Best-of list · Live Music

The 10 Best Live Music Bars in Melbourne 2026

The 10 best live music bars in Melbourne for 2026 — picked by our editors. Hand-picked by our city editors. Locations, hours, neighbourhoods and price.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is The Corner Hotel.

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

Melbourne is Australia's live music capital. The 10 below show why.

The 10 best live music bars in Melbourne

Editor's №1

The Corner Hotel

The Corner Hotel in Richmond is Melbourne's benchmark mid-size room, an 800-capacity bandroom that has hosted local punk acts and touring internationals since the 1940s. The system rewards loud guitars. Regulars head upstairs to the rooftop bar between sets for a pot of Stomping Ground and a skyline view. Best for gig-goers who want the band close and the beer cold. Arrive early on sold-out Fridays.

Full listing & hours →

The Toff in Town

The Toff in Town hides on the second floor of Curtin House on Swanston Street, a velvet-curtained cabaret room that swings between jazz, soul and singer-songwriter nights. Service is quick and the cocktail list runs deeper than most live rooms, with a tight whisky selection. Best for a seated show with a drink that matters. Book the booth seating for touring acts; the standing floor fills fast after 9pm.

Full listing & hours →

Northcote Social Club

Northcote Social Club anchors High Street with a 300-capacity bandroom that has launched more Melbourne careers than almost any other room. The front bar pours local taps and stays loud until late. Broadsheet rates it among the city's essential live venues. Best for catching a band on the way up before they sell out the Corner. Get there for the support act; the locals already have.

Forum Theatre

The Forum on Flinders Street is Melbourne's most theatrical room, a 1929 picture palace with a fake-sky ceiling and Roman statues watching the stage. It holds just over 2,000 and books the bigger touring names. The bars are well staffed for the capacity, so the interval wait stays short. Best for a marquee show where the room is half the spectacle. Standing downstairs, seated up top.

Bird's Basement

Bird's Basement is the sister club to New York's Birdland, a basement jazz room off Singers Lane that runs two seated dinner shows a night. The booking is serious, drawing international touring musicians most weeks. Tables sit close to the stage and the kitchen sends modern Italian plates through the set. Best for a date built around the music, not the background. Reserve the early show for the better sound mix.

Full listing & hours →

The Tote

The Tote in Collingwood is Melbourne's most fiercely defended rock pub, saved by public campaign when it nearly closed in 2010. The front bar pours cheap pots and the bandroom runs Wednesday to Sunday with emerging and cult acts. Expect sticky floors and honest volume. Best for punk, garage and anyone who wants the real thing over the polished version. The door queue moves fastest before 9pm.

The Evelyn

The Evelyn Hotel has worked Brunswick Street since the 1980s, a Fitzroy pub where the bandroom and the front bar share a wall and a crowd. The booking leans indie, soul and roots, with local taps and a no-fuss drinks list. Best for a Friday where you want music without a stadium markup. Arrive before the headliner; the room is small enough that late means standing by the door.

Full listing & hours →

Howler

Howler sits down a Brunswick laneway, a converted warehouse with a beer garden, a 400-capacity bandroom and a cocktail list that takes itself seriously for a live venue. The programming spans live sets, comedy and DJ nights. Best for a long evening that drifts from garden drinks to a late show. Come early on weekends to claim the courtyard before the band pulls everyone inside.

Max Watt's

Max Watt's on Swanston Street, the former HiFi Bar, is a basement room built for touring mid-size acts, holding around 800 across a sunken floor and a raised bar. The sightlines are better than the basement setting suggests. Beer runs to cans and taps, fast over fussy. Best for a sweaty single-band night with the crowd pressed to the stage. Check the listing; some shows are all-ages and dry.

The Old Bar

The Old Bar in Fitzroy is a front-room pub with a bandroom out back that books live music every night of the week, much of it free. The crowd skews local musicians and regulars who treat it as a lounge. Pots are cheap and the booking is gloriously unpredictable. Best for a no-plan night where you trust the room. Sunday sessions are the quiet local secret.

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.