The Noosa bars and pubs you need to visit in 2025

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Relax over a few tipples at these laidback watering holes.

At first glance, you could be mistaken for thinking the Noosa bars and pubs scene only extends as far as the Hastings Street strip. But just as the region is blessed with alluring smaller neighbourhoods, its drinks offering is just as varied and, sometimes, tucked away.

Consider this your guide to the best Noosa bars and pubs you need to visit next time you’re in town.

Halse Lodge

two people heading up to the Halse Lodge, Noosa
Head up to the historic Halse Lodge for a guaranteed good time. (Image: Tourism and Events Queensland)

Best for: Post-surf beers on the verandah

Since COVID hit, the heritage weatherboard bones of Noosa’s historic guesthouse, Halse Lodge , have been missing the buzz of its beloved bar. In 2024, local creative Chloe Tozer, of CLO Studios, and her family have given the iconic backpackers lodge a new lease on life, refurbishing it from top to bottom with chic new rooms and a restaurant and bar that already has punters flocking back to its leafy verandah.

It’s one of those IYKYK places, tucked up behind the hubbub of Hastings Street, a few short steps up the hill. Dogs (on lead) sit by feet at the white picnic tables set beneath wide striped umbrellas as groups of friends and families tuck into tasty eats from the menu designed by renowned Noosa chef, Ryan Fitzpatrick (Lanai, Noosaville). Don’t miss the fish tacos. While Fleetwood Mac and Creedence play, Heads of Noosa beers are pulled and excellent tap cocktails mixed on Seabourne Distillery spirits complement the made-to-order selection. Inside, the ‘70s vibes continue in the listening room where the pool table is found, while ping pong battles take place on the back deck.

Address: 2 Halse Ln, Noosa Heads

Theo’s Social Club

friends dining alfresco at Theo’s Social Club, Noosa
Relax and chat with friends while dining alfresco at Theo’s Social Club. (Image: Tourism and Events Queensland)

Best for: Breaking down the pretentiousness of wine

If you’re not a fan of the ‘Junga’ (aka Noosa Junction) before a visit to Theo’s , you’ll be sold after your first sip. This is the type of place where you find a welcoming vibe and good chat no matter when you stop by – and being walk-in only, it doesn’t take heavy planning. With 100-plus labels lined up along the bar, wine is the obvious star here but they also mix a mean cocktail. Sit outside under the fairy lights, order a few snacky things from the seasonal menu, and slip inside to listen to your fave vinyl with a slice of burnt butter miso cake as the night wears on.

Address: Shop 2 Arcadia Walk, Noosa Heads

Village Bicycle

Village Bicycle Noosa
Indulge in heart burgers and craft brews. (Image: As You Wish LAB)

Best for: Burgers, beers, and live tunes

Open 10 years and still going strong, Village Bicycle is all about its pool table and graffiti-laden beer garden where you can drop in for an afternoon frothy or stay into the night to catch live tunes and DJ sets on weekends. The menu is filled with the type of nosh you’ll want to wrap your hands around after a drink or two, with onion rings and poutine both as worthy options as the burgers and tacos. Expect local Boiling Pot (Noosa) and Black Flag (Coolum) craft brews among the lineup on the taps and in tins.

Address: 6/16 Sunshine Beach Rd, Noosa Heads

Moonstruck

Moonstruck Noosa
Imbibe on delicious gin cocktails and charcuterie boards.

Best for: Post-shopping spritzes

In an intimate space on Hastings Street, Moonstruck switches from coffee shop to small bar when the time is right, dishing up gin tasting flights from their extensive collection and Euro-inspired share plates. If you feel like something more substantial after road testing their cocktail of the week, there’s also gnocchi served up in pretty bowls handmade by the owner, Mell Thompson.

Hot tip: Head here to cap off your weekend in Noosa with $15 gin spritzers during their Sunday Spritzeria from 2-5pm.

Address: 5 Hastings St, Noosa Heads

Yoyo Bar

a spread of food on the table at Yoyo Bar, Noosa
Splash out on a special dinner at Yoyo Bar. (Image: Supplied)

Best for: Sunset tapas… that lingers on to dinner

Drop in for a few sips overlooking the sparkling Noosa River, at the Catalan and Basque-inspired YoYo Bar and Restaurant in Noosaville. It’s received multiple accolades in Wine List awards since opening in 2018, with sommelier Lara Graham (ex Wasabi) and her partner Marc Romanella at the helm.

Considered choices make up the 22-strong by-the-glass list, including a Basque Txakoli to pair with pintxos, and a great round-up of ‘weird and wonderful’ blends. Don’t let that stop you from ordering a cocktail, though. They’re classic and well-executed, a little like Noosa itself.

Address: 249 Gympie Terrace, Noosaville

Sunset Bar at Noosa Boathouse

food and drinks by the water at Noosa Boathouse
Indulge in seafood and cocktails by the water. (Image: Tourism and Events Queensland)

Best for: Cocktails with a cracking view

A three-level institution, long bobbing on the Noosa River and refurbed in 2021, upstairs at Sunset Bar at Noosa Boathouse is the best place to head come happy hour. Order a Retro Plate for a thoroughly ‘80s spread of kabana, cheese and pickled cucumber, or a bundle of fresh Mooloolaba prawns to nibble while you soak in the timeless view.

Drinks-wise, any of the cocktails made on Noosa’s Seabourne vodka are a winner, but there’s also something about the setting that will have you reaching for a pina colada.

Address: 194 Gympie Terrace, Noosaville

Roads

Best for: Feeling like a local

Roads is the ultimate slashie – a coffee shop, boutique and, come Thursday to Sunday afternoons, wine bar – brought to you by the team behind local artisan surf brand, Dessa. Sit outside, facing the village square with a glass of something from the 80-strong bottle line-up and a platter or some tinned mussels, and you’re likely to slip into conversation with someone new.

On Thursdays, a rotating roster of live musicians set the soundtrack for aperitivo between 5-7pm. Get yourself a wine flight matched with local cheeses, or perhaps a James Bond-style martini, and settle in. There are also bottles and cans from Land and Sea, along with Guinness and Kilkenny for good craic.

We dare you to leave without being tempted by something from the beautifully curated shelves inside, with coffee table books through to leather bags, ceramics and locally-designed threads. Doggos are welcome at outdoor tables, too.

Address: 6 Kingfisher Dr, Peregian Beach

Kin Kin Hotel

the exterior of Kin Kin Hotel, Noosa
Kin Kin Hotel exudes rural charm. (Image: Bec Millard)

Best for: Weekend destination drives

History seeps from the walls of the Kin Kin Hotel , which was completely restored over two years ago, re-opening in late 2023. Provenance is king when it comes to the share plates being served from the kitchen, whether you’re visiting for lunch or dinner or some bar snacks in between – an ethos overseen by head chef and manager Oscar Holgado who cut his teeth in Michelin-starred restaurants in the UK. Sourcing from quality local producers, the kitchen team makes their own sausages, rillettes, and bacon and plans are in place to raise their own pigs and plant out an extensive kitchen garden. There’s also a more formal sit-down restaurant to come, along with upstairs accommodation. “We’re trying to take a little bit of that and sprinkle some of that Cornish rural charm into Queensland," Oscar says.

At the bar, local brews from Boiling Pot, Heads of Noosa, Land and Sea and Hinterland Brewing from Cooran are on the taps along with Eumundi Ginger Beer. Whatever’s growing in the herb garden at the time might even make its way onto the cocktail menu, like a recent lovage-spiked margarita. Head out to the beer garden and soak up the next-gen country vibes.

Address: 69 Main Street (Cnr Old Wahpunga Road), Kin Kin

Celeste Mitchell
With visions of hosting Getaway, Celeste Mitchell graduated with a Bachelor of Journalism and entered the hard-hitting world of boy bands, puberty, and fashion, writing for magazines like Girlfriend, Total Girl, CLEO and TV Hits in the early noughties (there was a lot of Twilight references). Since switching gears to full-time freelancer in 2013, focused exclusively on travel, she’s criss-crossed the globe, opened a co-working space, lived in Mexico, and co-founded slow and sustainable site, Life Unhurried. The Sunshine Coast-based author (Life Unhurried & Ultimate Beaches Australia, Hardie Grant) and mum of two regularly pinches herself that she gets to explore new places and ask all the nosy questions she wants in the name of work.
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5 of the best Sunshine Coast day trips

City buzz, gourmet trails, surf breaks and art scenes are all at your fingertips.

When it comes to planning a trip, picking a holiday destination is the easy part. The real dilemma is where to set yourself up for the night. Do you go coastal, city, or countryside? Somewhere remote and rugged, or right in the action? Luckily, the Sunshine Coast, and huge number of amazing Sunshine Coast day trips, have kindly made the choice for you.

Ditch the hotel-hopping and suitcase-lugging. Instead, base yourself at Novotel Sunshine Coast or Mantra Mooloolaba , where big-city culture, vine-covered valleys, and theme parks are all within a two-hour drive.

1. Sunshine Coast to Brisbane

Drive time: 1 hour 20 minutes (105km)

Shake off the sand from your sandals and swap the beach for the throb of the Queensland capital. Ease in gently with a bougainvillea-filled stroll through South Bank, iced latte in hand, before cooling off at Streets Beach lagoon – Brisbane’s answer to the coast (but without the waves).

Once firmly in big-city mode, hit up the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) , home to Australia’s largest collection of modern and contemporary artworks. Dive into the past at the Queensland Museum, where prehistoric fossils of Australian dinosaurs and megafauna collide with First Nations cultural collections and interactive science exhibits.

All this learning got you hungry? Howard Smith Wharves calls. Here, riverside dining delivers breweries with meat-forward menus, Japanese fine dining and overwater bars. If you’ve got room for more, Fortitude Valley’s shopping boutiques await you and your wallet.

woman walking around Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA)
Wander the Gallery of Modern Art. (Image: TEQ)

2. Sunshine Coast to the Scenic Rim

Drive time: 2 hours 15 minutes (170km)

Make your way inland to the Scenic Rim for the state’s best vineyards and age-old volcanic slopes. Start your day early (like, sparrow’s breakfast early) at O’Reilly’s Rainforest Retreat in Lamington National Park . Here, take a treetop walk through the canopy and hand-feed the wild birds who flock here.

Next, it’s your turn to eat. Here, the food scene operates where locally sourced produce is an expectation, not an exception. Order a picnic basket crammed with regional wine and cheese to devour next to the creek at Canungra Valley Vineyards . Or perhaps a grazing platter of vegan and non-vegan cheeses at Witches Falls Winery .

Feeling bold? Tackle the Twin Falls circuit in Springbrook National Park. Or keep the gourmet life going with a Scenic Rim Brewery tasting paddle, best enjoyed while taking in the rise of the Great Dividing Range.

woman with cheese and wine at Witches Falls Winery
Enjoy a cheese platter at Witches Falls Winery. (Image: TEQ)

3. Sunshine Coast to the Gold Coast

Drive time: 2 hours (180km)

Surf, sand and sparkling skylines might be the Gold Coast’s MO, but there’s more to Surfers Paradise and beyond. Kick things off with a beachfront coffee at Burleigh Heads, then hike through Burleigh Head National Park to look over the ocean and whale sightings (dependent on the season, of course).

Cool off in the calm waters of Tallebudgera Creek before chowing down on the famously buttery Moreton Bay bug rolls at Rick Shores . Travelling with the kids? Then you can’t miss Australia’s theme park capital, with Dreamworld ’s big rides and Warner Bros. Movie World ’s Hollywood treatment at hand to keep the family entertained.

aerial view of Tallebudgera Creek
Dive into Tallebudgera Creek. (Image: TEQ)

4. Sunshine Coast to Tweed Heads

Drive time: 2 hours 15 minutes (200km)

Dare to cross enemy lines? Then welcome to New South Wales. Tweed Heads blends the laid-back attitude of the Northern Rivers with high-quality dining, experimental art, and farm-fresh indulgence – a combo worth the drive.

Start strong with a long, lazy brunch at Tweed River House , then swing by Tropical Fruit World for exotic finds like red dragon fruit, handfuls of lychees and black sapote. Next, hit M|Arts Precinct – an art deco hub of micro galleries, artist workshops and one-off boutiques.

Round off the day with sunset drinks at Husk Distillers among the glowing cane fields, and order one with their famous Ink Gin. You’ll thank us later.

exterior of Husk Distillers
Taste the famous Ink Gin at Husk Distillers. (Image: Destination NSW)

5. Sunshine Coast Hinterland

Drive time: 1 hour (70km)

Strap on those hiking boots and make tracks inland, where volcanic peaks, misty rainforest and hinterland townships beckon. Ease in with the Glass House Mountains Lookout Walk, or, if you have energy to burn, tackle the Mount Ngungun Summit Walk for a 360-degree sight of the surrounding summits.

Next: Montville. This township delivers European-style architecture and old-world appeal. Nearby, settle in at Flame Hill Vineyard, where a large pour of estate-grown wine comes with encompassing views of the countryside.

Not ready to leave the hinterland villages just yet? Of course not. Meander past art galleries and indie shops at Maleny. Nab some fudge from Sweets on Maple for a sweet fix. Or go salty at Maleny Dairies with a farm tour and a chunky wedge of their deliciously creamy cheese.

End the day among the eucalypts and rainforests of Kondalilla National Park. Here, the Kondalilla Falls Circuit winds down through trees humming with life to a rock pool beneath a waterfall – as if designed for soaking tired feet before heading back to the coast.

view of Mount Ngungun on the scenic rim queensland
Take on the Mount Ngungun Summit Walk (Image: TEQ)

Start planning your Sunshine home base at all.com.