Caulfield sits in the inner Melbourne grid with Elsternwick to the north, Carnegie to the east, Glen Huntly to the south. Caulfield holds caulfield racecourse and monash university’s caulfield campus, which gives it a mixed crowd of students, racing-day visitors, and a strong long-running jewish community along hawthorn road. The pub stock here in winter reflects the suburb’s character — limited — a few historic pubs around the racecourse and Glen Eira Road, mostly traditional rather than gastro, with kitchens that lean into braising, slow-cooked roasts, and the kind of food that justifies sitting in the same room for three hours.
The Main Pub Strip
The bulk of Caulfield’s pub-and-bistro stock runs along Glen Eira Road and the surrounding cross-streets. Hawthorn road and glen eira road have the bulk of the eating; the carnegie and elsternwick strips spill across the borders. The pubs along here are a mix of:
- Heritage corner pubs from the late 19th and early 20th centuries
- Renovated mid-2000s gastropubs with bigger dining rooms and $26–$36 mains
- Newer wine-bar-style operations (smaller, more focused menus)
For winter, the heritage corner pubs are usually the strongest move — older buildings have working chimneys, the front bars hold heat, and the kitchens know what a Sunday roast is meant to look like.
Character of Caulfield’s Pubs
Limited — a few historic pubs around the racecourse and glen eira road, mostly traditional rather than gastro. The atmosphere on a Wednesday night in mid-winter: low-lit front bar, fireplace going if the venue has one, half the tables filled with locals, the other half with workers from the surrounding offices or terraces.
What separates Caulfield’s pubs from the neighbouring suburbs:
- Suburb-specific crowd — Caulfield pulls a particular demographic, and the pubs reflect it
- Building stock — the older venues have heritage character that newer suburbs can’t replicate
- Kitchen depth — the better pubs run proper winter menus rather than year-round generic pub food
What to Order in Winter
Across Caulfield’s better pubs, the winter menu typically includes:
- Slow-braised lamb shanks with mash and red-wine jus
- Beef cheeks or short ribs in a heavy reduction
- Mussels in white wine and cream for the smaller-appetite winter dinner
- Sunday roasts — beef, lamb, pork, with proper sides
- Pub classics — parmas, schnitzels, fish and chips, all elevated at the gastro end
Mains run $26–$42 depending on the venue. Most pubs run a smaller bar menu (snacks, $14–$22) for casual drinks-and-eats nights.
Drinking Beyond the Pub
A few small bars and wine-led venues operate alongside the traditional pubs in Caulfield, especially in the side streets off Glen Eira Road. These are often cafe-by-day, bar-by-night operations with smaller heated rooms, slightly more polished food, and a different crowd from the main-strip pubs.
For the fireplace-and-heritage experience, the pubs are usually the move. For natural wine and small plates, the side-street bars are the alternative.
Getting There
Caulfield is served by Caulfield station on the Frankston/Pakenham/Cranbourne lines, plus the 3 tram from the city. Most pubs are within a 5–10 minute walk of a tram or train stop. Driving is realistic but parking near the busier strips on Friday and Saturday nights can be a hunt.
Booking and Timing
Most Caulfield pubs are walk-in territory mid-week. Friday and Saturday from 7pm onwards, the better dining-room pubs need bookings — especially for groups of four or more. Sunday lunches at the heritage pubs sell out from about 1pm; book or arrive early.
The fireplace seats at the heritage pubs go fast on weekends; arrive at 5pm rather than 7pm if you want one.
What This Means for You
For a Caulfield winter pub night, the strongest play is mid-week dinner at a heritage corner pub for the proper old-room experience, fireplace if available, slow-cooked main, and a quiet pint after. Avoid Friday-Saturday peak unless booked. Sunday lunches are the bonus move — proper roasts, longer dwell, and the rest of the day to digest.
For more cold-weather Caulfield content, see cafes and bars with fireplaces in Caulfield and the best ramen and soup in Caulfield.
Jack Carver writes about Melbourne’s suburbs for MELBZ.
