Overview
Laneway and CBD
Free museums and art
Coffee and food
Sport capital
Festivals and events
Day trips
History
Culture
Practical Info
Melbourne is best read as a fine-grained urban network rather than a list of attractions. The CBD sits on the Hoddle Grid — a strict 1837 plan of wide main streets (Collins, Bourke, Flinders, Spring, Russell, Elizabeth, Queen, William) crossed by narrower service streets, with a secondary lattice of laneways (Centre Place, Degraves Street, Hosier Lane, AC/DC Lane, Block Place) that has become Melbourne's defining ground-level character — independent cafés, bars, street art and small shops layered three storeys high in spaces never intended for pedestrians. Federation Square (2002) on Flinders Street holds the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) and the Ian Potter Centre (NGV's Australian collection); the larger NGV International on St Kilda Road across the river is one of the southern hemisphere's great galleries (free general entry). The free tram zone covers the entire CBD plus Docklands and the Queen Victoria Market end — single tap-ons within the zone are unbilled. Outside the zone the myki card or contactless bank card is required. Melbourne's inner suburbs each carry strong neighbourhood identities and reward thematic days: Fitzroy and Brunswick (Brunswick Street, Smith Street, Sydney Road — bookshops, vintage, indie music, brunch), Carlton (Lygon Street, Italian heritage, university and Royal Exhibition Building), Richmond (Bridge Road and Victoria Street's Vietnamese restaurants), Footscray (Vietnamese, Ethiopian, Sudanese and African Horn community in the west), St Kilda (Acland Street pâtisseries, Luna Park, beach and pier), South Yarra and Toorak (luxury retail and tree-lined streets), South Melbourne (Sunday market and bayside cafés). Sport is genuinely a civic religion: the MCG hosts Australian Football League (AFL) games drawing 80,000+ from March to September and was the heart of the 1956 Olympics; Rod Laver Arena hosts the Australian Open in late January (one of the four tennis grand slams); the Melbourne Cup horse race stops the country on the first Tuesday in November; the Formula 1 Grand Prix runs in March at Albert Park. Coffee culture is one of the world's strongest, descended directly from Italian and Greek post-war migrants and refined by a roaster scene led by St Ali, Market Lane, Proud Mary, Seven Seeds and Auction Rooms. Practical 4-day shape: day 1 CBD laneways, NGV and Federation Square; day 2 Fitzroy-Carlton and the Queen Victoria Market; day 3 Yarra River, Southbank, NGV International and the MCG/Olympic Park; day 4 St Kilda or a day trip — Great Ocean Road (Twelve Apostles, 3-day or long day), Phillip Island (penguin parade, day trip), Yarra Valley (wine, 90 min east) or Mornington Peninsula. Travellers from Switzerland, EU, UK, US, Canada, Japan and other visa-waiver countries need an Electronic Travel Authority (ETA, AU$20, 12-month validity, 3 months per visit) — apply via the official Australia ETA app or government site before flying.
Discover Melbourne
Transport & airports
Official planner and ticketing for Melbourne Trains, Trams and Buses. myki card or contactless bank card; daily fare cap around AU$11 weekdays. Free Tram Zone covers the CBD, Docklands and Queen Victoria Market.
Flight information, terminal maps and ground transport for Melbourne (Tullamarine) Airport — 23 km northwest of the CBD, served by SkyBus to Southern Cross Station every 10 minutes (~30 minutes).
Tourism & destination guides
Official tourism portal for Melbourne and the state of Victoria — events, neighbourhood guides, accommodation and the Great Ocean Road and Yarra Valley regional links.
38 hectares of botanic gardens east of Southbank — free entry, Aboriginal Heritage Walks led by Wurundjeri guides, and the Tan running track. One of Australia's finest gardens.
Official tourism site for the Great Ocean Road (Anglesea to Allansford, 240 km) — Twelve Apostles, Bells Beach, Otway National Park, drive itineraries and 1–3 day suggestions from Melbourne.
Culture & festivals
Australia's oldest and most-visited gallery, founded 1861, with 76,000+ works split between NGV International (St Kilda Road) and NGV Australia (Federation Square). Free general admission; paid international exhibitions.
Interactive screen-culture museum at Federation Square — film, video games, digital media, virtual reality. Free general admission, paid feature exhibitions.
Official site for MCG tours (75 minutes, daily 10:00–15:00 from Gate 3), AFL and cricket match tickets, and the Australian Sports Museum on site. The MCG holds 100,024 and is the spiritual home of AFL and Test cricket.
4 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.