Glen Waverley’s soup geography is shaped by who lives here and who comes through. Glen waverley is one of melbourne’s strongest middle-eastern asian-australian suburbs — chinese, korean, japanese, vietnamese and malaysian communities are all well-established, and the kingsway dining strip is one of the city’s best non-cbd pan-asian zones. For winter eating, that translates into a particular soup mix — very strong — pan-Asian density rivals Box Hill, with depth in Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and Malaysian operators.
The Glen Waverley Soup Map
Kingsway and coleman parade hold the densest eating in the eastern suburbs outside box hill. The soup operators in Glen Waverley cluster around the main retail strip rather than spreading across the whole suburb, which is good news on a cold day — you can compare options without walking far.
Three rough categories of soup available:
- Ramen — Japanese kitchens running tonkotsu, shoyu, and miso broths
- Vietnamese — pho, bun bo Hue, hu tieu, plus the lesser-known options
- Pan-Asian — laksa, Korean stews, Chinese noodle soups
Not every Glen Waverley kitchen runs all three — the depth in each category depends on the suburb’s demographics and food history.
Ramen — What’s Available
Ramen prices in Glen Waverley run $18–$24 for a bowl with toppings, depending on the operator. Standard options:
- Tonkotsu — pork-bone broth, fattiest, longest-lasting warmth, the strongest cold-day pick
- Shoyu — soy-based, lighter, better for a midday meal
- Spicy miso — heat plus richness combined
- Tantanmen — sesame-spice base, a slightly different format
The smaller Japanese kitchens often run udon, soba, or curry-don menus alongside ramen, which gives you a soup or stew alternative if ramen isn’t the mood.
Pho and Vietnamese Soups
Pho prices in Glen Waverley run $14–$18 for a large bowl. Standard cuts:
- Pho tai chin — rare beef and brisket, the default
- Pho ga — chicken pho, lighter winter option
- Bun bo Hue — spicy Hue-style soup with lemongrass and chilli, the warming default
- Hu tieu — clear pork-and-prawn soup, lighter than pho
The Vietnamese kitchens often run bun (vermicelli) and com tam (broken rice) menus alongside soups, so you can mix the order if a soup-only meal feels narrow.
Other Asian Soups
Beyond ramen and pho, Glen Waverley kitchens often run:
- Laksa — Malaysian curry noodle soup, one of the strongest cold-day soups (chilli plus coconut)
- Tom yum — Thai hot-and-sour, available at most Thai operators
- Sundubu jjigae — Korean soft-tofu stew, served bubbling hot
- Kimchi jjigae — kimchi-and-pork stew, deeply warming
- Beef brisket noodle soup — Hong Kong style, slow-cooked brisket in star-anise broth
The variety depends on which Asian communities have settled in Glen Waverley over the past few decades.
Practical Notes
- Transit: Glen Waverley station (terminus of the Glen Waverley line), plus extensive bus connections
- Lunch peak: 12.30–1.30pm at the busiest kitchens; arrive at 12 or after 2pm to walk in
- Cash-vs-card: most operators accept card; some smaller kitchens are cash-only
- Mid-afternoon: many soup kitchens close 3–5pm before reopening for dinner
What to Pair Soup With
A pho or ramen lunch typically takes 30–45 minutes, which leaves time for the rest of a winter day. Combine with:
- A walk along Kingsway for shopping or browsing
- A cafe stop for a slow afternoon coffee — see our Glen Waverley fireplace cafes guide
- A pub for the early-evening transition — see our Glen Waverley winter pubs guide
The soup-cafe-pub chain is one of the more efficient cold-weather day patterns in Melbourne and works particularly well in suburbs with high walking density.
What This Means for You
For a Glen Waverley cold-day soup lunch, the strongest move depends on what’s available locally — a tonkotsu ramen at a Japanese kitchen is the heaviest warming option, a laksa is the strongest spice-and-coconut hit, and a bowl of bun bo Hue is the underrated middle-ground. Mid-week walk-ins are the easiest; weekend lunches book out at the busier kitchens. Build the soup into a longer afternoon and you’ve got a real winter outing rather than just a quick meal.
For more, see winter pubs in Glen Waverley and cafes and bars with fireplaces in Glen Waverley.
Jack Carver writes about Melbourne’s suburbs for MELBZ.