s also a playground onsite to keep your little ones entertained.

Wild Hop Brewing Company, Yallingup

Drive 20 kilometres further west from Cheeky Monkey and you’ll reach Wild Hop – a dreamy, tranquil retreat tucked away in the Yallingup hills, between the trees and next to a dam, that epitomises the term ‘boutique brewery’.

deck at Wild Hop Brewery

Soak up the boutique brewery vibes on the deck at Wild Hop Brewery.

A favourite haunt among in-the-know locals, this brewpub likes to keep things simple. There’s no ‘core range’ of beers on offer here. Just one beer – the Short Shorts Czech Pilsner – is a constant, while the other 10 taps are always rotating, featuring whatever has been dreamed up by the brewers and most recently batch brewed. The fact that Wild Hop doesn’t can or bottle their beers only adds to the draw (and exclusivity).

Tasting Paddle Wild Hop Brewery

Wild Hop doesn’t can or bottle their beers; the brewpub is the only way to taste them.

There’s nothing pedestrian about the food menu here either. Forget your pub classics: the kitchen at this Margaret River brewery uses seasonal ingredients to piece together its ever-changing share plates menu, which is presided over by a wood-fired rotisserie oven. The juicy whole or half-free range chook has become something of a house signature.

Share Plates at Wild Hop Brewery

Dig into some quality food at Wild Hop Brewery with your mates.

Beerfarm, Metricup

It’s only another 15-minute drive from Black Brewing Co.’s HQ to the rural locality of Beerfarm. A local legend of a place, this sustainable Metricup brewery does exactly what it says on the tin, bringing together beer and a working farm in one location, with cattle, sheep, alpacas and chickens all resident on its 65 hectares.

Beerfarm brewery Margaret River

The sustainable Beerfarm brewery is set on 65 hectares in Metricup.

A rustic joint, housed within an old dairy farm and hayshed that dates back to the early 1900s, Beerfarm has plenty of character as well as a growing number of beer industry accolades to its name.

interiors of Beerfarm

The rustic interiors of Beerfarm.

There are always eight core beers on tap here, alongside the brewery’s off-kilter special releases. Perhaps chief among Beerfarm’s more unconventional and alluring pours is its Native Series, which highlights Indigenous ingredients through collabs with Indigenous organisations (think a quandong and samphire gose, and a wattleseed red ale).

Beyond the beers and ambience, punters here are guaranteed a good meal too. Burnt Ends Smoking Co heads up the kitchen, bringing some seriously moreish low-and-slow style barbecue to the Margaret River, using spent grain and grass-fed Angus beef sourced straight from the same farm.

Beerfarm food and lager

Beerfarm combines great beers with great food. So come hungry.

Cowaramup Brewing Company, Cowaramup

Take the Bussell Highway and drive 10 minutes south to arrive at Cowaramup Brewing Company, a spacious brewpub with a scenic country backdrop. Parents, for one, will be thrilled to see that there’s a kid’s playground, while hopheads will relish the refreshingly simple six-strong line-up of craft beers.

The German-style Cowaramup Pilsener, with its crisp finish and moderate bitterness, has become the house’s most popular drop, but there’s also a hefeweizen, a summer ale, a special pale ale, an IPA, and a chocolate porter to try. Sample them all with one of the house’s tasting paddles, or sign up for a brewery tour to see behind the scenes. It’s a plum spot for a pub lunch too, with tables spilling out onto the deck and manicured lawns.

For more insider tips and inspiration, see our ultimate travel guide to Margaret River.

Chloe Cann is an award-winning freelance travel and food writer, born in England, based in Melbourne and Roman by adoption. Since honing her skills at City St George's, University of London with a master's degree in journalism, she's been writing almost exclusively about travel for more than a decade, and has worked in-house at newspapers and travel magazines in London, Phnom Penh, Sydney and Melbourne. Through a mixture of work and pleasure, she's been fortunate enough to visit 80 countries to date, though there are many more that she is itching to reach. While the strength of a region's food scene tends to dictate the location of her next trip, she can be equally swayed by the promise of interesting landscapes and offbeat experiences. And with a small person now in tow, travel looks a little different these days, but it remains at the front of her mind.
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Australia’s first and only underwater winery is hiding in Margaret River

This is wine redefined, from the sea floor to your glass.

Australia is known for its diverse wine regions that produce top drops in droves. We’re home to the best shiraz in the world and some of the coolest oenophile-approved experiences you can find. But this WA venture is taking it to new depths – literally. Welcome to Australia’s first underwater winery.

Underwater wine: how it works

It may be situated among Western Australia’s famed Margaret River wineries, but Subsea Estate doesn’t resemble your typical vineyard. Instead of unfolding across verdant hills, its cellar door can be found off the coast near the town of Augusta, where the Southern and Indian oceans meet.

Augusta in Western Australia

The winery is hidden underwater off WA’s coast. (Image: Ryan Murphy)

A 20-metre dive below the ocean’s surface, the 413-hectare estate comprises specially crafted wine barrels anchored to the sea floor. It’s an intricately designed production process that is painstakingly adhered to by the team at Subsea, made up of leading wine pioneers from both Australia and abroad. But why? And what is the result?

The technique was first introduced by French company Winereef, which has spent over 17 years perfecting its world-first subsea winemaking operation. The concept posits that the ocean’s current and natural sway stirs the wine and keeps the yeast in suspension, which creates a secondary fermentation process.

Subsea Estate in Augusta, Western Australia

The wine barrels are secured to the sea floor by specialist divers.

Hydrostatic pressure, the weight produced by the water column pressing down on an object due to gravity, allows the yeast to produce flavour notes not available on land.

But it doesn’t stop there, because the ocean’s energy is constantly changing, and each batch produced is completely unique. The wines all have their own character, touched by Mother Nature in a different way and offering the truest expression of each season.

How to experience it for yourself

If you’re intrigued, you’re not the only one. Subsea Estate’s innovative winemaking process has attracted attention from across the country – which is why its cellar door is open to the public seven days a week. And no, you won’t be pairing your wine with a scuba suit.

Subsea Estate in Augusta, Western Australia

The Subsea cellar door sits on Augusta Boat Harbour. (Image: Lauren Trickett)

Sitting pretty back on land in Augusta Boat Harbour, Subsea Estate invites guests to sip its one-of-a-kind creations with views of the ocean that nurtured them. While walk-ins are welcome, the best way to explore Subsea’s range is with a guided experience. Join a member of the team for a 90-minute Subsea Estate & Rare Foods Abalone and Wine Tour.

That’s right – not only is Subsea home to some of the world’s most innovative wines, it’s also in one of Australia’s top seaside towns for seafood. Your tour starts in the on-site abalone facility, where you’ll witness firsthand how these premium seafood delicacies are prepared for export. Guests can get up close to the tanks and even hold a live abalone if they wish.

Ocean-stirred wines are paired with fresh abalone. (Image: Lauren Trickett)

From there, you’ll be led to Subsea’s cellar door, where you can watch local fishermen return with their catch across Flinders Bay from the sunny deck. Not only will your host walk you through the entire winemaking process, but you’ll enjoy the results firsthand – paired perfectly with the fresh abalone from earlier.

The details

Subsea Estate is located in the town of Augusta, around a 3.5-hour drive south of Perth. The cellar door is open from Monday to Sunday, 9am–4pm. Bookings for the Subsea Estate & Rare Foods Abalone and Wine Tour are essential. The experience is priced at $89 per person and can accommodate groups of up to 15 people. While the tour allows for up to 1.5 hours, guests are encouraged to linger for as long as they please.