The fine diners and food-lovers’ favourites Sydney farewelled in 2025
From three-hatters Quay and Oncore to O Tama Carey’s Lankan Filling Station, these are the venues that recently served, or will soon serve, their last supper.
From three-hatters Quay and Oncore by Clare Smyth to the Bentley team’s Monopole and O Tama Carey’s Lankan Filling Station, these are the venues that recently served, or will soon serve, their final course.
December 29, 2025
With both Oncore by Clare Smyth and Quay announcing they will close in February next year, Sydney will lose two of the four three-hatted jewels in its crown. The degustation isn’t dead, but crippling price hikes and changing tastes are conspiring to make Sydney’s famed top-end dining pool a little shallower.
Contraction isn’t confined to the three-hat category, with Sydney sadly losing a mighty band of quality restaurants in 2025; the French-leaning Monopole from the Bentley team, Chippendale’s adventurous Longshore and O Tama Carey’s Lankan Filling Station all serving their last meals this year.
Oncore at Barangaroo will close in February.Courtesy of Crown Sydney
Celebrity chef Luke Nguyen and sister Pauline Nguyen’s Red Lantern ended its impressive 23-year-run in November, the restaurant’s third partner, Mark Jensen, telling Good Food that lower diner numbers, relentless rain, the economy and Sydneysiders’ fascination with new restaurants were some of the reasons behind the decision not to renew the Darlinghurst stalwart’s lease.
After an earlier exit at Tramsheds in Forest Lodge, China Diner closed its Bondi Beach branch, with co-owner Kingsley Smith explaining that the neighbouring gym has taken the Campbell Parade space, while the redevelopment of Manly Wharf was behind the August exit of Cheeseburger spring roll go-to, Potts Point’s joined the departures list on December 21 after a 15-year run.