10 of the best Dunsborough restaurants, bars and cafes you need to try

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From the sprawling, family-friendly pub to cute coffee stops, this is your guide to the best Dunsborough restaurants, bars, and cafes.

Impossibly blue beaches, world-class wine, and thick West Australian bushland: Dunsborough sits at the intersection of all the major drawcards of the Margaret River region. Transport options in the region are quite limited, but fortunately, Dunsborough restaurants, bars, and cafes aren’t. You don’t have to venture too far from your accommodation for a great coffee or cocktail, with these ten venues some of the best in the area.

The shortlist:

Best for brunch: Wild and Woods

Best family-friendly spot: Meelup Farmhouse

Best date spot: Yarri

Best outdoor dining: Chow’s Table

1. Merchant and Maker

al fresco dining setup at Merchant & Maker, Dunsborough

Snag an outdoor table for lunch at Merchant & Maker. (Image: Bianca Kate Photography)

Nowhere in Dunsborough does sandwiches and cinnamon scrolls quite like Merchant and Maker. Each morning, their in-house bakery springs to life, pumping out slow-ferment loaves, organic focaccia, and, on Thursdays, traditional Danish Rugbrød. Visually, the cafe-turned-general store is inspired by Scandinavia, too, subscribing to the northern European region’s trademark minimalism with simple black, white, and timber finishes. But, when it comes to what’s on the shelves in the general store, it’s all very much local. There are housemade condiments and meal jars, cheese from makers in the region, and all manner of chocolate goodies from local companies.

Next door, owners Steve and Anna have opened another love letter to Denmark, Elski. Grab a scoop of their Danish ice cream (all made on-site from fresh ingredients) to go and enjoy as you wander down to the beach.

Cuisine: Modern Australian

Average price: $

Atmosphere: Casual

Location: 8/35 Dunn Bay Rd, Dunsborough

2. Wild and Woods

a plate of food at Wild and Woods, Dunsborough

Feast on the vegan and gluten-free menu at Wild and Woods.

For anyone with intolerances and allergies, the carby, Italian-heavy menus so loved by Australian venues can be difficult to digest. Avoid the discomfort of dining on a limited menu or things you shouldn’t, and make a beeline for Wild and Woods, where gluten-free, vegan, and dairy-free aren’t dirty words. Not everything is completely allergen-free, but things like their vegan risotto patties, falafel wraps, and gluten-free and dairy-free banana and raspberry loaf are just what intolerant stomachs need. If you’re staying in self-contained accommodation, you can pick up gourmet granolas and mung bean fettuccine to take back to base in their small eco store, too.

Location: 2/237 Naturaliste Terrace, Dunsborough

Cuisine: Modern Australian

Average price: $-$$

Atmosphere: Casual

3. Meelup Farmhouse

the Meelup Farmhouse in Dunsborough

Enjoy delicious seasonal dishes and breathe in fresh country air at Meelup Farmhouse. (Image: Tourism Western Australia)

Any cafe that keeps kids entertained is a winner in parents’ books. Meelup Farmhouse goes beyond crayons and colouring in books, offering little ones a bag of feed and meet and greets with the hobby farm’s resident animals. There’s a flock of silky hens (whom the feed is for), Winston the goat, three alpacas (Maisie, Daisie, and Haisie), Lizzie and Sir Raymond the Highland cows, and Mila the farm dog, who roams the back deck wearing her ‘do not feed me’ bandana. The food at Meelup Farmhouse is too good to want to share, anyway. Think brunch or lunch with char sui pork belly scrambled eggs, mushroom and sage gnocchi, or confit duck leg curry paired with a mimosa or a glass of regional wine.

Cuisine: Modern Australian

Average price: $$

Atmosphere: Relaxed

Location: 54 Sheens Rd, Naturaliste

4. Chow’s Table

hands using chopsticks to get food, Chow’s Table, Yallingup

The menu is a fusion of modern Chinese and Malaysian cuisines.

In a region full of modern Australian restaurants, Chow’s Table carves its own space. Specialising in modern Chinese and Malaysian cuisine, the winery-side eatery is the kind of warm and inviting place you go to share a great meal with even greater company. It’s what owner and head chef Malcolm Chow wants of his food, designing his menu in such a way that promotes ‘shared feasting’. For $90 per person, you can select three small and three large dishes for the table, all served with complimentary steamed rice (based on two people). As it shares the same property as House of Cards Wine, the wine list is heavily skewed towards their varieties, with a handful of other regional drops thrown in for good measure.

Cuisine: Modern Chinese/Malaysian

Average price: $$$

Location: Unit 12/5 Quininup Rd, Yallingup

Atmosphere: Relaxed

5. Commonage Coffee Co

pastries on display at Commonage Coffee Co, Dunsborough

Grab a takeaway coffee and pastry from this quaint cafe.

A morning coffee among the gums is quintessential Dunsborough. It’s an instant shoulder-dropper—a letting go of all that pent-up city-life tension—which is exactly why people escape to this part of the world. Breathe in the fresh country air with your hands wrapped around a mug of site-roasted Commonage Coffee Co. coffee, and enjoy the bushland outlook from the flagship cafe. There are muffins, cake, and sandwiches at the counter to sate a hungry stomach, or, for the sweet tooth, chocolate next door at Yallingup Chocolate.

Cuisine: Cafe

Average price: $ – $$

Atmosphere: Casual

Location: 855 Commonage Rd, Yallingup Siding

6. Yarri

staff busy preparing inside Yarri restaurant

Every dish in this moody restaurant celebrates local ingredients and seasonal flavours.

Everything that the team at Yarri does is influenced by nature, seasonality, and the Margaret River Region; it doesn’t get much more local than using timber collected from site to flesh out the restaurant’s interiors or a menu full of dishes using fresh produce from the large tended garden at sister property Snake and Herring. Each morning, a bounty of freshly picked fruit and vegetables is delivered to head chef Aaron Carr, who expertly crafts it into dishes for the evening’s three-course dinners or seven-course tasting menus. Expect anything from lamb and Jerusalem artichoke with garlic to tiger prawns with saltbush. Though the timber, worn leather, and limestone interiors are beautiful, the best place on a summer evening is out the back on the deck, surrounded by festoon lighting and gums.

Cuisine: Modern Australian

Average price: $$$$-$$$$$

Atmosphere: Relaxed

Location: Unit 7/16 Cyrillean Way, Dunsborough

7. Bungalow Neighbourhood Social

Sourdough ferment pizza, natty wine, and local beer; it’s the name of Bungalow Neighbourhood Social’s game. They pride themselves on their 48-hour dough, backing up their quality wood-fired Margherita and pizza con patate with a solid lineup of Italian-inspired share plates. Think homemade focaccia with whipped ricotta, carbonara crocchette, and gnocchi with zucchini cream and gremoulata. The menu here is as easy-going as the atmosphere, with the mid-century beach-bungalow-style interiors really leaning into the barefoot Dunsborough lifestyle.

For a slightly more ‘grown-up’ feel, pop into the wine room next door. Here, vinyls crackle and spin, and anything from biodynamic Piedmont Barberas and Belgian saisons are on the pour.

Cuisine: Modern Italian bar-style

Average price: $$

Atmosphere: Casual

Location: 226 Naturaliste Terrace, Dunsborough

8. Wayfinder Cellar Door and Restaurant

a table-top view of a dish alongside a glass of wine at Wayfinder Cellar Door and Restaurant

Dine on the mouth-watering seasonal menu alongside local wines. (Image: Tom Pearsall)

For the most part, the Margaret River region’s cellar doors are all on-site, with urban centres strictly cafe, bar, and restaurant territory. Wayfinder is the exception to the rule. In the heart of Dunsborough, this small tasting room brings drops from three sustainably minded Australian brands—Swell Season, Wayfinder, and Tasmania’s Small Wonder—to you with minimal effort on your part. Sit through a wine tasting in the light and breezy front bar, or sit among the art in the back section of the urban cellar door to wine while you dine. The menu here is succinct (particularly at lunch when it’s ‘grazing menu only’) but varied enough to have something to please even the most discerning of diners.

Cuisine: Modern Australian

Average price: $$$-$$$$

Atmosphere: Relaxed

Location: 239 Naturaliste Terrace, Dunsborough

9. Eagle Bay Brewing Co.

If Vasse Felix is the founding father of the Margaret River wine region, Eagle Bay Brewing Co. (EBBC) is the same for the region’s craft beer industry. Established in 2010, the brewpub was one of the first companies to play with the status quo, brewing interesting small-batch beers with story and heart. At EBBC’s core are kolsch, pilsner, and cacao stout, the range bolstered by a rotating roster of seasonal beers and collabs. Try them in a tasting paddle at the brewhouse, overlooking the rolling hills of the family farm and the Indian Ocean beyond. Pizza is always a good match for their beers, or go for a few shared dishes like the fried prawns with chilli crunch cabbage or charred cos with pickled shallots.

Cuisine: Modern Australian

Average price: $$

Atmosphere: Casual

Location: 252 Eagle Bay Rd, Eagle Bay

10. Lady Lola

the restaurant interior at Lady Lola, Dunsborough

This old patisserie has been refurbished into a classic Italian-style bistro. (Image: Peggy Voir)

Slotting in beside two of Dunsborough’s most celebrated venues is no easy task. But Michelle Forbes and Marinela Antonic’s Lady Lola—a whimsical acronym for ‘love of life’s adventures’—does so with ease. In 2021, the pair transformed an old patisserie into a classic Italian-style bistro with a dash of bar and slice of deli, serving salumi, shared plates, and a daily menu of pastas, risottos, and other international favourites. Their cocktail list reads long, but the wine list is even longer, starring everything from Marri Wood Park Chenin to a Tuscan sangiovese. Cosy up with a glass at the long communal table, or make the most of WA’s balmy evenings on the deck overlooking the Dugalup Creek.

Cuisine: Italian bistro

Average price: $$$

Atmosphere: Relaxed

Location: 4/16 Cyrillean Way, Dunsborough

Monique Ceccato is a freelance travel writer and photographer hailing from Perth. Though she now spends most of her time overseas, WA's sandy beaches, jarrah forests and world-class food and wine scene will always feel like home.
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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.