A real fireplace in a Melbourne cafe is rare. The combination of fire-safety regulations, modern ventilation requirements, and the cost of running wood through a small kitchen means most cafes default to gas heaters or split-system air conditioning. Toorak’s cafe and bar stock isn’t an exception — but the suburb does have a handful of venues with genuine fires, and knowing which ones are running them makes a real difference on a cold afternoon.
Toorak is an old-money inner-south suburb with the largest concentration of expensive housing in Australia, a small but premium retail strip along Toorak Road Village, and the Yarra-side parkland of Como Park. That shapes the cafe scene here: old-money, residential, polished, with the bulk of venues clustered along Toorak Road Village between Williams Road and Grange Road.
Where Real Fireplaces Tend to Be
Three patterns hold across Toorak for where the real fires sit:
- Older converted-house cafes — the venues that took over a 1900s residential building usually inherited the original fireplaces. Some kept them functional, most sealed them, but a small number run gas inserts in the original hearths.
- Heritage-building bars — small bars in heritage-listed buildings (Toorak Road Village between Williams Road and Grange Road has a few of these) sometimes have working fires for the same reason: easier to use the chimney than to retrofit ducted heating.
- The wine-bar-and-bistro hybrids — venues that operate cafe-style during the day and wine-bar-style after 5pm are the most likely to invest in a fire as part of the room’s atmosphere.
Strip cafes — the brunch-focused Saturday-morning operators — almost never have fires. They’re built for fast turnover, and a fire reduces seat turnover, which is the opposite of what they want.
The Strips to Walk
Toorak Road Village between Williams Road and Grange Road carries the most cafe density in Toorak. Walking the strip on a cold weekday afternoon between 2pm and 4pm is the way to find the warm rooms: you’ll see which cafes have visible chimneys, which have draft-resistant doors, and which are running fires (the smell of wood smoke or gas is unmistakable at the door).
Toorak Road from South Yarra east is the secondary strip — quieter, fewer cafes, but occasionally the better venues for a long-stay afternoon.
The walking move: start at one end of the main strip, walk slowly, and pop your head into anywhere that looks promising. The cafes that welcome you for a 90-minute coffee are also the ones that tend to invest in atmosphere — fires included.
Wine Bars That Work as Cafes
Toorak has a small cluster of natural-wine bars and bistro-bars that open from 4pm or 5pm and serve coffee, wine, and small plates. A few have small fireplaces or heated nooks. These are the venues to try for a 4pm-onwards “cafe-ish” warming session that turns into a glass of wine at 6pm and dinner by 7pm.
Look for venues with fewer than 30 seats, exposed brick or original wall stock, and a counter that runs both coffee and wine. These small operators are the most likely to run a fire because the room’s atmosphere is the entire product.
How to Confirm Before You Walk
Three quick checks before you commit a 15-minute walk to a venue:
- Check exterior photos online — visible chimney or stack means a real fireplace is at least possible
- Check interior photos — venues with fires usually photograph them; the absence of fire photos in their gallery is a soft signal
- Ring at 3pm — operators are happy to tell you whether the fire’s lit, and most lit fires stay lit through the afternoon
If a venue’s website or socials don’t mention a fireplace, it almost certainly doesn’t have one. Fires are a marketing line — operators with them lead with them.
What Toorak Cafes Do Well in Winter
Independent of the fireplace question, Toorak’s cafe stock has some genuine winter strengths:
- Solid coffee — most operators on Toorak Road Village between Williams Road and Grange Road run third-wave roasters and trained baristas; you won’t get a bad flat white here
- Slow-room atmosphere — outside the Saturday-brunch peak, Toorak cafes welcome 2-hour sits with a book or a laptop
- Reliable food — most venues run sourdough toasties, soups, and bowls through winter that work as a complete lunch
What Toorak cafes mostly don’t do well: large-group bookings, late-night service (most close by 4pm), and fast service during weekend brunch (you’ll wait).
A Cold-Weather Cafe Day in Toorak
Built around Toorak’s strengths, a working winter cafe day looks something like:
- 10am: Coffee at one of the Toorak Road Village between Williams Road and Grange Road cafes
- 11.30am: Walk to a second cafe with a heated room for an early lunch
- 2pm: A 90-minute reading session at a fireplace cafe (if you’ve found one that day)
- 4pm: Switch to a wine bar that opens from 4pm; small plates and a glass of red
- 6pm: Walk home or stay for dinner
This is a slow day by design. Toorak’s cafe stock rewards slow days; rushing the strip on a Saturday morning is a worse experience than walking it slowly on a Wednesday afternoon.
What This Means for You
For the genuine fireplace experience in Toorak, walk Toorak Road Village between Williams Road and Grange Road on a weekday afternoon and look for the older converted-house cafes and the small wine bars. Ring ahead if it matters; most operators will confirm the fire’s status. The Saturday-brunch strip cafes aren’t where the fires are — that’s the wine-bar-and-bistro tier of the Toorak hospitality stack, and it’s a different planning approach.
For more, see winter pubs in Toorak and indoor things to do in Toorak this winter. If you want a long-form winter Melbourne overview, the Melbourne winter guide for 2026 covers the season-wide planning.
Jack Carver writes about Melbourne’s inner suburbs for MELBZ.

