Best New Restaurants and Bars in Sydney: Winter 2025
- Smashd Sydney
- Jun 23
- 4 min read
Updated: Jun 24
Looking for the best new restaurants and bars in Sydney? From fresh openings in Newtown and Paddington to hidden gems in the CBD and Randwick, these are the spots making waves right now.
Whether you’re after late-night wine bars, neighbourhood delis, modern Greek by the water or a revamped Hungarian classic, here’s where to eat and drink in Sydney this winter.
Best New Restaurants and Bars in Sydney
Corner 75
Randwick

Once a humble Hungarian restaurant known mostly to locals, Corner 75 has been brought back to life by Jean-Paul El Tom (Baba’s Place) and Daniel Puskas (Sixpenny).
The room still feels familiar with tiled floors, timber walls, printed plates, memories on the walls, and old-school glassware, but the menu’s had a reset. Goulash, schnitzel and semolina dumplings are still here, now done with finesse. Eastern European wines pour alongside, and the warmth that defined the original hasn’t gone anywhere.
Corner 75 is less a new opening than a preservation project, a continuation of Hungarian-Australian migrant culture, communicated through food, service, and space.

Berta’s Deli
Marrickville
A small deli with big heart, serving generous sandwiches built on fresh Turkish bread layered with house pickles, cold cuts, sharp sauces, as well as veggie options.
The menu’s short but stacked, think roast broccolini with muhammara, garlic sauce and pickled cucumber, or mortadella with stracciatella and pistachio. Everything’s served on silver plates, and nothing’s trying too hard. Just good sandwiches done properly.
Bar DEMO
Newtown

A modern wine bar from bartenders Claudia Morgan and Olly Churcher, inspired by the kind of late-night spots you'd find in Berlin or Paris. It’s walk-in only, open late, and built for people who care about good wine, good company and good music.
The 60-bottle list is grouped by vibe, not varietal, with rotating pours, limited drops, and plenty under $100. Cocktails are short and seasonal: freezer Martinis at -15°C, two-sip coladas, and spicy bourbon-mezcal signatures. Even though there is no kitchen, the snacks are spot on with charcuterie from LP’s and Pino’s, anchovies, and Chappy’s chips.
Vinyl only, played start to finish on a hi-fi system from Translate Sound. A bar made by bartenders, for anyone who just wants one more glass and a good reason to stay for another.
Caness
Paddington
From the team behind Shaffa, Caness is your new neighbourhood go-to — a Middle Eastern tapas. The format is casual, small plates served as they’re ready and designed to be shared.
The menu goes back to basics, reimagining bold Middle Eastern and Mediterranean flavours in playful Spanish-style small plates. Think lamb brioche sliders, mushroom shawarma, chicken skewers with mojo verde, ouzo prawns with feta, and sabich layered with tahini and amba, all designed to hit the table hot off the grill.
Alas
Newtown

Alas blurs the line between café and bar, record store and neighbourhood hang. By day, it’s single origin espresso café. By night, it becomes a vinyl listening bar, set in a beautifully styled space with moody lighting, vintage Klipsch speakers, and an atmosphere that feels both cool and low-key.
Out the back, the dog-friendly courtyard, known as the “Wine Yard” is the perfect spot to enjoy a natural wine (or more) with friends. Alas is also becoming a quiet cultural hub, recently hosting an art exhibition, with more on the way.
Image credit: @nergalyoukhana.creative
Osteria Mucca
Newtown

Set inside a former butcher shop on Australia Street, Osteria Mucca blends Italian tradition with a Newtown edge. The name (‘mucca’ means cow) nods to the building’s past which has been carefully preserved.
The menu leans into family recipes and regional favourites, with handmade pasta, slow-cooked sauces, and a short list of aperitivi and digestivi that feels straight out of Rome. Wines come from small, family-run vineyards across Italy, some familiar, many not. It’s warm, unfussy, and already shaping up to be one of the inner west’s most comfortable tables.
Akti
Woolloomooloo

Akti is a modern Greek spot on the Finger Wharf that feels made for sun-drenched feasting. Enjoy elevated Greek classics like moussaka croquettes, lahanodolmades, and kontosouvli, all built to share.
The tables are a soft pastel pink, the plates are shell-shaped and Pinterest-worthy, and the views stretch right out over the harbour, it’s the kind of place you can already see yourself at, a spritz in hand and plates piling up.
Herbs Taverne
Sydney CBD
From the team behind Cantina OK and Bar Planet comes a basement bar devoted to the Negroni in all its forms. Herbs Taverne is dark, moody, and joyfully bitter, a love letter to amaro, aperitivo culture, and drinks that make you pause between sips.
Expect a rotating list of Negroni riffs and rare amaros from around the world, poured under red lights and spinning disco balls. The space leans mid-century Euro with a bit of dive-bar swagger, and the best part? It's open until 2am.
L’Avant Cave
Paddington
Tucked beneath P&V Paddington, L’Avant Cave is a wine bar by the P&V team with food from upstairs neighbour Porcine. The mood is low-lit, the menu is snack-heavy, and the list leans natural, the kind of place where you can drop in for a quick glass or end up staying for the night.
Croque Monsieur, snapper tartare, plat Provençal, it’s all designed to work with the wine, not overshadow it. No pressure, no bookings, just a corner table, a couple of snacks, and a pour worth talking about. More Sydney Guides
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