27 Best Restaurants in Coromandel and the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand

Bistro at the Falls Retreat

$$$$ Fodor's choice

It might be way out in the bush, but this restaurant could stand proud in any big city. Dine inside or out, beneath the trees, and watch the chefs in the open kitchen adding wood to the pizza oven or creating contemporary cuisine with organic-farmed beef and lamb and vegetables straight from the garden. For flavor and innovation, try the chef’s choice of three seasonal tasters. This is a great option for family dining---there’s so much space and a little playground---and it’s actually only about 10 minutes away from either town, Waihi or Paeroa. Accommodation is available too, from $180 per night.

Eggsentric Café

$$$$ | Flaxmill Bay Fodor's choice

In addition to great food, this restaurant has a community-hub feel thanks to live music sessions, poetry readings, film nights, and a summer sculpture symposium. The dinner menu reaches beyond standard café fare, and there's also a great range of classic breakfasts and fresh baked goods. Be sure to check the on-site shop Eggstras for quality deli items to take on your journey. The café is about 1 km (0.6 mile) from the Whitianga ferry landing, with a free pick-up service if you don't fancy the 10-minute walk.

Rosie and Breadhead

$ Fodor's choice

There’s a vintage retro feel at this unassuming café that belies the amazing fresh-baked goods produced within. Cabinets are crammed with pastries, breads, cakes, panini and other sandwiches, and some truly fantastic cakes like the passionfruit curd cake. Salads and lots of vegetarian options are on the menu, the coffee is consistently good, and tea lovers can choose from a list of organic, loose-leaf flavors. The place is loved by the locals and if you eat in you’re likely to get to know them at the big communal tables.

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UMU Café

$$ Fodor's choice

Like many places to eat on the peninsula, this casual café does a roaring trade with mussels and seafood. But lots of Kiwi café foods are also here, like full breakfasts, salads, and pies, while the dinner menu serves all the classics. Quiches, cakes, and sandwiches are handmade every day, and the coffee is fair-trade. You can enjoy your food and drinks indoors or alfresco. Nothing is deep-fried.

Babinka Restaurant and Bar

$$
A delightful blend of cuisines can be found here, from authentic curries from Sri Lanka and India to modern New Zealand classics, including seafood specialties and quality steaks. There’s also a breakfast menu, and local and imported beers and wines from the bar.
62 The Strand, Bay of Plenty, 3120, New Zealand
07-307--0009
Known For
  • <PRO>refreshing mango lassi</PRO>
  • <PRO>relaxed ambience</PRO>
  • <PRO>house-baked desserts</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed 2--5

Café 4u

$$

Salted-caramel, white-chocolate, and creme-custard donuts are among the decadent favorites at this central Whakatane café. However, sandwiches and savory pies are other options from the cabinet, and you can order from a full breakfast and lunch menu for something cooked freshly on site. The small lemon meringue pies are snapped up quickly, too, but you'll always have something to choose from in the house baking line.  Indoor and outdoor seating is available.

Down Thyme Restaurant and Cafe

$$$

Mediterranean food and ambience are the focus at this quiet restaurant tucked away on the edge of town. The finest local produce, organic where possible, is matched with quality international and local craft beers and wines.

31 Orchard Rd., Waihi, Bay of Plenty, 3610, New Zealand
07-863--8980
Known For
  • house-made ice cream
  • Angus beef cheeks
  • Mediterranean-style risottos
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.

Go Vino

$$
This café’s small shared plates feature an eclectic fusion of Asian and classic European flavors with a strong Kiwi touch. Try the tea leaf salad, Burmese-style, with roasted soy beans, peanuts, kawakawa (a pepper-flavored native plant), cabbage, and tomato; ostrich and beef cheek; or the braised octopus with nectarines. Sit inside in candlelight or under the trees in the buzzy garden with the locals.

Harbourside

$$$$
The food and the view will vie for your attention here, as you dine on contemporary New Zealand cuisine. The menu is created largely from local artisan products, and you can admire Tauranga Harbour from the stunning waterfront location. The quite pricey à la carte menu encompasses starters or starters to share as well as light meals that can be appetizers depending on the size of your appetite, mains, and desserts. From the grill, meats come with a choice of butters and sauces. Reservations are recommended, particularly if you want a spot on the over-water balcony.

Hereford 'n' a Pickle

$

The meat and produce in this café and store all come from the owner’s very own farm, Kairaumati Hereford Stud. The meat is processed on-site, the sausages are made from an old family recipe, and the free-range eggs, honey, vegetables, jams, and pickles are all homegrown. For lunch, there’s a range of burgers (regarded widely as the best on the peninsula), toasted sandwiches, hot chips, muffins, and cakes, plus real fruit ice cream. You can dine in the garden, then pick up some farm-fresh meat and condiments to enjoy later.

Izakai Bar and Eatery

$$$

The Bayfair Shopping Centre may seem an unlikely place to find one of the area's most innovative restaurants, but this is well worth seeking out. Izakai combines Māori ingredients and cooking styles with Japanese cuisine, so you'll find hāngi-style pork belly and watercress with ramen (noodles); smoked kahawai with cabbage fritter, Tokoyaki sauce, and pickled red onion; and creamed paua (local shellfish) and prawn gyoza (dumplings). The centerpiece of the restaurant is a long curved bar, but you can also sit at high tables near the window or in a more intimate booth-like setting.

Macau Restaurant and Lounge

$$$
Fresh flavors right from Asia are blended with the best of local New Zealand meats, seafood, and vegetables at this popular-with-the-locals waterfront eatery. As with current restaurant trends, small plates are made for sharing, so you can enjoy a blast of flavors and just keep ordering until you're full. If the myriad choices look confusing, let the kitchen decide and order a banquet. There’s a lounge bar upstairs, open from 4 pm on, for relaxing into the evening.
59 The Strand, Tauranga, Bay of Plenty, 3110, New Zealand
07-578–8717
Known For
  • crying tiger grilled beef sirloin
  • steamed buns, spring rolls, and dumplings
  • banquet-style menu options

Manaia Café and Bar

$$$$

This spacious, centrally located café–restaurant can get busy with both visitors and locals. Breakfast kicks off at 9 am with all the standard Kiwi options. Salads, burgers, and fish-and-chips come on the menu for lunch; dinner is still casual but with slightly more upmarket fare with a good range of lamb, steak, salmon, pork, and vegetable dishes on offer. If you arrive during the day, pop into the adjacent Manaia Gallery, which sells jewelry, art, and crafts.

Mount Bistro

$$$$

The high prices set this restaurant apart from other local options, but then again so does the food: in the open-plan kitchen, nationally renowned chef Stephen Barry fuses quality indigenous meats, seafood, and produce with Pacific Rim flavors. À la carte menu choices range from small tapas to share and appetizers (which can also be requested in a slightly larger portion size) to full main courses. For those who inevitably want a taste of all the desserts, there's a tasting platter. The street-side restaurant looks out onto Mauao (Mt. Maunganui).

6 Adams Ave., Mount Maunganui, Bay of Plenty, 3116, New Zealand
07-575–-3872
Known For
  • signature flambé seafood dish
  • multicourse degustation menu
  • dessert tasting platter
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch

Orchard House Cafe

$$$

Just off the road but with a backdrop of fruit trees, this is a fitting place to stop for breakfast or lunch in an area known for its fresh produce. A tasty vegetarian choice is the "Figotten Shroom" (balsamic mushrooms on a potato rosti stack with spinach and a dollop of fig jam). Standard fare like loaded fries, nachos, and "fush and chups" (a gentle jibe at the Kiwi accent) can be found here too. Dine inside, or take advantage of the park surroundings and settle at an outdoor table.

603 State Hwy. 2, New Zealand
07-549--1924
Known For
  • plenty of off-road parking, with room for campervans and motorhomes
  • early closing (at 3 pm)
  • good children's menu
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

Pepper Tree Restaurant and Bar

$$$$

The standout restaurant in town showcases local produce, shellfish, fish, lamb, and beef. Lunch easily segues into dinner in the sheltered courtyard or in front of the fire, depending on the season. Service is swish and prices are up there, but you get what you pay for. All-day brunches and light lunches are also served.

Poivre & Sel

$$$$
The existence in a small seaside town of such a high-quality French fusion eatery pleasantly surprises many visitors. French chef Samuel Goslin remains true to classical French cuisine, at the same time allowing for the Kiwi taste for less salt and less fat. His wife Severine guides the front of house with a sophisticated yet relaxed ambience, whether inside or out in the cottage garden. Seasonal and local produce features options like Ora King salmon and Coromandel scallops.
2 Mill Rd., Whitianga, Waikato, 3510, New Zealand
07-866--0053
Known For
  • <PRO>French classics like garlic snails</PRO>
  • <PRO>dish presentation that is more like art</PRO>
  • <PRO>two- or three-course degustation menus</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

Salt Restaurant and Bar

$$$

Put a slightly upscale yet still casual restaurant in a popular local hotel, with a waterside location in a vacation town, and you've got this can't-miss dining spot. There is casual pub dining in the bars, but Salt, with its alfresco dining by the palm-edged marina, is the star. The menu changes with the seasons, sometimes offering free-range pork belly with prawn dumplings, lamb backstrap, or grass-fed eye fillet with béarnaise sauce. Bar snacks include lots of fresh seafood such as Coromandel mussels. Reservations are recommended in summer.

1 Blacksmith La., Whitianga, Waikato, 3510, New Zealand
07-866–5818
Known For
  • great raw bar with oysters and ceviche
  • steamed mussels
  • slow-roasted lamb sharing plate
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

Sidetrack Cafe

$

At the base of Mauao and across the street from the beach, this bustling café is a great place for breakfast or lunch after a climb or swim. Grab a table (there are more outside than in) for a blueberry muffin, blue cheese scone, a falafel, a salad, or a dense chocolate brownie. Or get a huge sandwich and a smoothie to go, and head off to a quiet spot on the trail that rings The Mount.

1 Marine Parade, Mount Maunganui, Bay of Plenty, 3116, New Zealand
07-575–2145
Known For
  • tasty muffins and pies
  • smoothies to go
  • excellent coffee
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Sola Café

$

A consistently good community café, Sola offers an all-vegetarian menu but it’s no health food bar. Counter food includes tasty risotto cakes, Florentines, and fresh fruit shortbreads. Try a breakfast of potato-and-fresh-herb frittata or pan-fried polenta with smoked field mushroom, spinach, and feta for lunch. They also cater to wheat and gluten-free diets. Local cheeses and chutneys from the deli counter make great picnic fixings.

720b Pollen St., Thames, Waikato, 3500, New Zealand
07-868–8781
Known For
  • <PRO>excellent vegetarian menu</PRO>
  • <PRO>tasty berry friend (a small, sweet cake made from ground almonds and egg whites, often topped or filled with fruit)</PRO>
  • <PRO>lots of teas</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Credit cards accepted

Surf and Sand

$
A classic New Zealand takeout experience, this is the spot to get a quintessential Kiwi-style beachside lunch or dinner of fish, shellfish, chips (fries), and burgers. When the fish (battered or crumbed) and chips are done well, they’re not too greasy or fatty. You could even wash them down with a bottle of the very sweet Lemon & Paeroa (the iconic Kiwiana soda made not too far from the Coromandel).
Shop 7, Main Rd., Tairua, Waikato, 3508, New Zealand
07-864–8617
Known For
  • classic New Zealand fish-and-chips
  • kūmara (sweet potato) fries
  • battered Coromandel oysters

The Bean Cafe and Roastery

$

Mellow jazz might be playing in the background, local art graces the walls, and the retro couches and armchairs are great spots to chill out and enjoy a coffee, which is freshly roasted every day in the café. Snack options include bagels with any filling you desire, egg and bacon rolls, sandwiches, cakes, and slices. Alfresco dining is available as well.

72 The Strand, Whakatane, Bay of Plenty, 3120, New Zealand
07-307–0494
Known For
  • in-house coffee roasting
  • quirky and arty decor
  • excellent bagels
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

The Junction Hotel

$$$

Within one of the few hotels remaining from the gold rush days, you'll find classy pub grub in a convivial atmosphere. The Grahamstown Bar Diner (GBD) is the main restaurant bar, serving everything from breakfast and lunch to bar snacks and pizzas to evening main courses. On weekends, it gets pretty packed late night thanks to music gigs. Down the back is a more casual bar with pool tables; upstairs, there are some basic but clean and excellent-value accommodations.

The Refinery

$

Hidden down a side street (look for the sign on the main street), you'll find this gourmet home-cooking surprise. This café gem serves breakfasts, muffins, scones, cakes, and shortcakes alongside build-your-own bagels and counter "sammies" crammed with choices of grilled meats, haloumi (salty cheese of goat and sheep's milk), and vegetables. The focus is on free-range, organically grown ingredients. Set in a 1914 heritage building that was originally a bank gold refinery, they also offer a boutique one-bedroom accommodation, the Refinery Guard’s Cottage, and an adjacent open plan Miner’s Cabin. Prices are from $99 per night.

5 Willoughby St., Waikato, 3600, New Zealand
07-862--7678
Known For
  • best bagels in the region
  • cornbread Reuben grilled sandwiches
  • historic building
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.

The Talisman Hotel

$$$

The 1876-built Talisman Hotel offers quality pub fare, with a focus on using local produce where possible. You’ll meet the locals here, be it over brunch, lunch, or dinner, where your meal could be anything from crammed-full burgers to confit duck leg. Suggested wine matches for the evening mains suggest more care than your standard pub grub.

The Vessel

$$$

This restaurant is "nautically themed" and really means it; the bar and kitchen are both housed in shipping containers. The atmosphere is casual to the extreme, so come in your swimwear if you feel comfortable doing so, and order some locally inspired pizzas. Burgers and salads are also available. Although there's seating inside, on a sunny day you are more likely to be seated outside under a shaded umbrella.

35b Captain Cook Rd., Waikato, New Zealand
07-866-0773
Known For
  • Kahawai Keeper, which is topped with smoked fish, capers, red onion, and few other goodies
  • good burgers and salads
  • plenty of outdoor seating for sunny days
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed May--Sept.

White Island Café

$$

At the base of Moutohora Island Tours, run by Ngati Awa Tourism, this place specializes in breakfast and lunch. The café opens up from 7 am to 2 pm, and its right by the water, as good an excuse as any to try the delicious seafood chowder with its mix of prawns, calamari, fish, and mussels. Also recommended is the potato and kale soup with red roasted almonds. The café serves a hearty Kiwi breakfast and also specializes in fresh-baked pastries.