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Halal Food in Melbourne: The Best Halal Restaurants by Suburb

· · 12 min read
Halal Food in Melbourne: The Best Halal Restaurants by Suburb

Melbourne is arguably the best city in Australia to eat halal. It is home to the country’s largest Muslim community, and that shows up on the plate: entire streets and suburbs are dedicated to halal food, from Lebanese charcoal chicken and Turkish grills on Sydney Road, to the Afghan restaurants of Dandenong, the Uyghur, Malaysian and Vietnamese halal kitchens of the south-east, and a booming halal cafe-and-brunch scene. Whether you are hunting for the best halal restaurants in Melbourne, a proper halal breakfast, or a good butcher near home, this guide maps it all out suburb by suburb so you can eat well wherever you are.

We have organised Melbourne’s halal food scene by area — the northern strongholds around Sydney Road and Broadmeadows, the CBD and Lygon Street, the Afghan and South-East Asian south-east, and the fast-growing western suburbs — plus dedicated sections on halal breakfast and halal butchers. It is a big scene, so use the area that is closest to you as your starting point.

Always confirm halal status before you order

Halal status can change — a venue may gain or lose certification, change owners, or serve halal options only on part of its menu. This guide is a starting point based on current listings and reviews, not a certification. Before ordering, confirm directly with the venue whether they are fully halal-certified, Muslim-operated, or serve halal options only, and ask about the meat supplier and whether alcohol or pork is handled on site. When it matters, ask for separated cooking.

TL;DR: Where to Find Halal Food in Melbourne

Melbourne’s halal hotspots are Sydney Road in Brunswick and Coburg (Lebanese, Turkish and Middle Eastern), Lygon Street in Carlton and the CBD (diverse — Afghan, Persian, Malaysian, even halal Italian), and Dandenong (Australia’s Afghan food capital, centred on Thomas Street). Other major hubs are Broadmeadows and Roxburgh Park (Iraqi, Turkish), Preston, Reservoir, Thomastown and Lalor, the western growth suburbs of Werribee and Tarneit (South Asian and Middle Eastern), Footscray and Sunshine (African, Malaysian, Sri Lankan), and Springvale, Noble Park and Clayton (Uyghur, halal Vietnamese and Thai). The halal Lebanese chain El Jannah has outlets across the city. Halal butchers are easy to find in the north, west and south-east. As always, confirm each venue’s current halal status yourself.

Is Melbourne Halal-Friendly? What "Halal" Means Here

Very much so. Victoria has the largest Muslim population of any Australian state, concentrated in Melbourne’s northern, western and south-eastern suburbs, and the city has hundreds of halal or halal-friendly venues, several active halal food directories and community pages, and halal butchers in almost every migrant-heavy suburb. But as in any city, “halal” on a Melbourne menu can mean three different things, and it pays to know which you are dealing with.

  • Fully halal-certified: the venue holds a current certificate from a recognised Australian halal authority, and everything it serves is halal. The strictest and most reassuring category.
  • Muslim-owned / Muslim-operated: run by Muslim owners using halal meat, but not necessarily formally certified. Extremely common in Melbourne and generally trusted — but still worth confirming.
  • Halal options available: a mainstream restaurant that uses halal meat or offers some halal dishes, but may also serve alcohol or non-halal items on the same premises. Fine for many diners; check if strict separation matters to you.

Throughout this guide we note which venues are commonly described as certified or 100% halal where we can, but you should always verify the current status yourself before ordering. Now, let’s eat — starting in Melbourne’s halal-rich north.

The North: Sydney Road, Brunswick & Coburg

If Melbourne has a spiritual home for halal food, it is Sydney Road — the long, buzzing strip running through Brunswick and Coburg. For decades it has been the heart of the city’s Lebanese, Turkish and Middle Eastern communities, and it is lined end to end with bakeries, charcoal-chicken shops, kebab houses, sweet shops and grills, many of them fully halal or halal-certified. It is the single best street in Melbourne for a halal food crawl.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
A1 BakeryLebanese bakeryIconic Sydney Rd institution for manoush and pastries
Tiba’sLebanese100% halal certified, alcohol-free (504–508 Sydney Rd)
El JannahLebanese charcoal chickenHalal certified, famous garlic sauce (695–697 Sydney Rd, Brunswick)
Blue StoolMiddle Eastern grill100% halal (20 Sydney Rd, Coburg)
AlasyaTurkishLong-running Turkish restaurant
AntalyaTurkishGrills and pide in Coburg
Bar-B-Q LoungePakistaniPopular for BBQ and curries
Balha’s PastryLebanese sweetsBeloved for baklava and knafeh (645 Sydney Rd)
ZaatarMiddle EasternManoush and mezze
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Do a Sydney Road halal food crawl

Start with a fresh manoush at A1 Bakery, grab a charcoal chicken with garlic sauce from El Jannah, sit down for a Turkish mixed grill at Alasya or Antalya, and finish with baklava and knafeh at Balha’s Pastry. You can eat Lebanese, Turkish and Middle Eastern within a few blocks — all halal, and mostly walkable from Brunswick or Coburg stations on the Upfield line.

Preston, Reservoir, Thomastown & Lalor

The northern suburbs beyond Coburg have large and diverse Muslim communities — Middle Eastern, South Asian, Sri Lankan, Turkish and more — and a deep bench of halal restaurants along High Street in Preston and across Reservoir, Thomastown and Lalor. This is where locals go for everything from Syrian shawarma to Sri Lankan rice and curry.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
C’est LaViMediterraneanAll food halal, no pork served — highly rated (Preston)
Maharaja TandooriIndianHalal Indian, 560 High St, Preston
Shawarma TimeSyrianExcellent shawarma (Lalor)
Lankan La LaSri LankanEverything halal, very highly rated
El Jannah PrestonLebanese charcoal chickenHalal certified chicken
Ria Ayam PenyetIndonesianSmashed fried chicken, Preston
Chilli IndiaIndianHalal Indian curries
Melbourne Kabab StationKebabs / Middle EasternThomastown area favourite
Broadway KebabsKebabsReliable Reservoir kebab shop

The CBD & Lygon Street, Carlton

Lygon Street in Carlton is famous as Melbourne’s “Little Italy”, but over the past decade it has quietly become one of the city’s best halal dining strips too — with Afghan, Persian, Malaysian, Lebanese and even halal Italian restaurants sitting alongside the traditional pizzerias. Combined with the wider CBD, this is the most cuisine-diverse halal area in Melbourne, and the easiest to reach on public transport, so it is ideal if you are studying or working in the city.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
Kabana RestaurantAfghanTraditional Afghan, 167 Lygon St, Carlton
TawooqLebanese / Middle EasternPopular grill and mezze on Lygon St
Shish’d LygonMiddle Eastern grill129 Lygon St, with Juiced Lygon next door
Warong MummyMalaysianHome-style Malaysian, 108 Lygon St
Il GamberoHalal-friendly ItalianHalal beef and chicken pasta on Lygon St
Ziyka RestaurantIndian / Pakistani (desi)Well-known desi restaurant in Carlton
Maha RestaurantMiddle Eastern fine diningUpmarket, halal-friendly, in the CBD
D’Penyetz & D’CendolIndonesianHalal-friendly global chain, Lygon St
LazzatPakistani / IndianCurries and grills
PappaRichMalaysianPopular Malaysian chain
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Halal fine dining and halal Italian in the city

Two things make the CBD and Lygon Street special for halal diners. First, halal fine dining is actually possible here — Maha is the best-known upmarket, halal-friendly Middle Eastern option for a special occasion. Second, Lygon Street’s Italian heritage means you can find halal-friendly Italian, like Il Gambero, serving pasta with halal beef and chicken — a rare treat. As always, confirm the current halal status and ask about separated cooking when it matters.

Beyond Lygon Street, the CBD also has halal Uyghur and Malay-Chinese spots, Persian restaurants, and plenty of quick, halal-friendly options around the universities and Queen Victoria Market — handy for students at RMIT and the University of Melbourne. For a halal cafe brunch in the city, see the breakfast section later in this guide.

Dandenong — Australia's Afghan Food Capital

If you want the best Afghan food in Australia, go to Dandenong. The area around Thomas Street — often called the Afghan Bazaar — is packed with Afghan restaurants, sweet shops, bakeries and grocers, serving up fragrant kabuli pulao, tender mantu dumplings, charcoal kebabs and fresh bolani. Almost everything here is halal by default, because it is cooked by and for the local Afghan community. It is a genuine food destination, well worth the trip from the city (about 35–45 minutes by train on the Cranbourne/Pakenham line).

RestaurantCuisineNotes
Afghan SalangAfghanOne of Dandenong’s most loved, highly rated
Afghan HayatAfghanTraditional Afghan, 23–29 Walker St
Afghan KitchenAfghan247 Thomas St, in the heart of the bazaar
Balkh TakeawayAfghan256–258 Thomas St, quick and authentic
Afghan Mum’sAfghan100% halal, home-style cooking (301–303)
PamirAfghanLong-standing Afghan restaurant
SarwariAfghanPopular for kebabs and pulao
NajimiAfghanWell-regarded local favourite
AbraKebabraKebabsQuick halal kebabs
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What to order in Dandenong

New to Afghan food? Start with kabuli pulao (spiced rice with lamb, carrot and raisins), mantu (steamed dumplings with mince and yoghurt), a mixed charcoal kebab plate, and bolani (stuffed flatbread). Portions are generous, prices are reasonable, and many places do an excellent-value all-you-can-eat spread. Bring friends and order to share — it is how Afghan food is meant to be enjoyed.

Springvale, Noble Park & Clayton

The wider south-east is one of Melbourne’s most multicultural pockets, and its halal scene reflects that with something you will not find everywhere: halal Asian food. Springvale and Noble Park in particular are the go-to for halal Uyghur, Vietnamese and Thai — cuisines that are often hard to find halal — alongside the usual Middle Eastern and South Asian options.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
Dolan Uyghur Food HeavenUyghurFully certified halal, Queens Ave, Springvale
Le Feu OasisHalal VietnameseHalal pho and banh mi in Springvale
Ghin ThaiHalal ThaiDouglas St, Noble Park
Little Bad WolfBurgers / modernHalal certified, Noble Park
Clayton BBQ ChickenCharcoal chickenHandy for Monash University students
Afghan Tasty FoodAfghanHome-style Afghan in the south-east
Pitta Pan / Springvale KebabKebabsReliable quick halal meals

For students at Monash University’s Clayton campus, this cluster is especially useful — halal charcoal chicken, kebabs and Asian options are all a short trip away, and Springvale’s markets are great for halal groceries too.

The West: Werribee & Tarneit

Melbourne’s western growth corridor — Werribee, Tarneit, Hoppers Crossing and Point Cook — is one of the fastest-growing and most multicultural parts of Australia, home to large South Asian, Afghan and Middle Eastern communities. As a result its halal food scene has exploded, with new restaurants, cafes and takeaways opening constantly. If you live in the west, you are spoiled for choice.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
BBQ & CurriesPakistani / IndianPopular, 126 Watton St, Werribee
El Jannah TarneitLebanese charcoal chickenHalal certified chicken
Bangkok TarneitHalal Thai100% halal, 31/380 Sayers Rd, Tarneit
Pulao PlaceAfghanKabuli pulao and Afghan classics
Biryani HandiIndian / PakistaniBiryani specialist
IKILI Turkish KitchenTurkishGrills and pide
Desi DhabaIndianHome-style desi food, Tarneit
Serrano’s CaféCafe / brunchHalal cafe at Tarneit Gardens

Footscray, Sunshine & Braybrook

The inner and middle west has Melbourne’s richest African halal food scene, thanks to large Somali, Ethiopian and East African communities, alongside Malaysian, Sri Lankan and South Asian options. Footscray in particular is a food-lover’s suburb, and much of it is halal.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
Sahara RestaurantSomali / East AfricanWell-known halal African dining, Footscray
BarwaqoSomaliAuthentic Somali dishes
Selam / AbeshaEthiopianInjera and traditional Ethiopian food
Roti RoadMalaysianFamous for laksa and roti, halal
Palms RestaurantSri LankanHalal Sri Lankan, 163 Sunshine Rd, West Footscray
MadhumotiBangladeshiTraditional Bangladeshi cuisine
El Jannah BraybrookLebanese charcoal chickenHalal certified, 330 Ballarat Rd

Broadmeadows & Roxburgh Park

Back in the outer north, Broadmeadows and Roxburgh Park have big Iraqi, Turkish, Lebanese and broader Middle Eastern communities. The shopping centres here — Broadmeadows Central and Roxburgh Village — have become halal food destinations in their own right, with clusters of halal eateries under one roof, alongside standalone restaurants and bakeries.

RestaurantCuisineNotes
Tiba’sLebaneseHalal certified, 4/195 Somerton Rd, Roxburgh Park
01 KebabTurkishCertified halal, premium meats, Roxburgh Park
Al TanoorIraqiTraditional halal breakfast wraps and grills, Roxburgh Village
Sambal KampungMalay / ChineseHalal Malay-Chinese dishes
Halal UyghurUyghurHand-pulled noodles and lamb
DeganiCafeHalal-friendly cafe, Roxburgh

Halal Breakfast & Brunch in Melbourne

Melbourne is Australia’s brunch capital, and its halal cafe scene has caught up fast. A wave of 100% halal and Muslim-owned cafes now serve everything from a full cooked breakfast to smashed avo, bagels, specialty coffee and dreamy weekend brunch plates — no compromise required. These are some of the standouts.

CafeAreaKnown for
Wolf Cafe & EateryAltona North (+ other sites)100% halal brunch — the Mighty Wolf and Green Bowl
The Glass DenCoburgPopular halal brunch spot
Corba CafeCoburgHalal cafe with generous breakfasts
SumaNiddrieDreamy halal brunch plates
Bang On BagelsInner northHalal bagels and breakfast
HIYC CaféMelbourneInstagrammable, Muslim-friendly cafe
Al TanoorRoxburgh VillageTraditional Iraqi halal breakfast wraps

New halal cafes open regularly in Melbourne, so the local halal food community pages (see the tips section below) are the best way to keep up with the latest openings and pop-ups.

Halal Butchers Across Melbourne

Cooking at home is the cheapest way to eat halal, and Melbourne has excellent halal butchers in almost every migrant-heavy suburb — many offering hand-slaughtered chicken and a huge range of cuts at good prices. Here are well-regarded options across the city.

ButcherSuburbNotes
Coburg Market Halal Meat & PoultryCoburg (north)Reasonably priced, excellent quality — a local favourite
Erdem Halal MeatThomastown (north)Very highly rated, clean and friendly
AL-Fajr Halal MeatsPreston (north)Fresh meat, reasonable prices
Eastern Halal ButcherHuntingdale / Oakleigh (SE)Known for hand-slaughtered halal chicken
Deer Park Quality Halal MeatsDeer Park (west)Great quality and service, some outlets open 24 hours
Madina Halal MeatsSunshine area (west)Open seven days, family-focused
Williams Landing ButcherWilliams Landing (west)Recommended for hand-slaughtered halal chicken
Marmara Food Wholesale MarketHallam (SE)Halal meat plus imported groceries, wholesale prices

Many independent Middle Eastern, South Asian and African grocers across these suburbs also sell halal meat and pantry staples, and some larger supermarkets stock halal-certified chicken. For a fuller guide to halal, South Asian and international groceries, see our companion post on halal and South Asian food in Melbourne.

Melbourne's Halal Scene by the Numbers

Melbourne’s remarkable halal food scene is built on the largest Muslim community of any Australian capital. The data explains why whole streets and suburbs revolve around halal food.

FactDetail
Greater Melbourne Muslim population (2021 census)258,250 people — about 5.3% of the city (some estimates put it higher)
Victoria’s standingAround 3.3% Muslim — one of the highest shares of any state
Where the community livesConcentrated in the north, west and south-east — Hume, Brimbank and Greater Dandenong
MosquesMore than 25 mosques across Melbourne, plus many prayer rooms; well-attended mosques at Preston, Broadmeadows, Newport and Doncaster
Sydney Road nicknameSometimes called “Little Lebanon” for its Lebanese and Middle Eastern food
Peak bodyThe Islamic Council of Victoria, established in the late 1960s

That is why the halal hubs in this guide line up so closely with the northern, western and south-eastern suburbs — the food follows the community, and the community is large and long-established.

How to Verify a Halal Certificate

If certification matters to you, it helps to recognise Australia’s main halal certifying bodies. A genuine certificate will name one of these authorities, and their certification marks are protected under Australian trade-mark law.

  • ICCV — the Islamic Co-ordinating Council of Victoria, Australia’s largest halal certifier (Victoria-based)
  • AFIC — the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils
  • Halal Australia
  • Halal Certification Authority Australia (HCAA)
  • SICHMA — the Supreme Islamic Council of Halal Meat in Australia
  • ANIC — the Australian National Imams Council
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Certified, Muslim-owned, or halal options — and how to check

A displayed logo can be confirmed as genuine and current by contacting the certifying body, which keeps registers of the businesses it certifies. But many excellent Muslim-owned venues use halal meat without paying for formal certification, so a missing logo does not mean a place is not halal. When it matters, ask the venue who supplies their meat, whether they are certified, whether pork or alcohol is on the premises, and request separated cooking.

Real-Life Examples: Eating Halal Around Melbourne

Here is how eating halal actually plays out in different parts of Melbourne.

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Example 1: An Afghan feast day in Dandenong

Catch the train to Dandenong and walk into the Thomas Street Afghan Bazaar. Start with bolani and green tea, then sit down at Afghan Salang or Afghan Hayat for kabuli pulao, mantu and a mixed charcoal kebab plate — order to share. Browse the Afghan sweet shops and grocers afterward for pastries and spices to take home. A whole day of authentic, almost-entirely-halal Afghan food for very little money.
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Example 2: A student in the CBD

A student at RMIT or the University of Melbourne barely has to leave Carlton. Grab a quick Malaysian lunch at Warong Mummy or PappaRich on Lygon Street, an Afghan dinner at Kabana, or a Lebanese mixed grill at Tawooq. For a treat, halal-friendly Italian pasta at Il Gambero, or a special-occasion dinner at Maha. Queen Victoria Market nearby has halal-friendly stalls and butchers for cooking at home.
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Example 3: A family in the western suburbs

For a family in Tarneit or Werribee, the options are endless without a long drive: charcoal chicken from El Jannah, Pakistani BBQ at BBQ & Curries, 100% halal Thai at Bangkok Tarneit, or Afghan pulao at Pulao Place. Weekly meat comes from a nearby halal butcher like Williams Landing Butcher or Deer Park Quality Halal Meats. With mosques, butchers and restaurants all close by, the west is one of the easiest places in Australia to live a fully halal life.

Craving a specific cuisine? Melbourne has a halal version of almost everything: Afghan in Dandenong (Salang, Hayat); Lebanese on Sydney Road (A1 Bakery, El Jannah); Turkish in Coburg and Roxburgh Park (Alasya, 01 Kebab); African in Footscray (Sahara, Selam); Uyghur and halal Vietnamese/Thai in the south-east (Dolan, Le Feu, Ghin Thai); Sri Lankan in the west and north (Palms, Lankan La La); and halal Italian on Lygon Street (Il Gambero). Whatever you are homesick for, it is almost certainly here.

How to Find Halal Food Anywhere in Melbourne

  • Follow Melbourne’s halal food pages. Accounts like Halal Food Melbourne (@halalfoodmelbourne), Melbourne Halal Guide and Melbourne Halal Eats post new openings, certified spots and honest reviews — the fastest way to stay current.
  • Use halal directories. Sites like HalalHQ, Zabihah and Halal Food Melbourne let you search halal venues by suburb with reviews and cuisine filters.
  • Search by suburb on Google Maps. “Halal restaurants + [your suburb]” almost always turns up nearby options with hours and reviews.
  • Look for the certificate, and just ask. Certified venues usually display their certificate; if unsure, ask staff about the meat supplier, certification and separated cooking.

Frequently Asked Questions

Final Thoughts

Few cities in the world make eating halal as easy and as delicious as Melbourne. From Sydney Road to Dandenong to Tarneit, whole communities have built food scenes around halal cuisine, so wherever you live, great halal food is close by. Use this suburb-by-suburb guide as your map, confirm halal status directly with each venue, and lean on the local halal community pages to keep up with new openings. For groceries and a wider food guide, see our post on halal, vegetarian and South Asian food in Melbourne.

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