Food & Drink
7 Legendary Outback Pubs You Need to Drink at This Winter
Published 22 March 2026
Winter is pub season in the Outback. The daytime heat eases, the verandahs fill with caravans and dusty utes, and every bar counter becomes a bulletin board for road conditions, fishing reports, and who saw what crossing the road last night. These seven pubs are not a checklist for one frantic week — they're stops along the routes you already drive, each with its own mythology.
Start at the edge of the Simpson if you're coming up the Birdsville Track. The Birdsville Hotel is the most famous pub in the country for good reason: cold beer after corrugated dirt, live music when the races aren't on, and a dining room that understands hungry travellers.
Winton is Waltzing Matilda country and the North Gregory Hotel sits at the centre of town life. Banjo Paterson wrote the anthem nearby; today the front bar hosts everyone from grey nomads to palaeontologists fresh from the dinosaur digs.
Muttaburra is tiny on the map and enormous in character. The Exchange Hotel is the kind of place where the publican knows your rig by sight and the locals will tell you exactly which road to avoid after rain.
Further south-west, Noccundra sits almost alone on the Adventure Way — a pub, a few cottages, and horizon in every direction. Pull in before dark; the stars here deserve a slow pint on the verandah.
Hebel straddles the NSW–Queensland border with easy humour and a bar that has seen every kind of traveller. It's a natural lunch stop between Moree and the inner Outback.
Adavale is almost a ghost town — almost. The hotel and general store keep the community heartbeat going. Winter evenings here are quiet in the best way: a meal, a beer, and the Milky Way overhead.
Finish at the Royal Mail Hotel in Hungerford if you're looping back toward the Darling. It's heritage, hospitality, and the satisfying click of a long drive done well. Seven pubs, one season, and a winter's worth of stories — that's the Outback crawl done properly.

