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The Best Restaurants in Wollongong Right Now

From the CBD to Fairy Meadow — the Illawarra dining rooms worth your attention.

By Wollongong Daily · Published 28 June 2026 at 3:47 am · Updated

Updated 2 July 2026 at 3:47 am

1 min read

The Best Restaurants in Wollongong Right Now
Photo: Photo by Unsplash

Wollongong's restaurant scene reflects the city's transformation from post-industrial to creative: the Italian-Australian heritage in the community's post-war immigration has always given Wollongong a strong pasta and pizza culture, and the more recent arrivals of chefs from Sydney and Melbourne have added contemporary Australian, Asian, and Middle Eastern dimensions to the dining landscape. The Southern Highlands produce (90 minutes), the Illawarra escarpment's market gardens, and the coastal seafood provide provenance for the city's best kitchens.

Caveau — the Keira Street restaurant in the Wollongong CBD has long been the city's most ambitious dining room, with a tasting menu format that draws on Southern Highlands produce and a wine list that includes excellent regional NSW selections. The kitchen's consistent quality over many years has made Caveau Wollongong's destination restaurant for special occasions.

Diggies — the North Beach café and restaurant is Wollongong's most beloved casual dining destination: a beachside building, excellent coffee, and a breakfast and lunch menu with produce care and execution quality that the beachside setting might not suggest. The weekend queue is a testament to the kitchen's quality.

Fratelli's — the Italian dining tradition that Wollongong's post-war migration history created is maintained at its finest at Fratelli's, where house-made pasta, wood-fired pizza, and the Italian-Australian wine selections reflect the community's roots in a way that contemporary dining trends have not displaced.

Samaras — the Lebanese restaurant in the Wollongong CBD provides the most complete Middle Eastern dining experience in the Illawarra, with mezze, house-baked flatbreads, and charcoal-cooked meats that reflect the culinary traditions of the Lebanese community that has contributed significantly to Wollongong's food culture.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Wollongong

This article was produced by the The Daily Wollongong editorial desk and covers community in Wollongong. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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