5 Best Restaurants in Darling Harbour and Barangaroo, Sydney

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We've compiled the best of the best in Darling Harbour and Barangaroo - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

BBQ King

$ | Haymarket

You can find better basic Chinese food elsewhere in town, but for duck and pork, barbecue-loving Sydneysiders know that this is the place to come. The poultry hanging in the window are the only decoration at this small Chinatown staple, where the food is so fresh you can almost hear it clucking—make sure you sample the duck pancakes. Barbecued pork is the other featured dish, and the suckling pig is especially delicious. It's open from 11 am until late at night, when the average customers are large groups of mates sprawled at the Formica tables feeding their drunken munchies, or Chinatown chefs kicking back after a day in the kitchen. The service can be a little brusque, but it's all part of the low-budget charm.

18–20 Goulburn St., Sydney, NSW, Australia
02-9267–2586
Known For
  • <PRO>duck pancakes</PRO>
  • <PRO>late-night feed</PRO>
  • <PRO>quick turnaround</PRO>
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Blackbird Café

$ | Darling Harbour

Blackbird Café is great place to take a break while exploring Darling Harbour. The weekday lunch specials are all under A$20 and a good value. There are great views from the balcony, so try and nab a table there. The à la carte menu includes starters of haloumi and vegetable stack or grilled prawns and crab, and there's a wide range of pizza, pasta, burgers, and grills.

Golden Century

$ | Haymarket

For two hours—or as long as it takes for you to consume delicately steamed prawns, luscious mud crab with ginger and shallots, and pipis with black-bean sauce—you might as well be in Hong Kong. This place is heaven for seafood lovers, with wall-to-wall fish tanks filled with crab, lobster, abalone, and schools of barramundi, parrotfish, and coral trout. You won't have to ask if the food is fresh: most of it is swimming around you as you eat. Come for the big-ticket seafood or a simple meal of deep-fried duck. Supper is served until 4 am so it's popular with late-night revelers. It's not the prettiest of places and service can be hit-and-miss, but it has a legion of fans.

393–399 Sussex St., Sydney, NSW, 2000, Australia
02-9212–3901
Known For
  • Large range of seafood
  • Late-night dining
  • Lengthy queue

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Recommended Fodor's Video

The Malaya

$ | Darling Harbour

The cocktails are legendary, the view is captivating, and the food, a traditional Chinese/Malay fusion, is extraordinary. After 50 years in the business (first opened in 1963), in different venues around Sydney, this modern Asian restaurant still does a roaring trade. Signature dishes include beef Rendang (Indonesian-style beef curry), and the spanner crab san choy bow, a fabulous twist on a classic dish. Try one of the four set menus (for a minimum of three people) for a true feast on the extensive menu's flavor combinations.

39 Lime St., Sydney, NSW, 2000, Australia
02-9279–1170
Known For
  • Great views
  • Beef Rendang
  • Szechuan eggplant
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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South Coffee & Food

$ | Darling Harbour

Darling Harbour and Barangaroo are undoubtedly two of the busiest areas of Sydney so for a quiet reprieve step into this tucked-away café. With an impressive wooden art installation snaking around the ceiling, outstanding coffee and freshly baked croissants and muffins, this is the perfect place to recharge before more adventuring.