Best-of list · Hidden Gems

The 7 Best Hidden Gem Bars in Melbourne 2026

The 7 best hidden gem bars in Melbourne for 2026, from Black Pearl and The Everleigh to Bar Americano and Embla, with hours and neighbourhood notes.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Black Pearl.

7 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.

Best overallBlack Pearl
Runner-upThe Everleigh

Melbourne's laneway-bar architecture is built for hiding things, from upstairs rooms to doors behind bookcases. The seven below make the case that Melbourne is Australia's deepest cocktail city.

The 7 best hidden gem bars in Melbourne

Editor's №1

Black Pearl

Black Pearl has run a Fitzroy shopfront on Brunswick Street for more than 20 years and still trains half the city's bartenders. The ground floor is loose and walk-in, while upstairs at Attico the drinks get more serious. There is no printed list worth chasing; tell them what you like. Order a dealer's choice, go early on a weeknight, and let one of Melbourne's founding small bars set the pace.

Full listing & hours →

The Everleigh

The Everleigh sits up a Fitzroy staircase on Gertrude Street and pours some of the most exact classic cocktails in the country, a World's 50 Best regular for years. The room is hushed and booth-lined, built for conversation over a Sazerac. It takes reservations, which you should use. Order from the bound menu of vintage classics and settle in for the long version of the night.

Full listing & hours →

Boilermaker House

Boilermaker House on Lonsdale Street keeps one of Australia's deepest whisky lists, north of 900 bottles, with a beer to match each pour if you want the full boilermaker. The room is narrow and dark and the staff know the shelves cold. Order a whisky-and-beer pairing and a charcuterie board, and go on a quiet weeknight when the bartenders can talk you through the back bar.

Full listing & hours →

Bar Americano

Bar Americano is a standing-room cubbyhole off Howey Place that holds only a handful of drinkers at once, which is the whole point. It pours precise classics with no shortcuts and no seats. This is a one-perfect-drink stop, not a session. Order the namesake Americano or a Negroni, drink it standing, and move on before the next pair is waiting at the door.

Full listing & hours →

Fall From Grace

Fall From Grace hides behind a sliding bookcase inside State of Grace on King Street, a dim gothic den for anyone who likes a hidden door. The cocktails are solid and the grazing menu keeps you there longer than planned. It leans date-night and group-celebration rather than quiet nightcap. Find the bookcase, order off the cocktail list, and go before the weekend crowd packs the booths.

Cookie

Cookie occupies a grand first-floor room in Curtin House on Swanston Street, equal parts Thai kitchen and serious drinking hall. The beer list runs long and the wine and cocktails hold up next to the food. It is loud, big and reliably good. Order a curry and a beer off the rotating list, and use the balcony seats when the weather plays along.

Full listing & hours →

Embla

Embla on Russell Street is a wine bar with a wood fire at its heart, chef Dave Verheul sending out flame-grilled small plates from an open counter. The list runs deep on local and natural wines, poured by staff who actually guide you. It suits a long, grazing evening. Order a glass off the by-the-glass list and whatever is on the grill, and book ahead for a counter seat.

Full listing & hours →

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.