OpenTable has named 37 restaurants across Melbourne and Sydney as its inaugural Australian Icons, recognising the venues that have helped shape the country’s dining culture. The new list sits alongside OpenTable’s first Australian Restaurant Awards, which also crowned favourites across a series of industry-voted and diner-voted categories. The announcement follows new research from OpenTable showing 63% of Australian diners are more likely to try a restaurant they haven’t visited before if it has won an award or appeared on a best restaurants list. Keeping it iconic Melbourne’s list includes some of the city’s biggest dining names, with Attica, Amaru, Vue de monde, Carlton Wine Room, Lee Ho Fook, MoVida and Serai Kitchen among the venues recognised by OpenTable. In Sydney, restaurants including Saint Peter, Sixpenny, Ester, Pellegrino 2000, Poly and The Apollo were named Icons, alongside a mix of long-standing institutions and newer favourites helping shape the city’s dining scene. Drew Bowering, General Manager Australia at OpenTable, says the list is designed to recognise restaurants helping define Australia’s dining culture. “Melbourne and Sydney are home to some of the world’s most exciting hospitality venues. Restaurants play an important role in how people experience a city and OpenTable Icons is an opportunity to recognise the restaurants helping shape Australia’s dining culture and setting the standard for hospitality experiences globally.” The Icons were selected by a panel of hospitality figures, critics and creatives, with the list designed to recognise restaurants that have had a lasting impact on Australia’s dining landscape. The Melbourne judging panel included Food & Drink Victoria CEO Anthea Loucas Bosha, food journalist Dani Valent, restaurant photographer Kristoffer Paulsen, PAX Hospitality founder Leon Kennedy, chef and cookbook author Rosheen Kaul, food writer and television host Sofia Levin, Club Sup founder Sophie McIntyre and MEASURED Studio co-founder Thurman Wise. Rosheen Kaul, chef, food writer and cookbook author, says Melbourne’s dining scene continues to stand out for its creativity and diversity. “Melbourne’s dining scene has always been defined by its creativity, diversity and willingness to evolve. What stood out most throughout the judging process was the calibre of venues consistently delivering memorable experiences while continuing to shape the culture of dining out in this city.” The Sydney panel included chef and cookbook author Brendan Pang, chef and cookbook author Danielle Alvarez, DRNKS founder Joel Amos, publisher Julie Gibbs, photographer Nikki To and presenter and food judge Simon Marnie. “Sydney’s hospitality industry is producing restaurants that stand confidently alongside the best in the world. OpenTable Icons is about recognising the venues setting the benchmark for experience, service, and cultural impact, and helping more diners discover the restaurants shaping what modern Australian dining looks like,” adds Danielle Alvarez, chef and cookbook author. The full list of OpenTable’s 2026 Melbourne and Sydney Icons can be found on the official OpenTable website. Melbourne’s Restaurant Award winners OpenTable also handed out its inaugural Restaurant Awards, with winners selected by both hospitality professionals and diners. The awards were presented in Melbourne by Merrick Watts. Industry Choice Awards Restaurant Design Award: Yiaga Innovation Award: Serai Kitchen Impact Award: Farmer’s Daughters Standout Service Award: Il Solito Posto People’s Choice Awards Neighbourhood Gem: Carlton Wine Room Bar & Pub of the Year: Marquis of Lorne Bucket List: Attica Opening of the Year: Yiaga The Australian OpenTable Restaurant Awards follow the launch of the OpenTable London Restaurant Awards in May, with Australian venues joining a growing international list of restaurants recognised for defining dining culture and exceptional hospitality experiences. Find more dining out updates on Crumb Wire.