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There are pubs that age badly, and there are pubs that age magnificently. The Victory Hotel, perched on the brow of Sellicks Hill with a panorama stretching across Aldinga Bay and the Fleurieu coast, belongs emphatically to the latter camp. This is one of Australia’s great gastropubs — weathered, warm and quietly formidable, with a wine cellar that would embarrass most fine-dining establishments in the country.
The Victory Hotel is the Fleurieu Peninsula’s anchor — a 170-year-old pub that has grown into one of Australia’s most quietly exceptional dining destinations.
AMBIENCE >
The Victory sits above the Southern Vales like it has always been there, because it has. The limestone-and-rendered façade speaks quietly of the 1850s, while inside, the dining room has been softened and civilised over decades without ever losing its essential pub soul. Timber, warmth, worn surfaces that carry memory — this is a room that feels lived in rather than designed. A wraparound veranda frames the coastal panorama, and on a clear afternoon the light across Aldinga Bay turns the kind of gold that makes you reach for a second glass before you’ve finished the first.
Willunga is where I grew up and spent much of my childhood on the beach, in the hills, through the vines and the almond trees. For all that time, the Victory Hotel on Sellicks Hill was always there; in the latter years it became a place for a drink with school mates. These days when I return to the Willunga / McLaren Vale area it becomes a place to seek out on a warm evening after a day on the beach, to watch the sun set while lounging out on the lawn, before setting down into a good meal with an excellent bottle of wine.
The front bar runs to its own rhythm — regulars nursing a pint of West End, a game of pool underway, the particular hum of a pub that genuinely knows its community. The restaurant beyond is a different register: tablecloths, considered lighting, and a quiet attentiveness from staff that stops well short of formality. It’s that rare place where you can come in dusty boots from a morning at Sellicks Beach and still feel the kitchen is taking you seriously.
Downstairs, the legendary wine cellar operates almost as a venue within a venue — a physical archive of over 8,000 bottles that guests are actively invited to explore and select from. It is, in every sense, the soul of the place.
EAT >
The menu at the Victory reads with the confidence of a kitchen that has no interest in trend-chasing. This is Modern Australian cooking anchored firmly in its geography — locally landed seafood, Fleurieu Peninsula meats, produce from the coastal and country districts that surround the pub — executed with the kind of disciplined restraint that only comes from decades of practice.
Begin, as almost everyone does, with the McLaren Vale olives: warm, marinated, fragrant with herbs and citrus, served with Andy Clappis’ famous bread that has achieved something close to regional legend status. Follow with Myponga Beach salt and pepper squid — just-caught, feather-light in its crumb, served with a citrus aioli that cuts through the richness without overwhelming the clean sweetness of the seafood.
The antipasto platter is generous enough to function as a shared main for two lighter appetites, but resist the temptation to stop there. The braised lamb shoulder — slow-cooked to the point of surrender, plated with roasted root vegetables and a jus that carries the weight of hours — is the kind of dish that justifies the drive from Adelaide alone. The smoked lamb rack with braised shoulder croquette, romesco sauce and green beans demonstrates the kitchen’s easy facility with both classic technique and contemporary presentation; it is precise, balanced and deeply satisfying.
The Victory Burger — this is not a pub afterthought but a considered, constructed thing: quality beef, proper cheese, a bun that holds its ground — remains the most-ordered item in the front bar for good reason. Seasonal specials rotate with genuine commitment to what is available and at its peak; the kitchen changes its vocabulary with the seasons rather than stapling a ‘specials board’ onto a static menu.
Desserts follow the same philosophy: comfort, technique, and the kind of execution that makes you glad you left room.
DRINK >
The wine program at the Victory is, without hyperbole, extraordinary. Over 8,000 wines are cellared beneath the dining room, with a focus that begins emphatically in McLaren Vale and extends outward through South Australia, the rest of Australia, and the old world — Burgundy in particular is represented with a depth and back-vintage reach that will arrest even the most well-travelled collector.
The cellar operates on an open-access model: guests descend, browse, and select. It is an experience in itself. Pricing is honest by any standard, and the staff guide it with genuine knowledge and without the condescension that sometimes accompanies serious wine lists. Local producers — d’Arenberg, Yangarra, Samuel’s Gorge, Wirra Wirra — feature prominently, and there is a particular pride in the Rudderless label, the estate’s own small-batch wines made from the three-hectare vineyard Doug Govan planted around the hotel itself.
The bar carries a well-chosen selection of draught beers, premium spirits and a compact cocktail offering for those not inclined to descend into the cellar’s depths. BYO is also permitted with a corkage of $20 per bottle — a generous provision for those arriving from nearby McLaren Vale tastings with a trophy bottle in hand.
CONCLUSION >
The Victory Hotel occupies a rare position in Australian hospitality: a pub of genuine historical provenance that has evolved, under single ownership, into one of the country’s most quietly distinguished dining and wine destinations without sacrificing the essential warmth and accessibility that make a great pub a great pub. It is the kind of place that rewards loyalty — the wine list deepens with each visit, the specials board charts the seasons, and the room feels more comfortable the more you know it.
Come for the view and the squid; stay for a second bottle from the cellar, pulled from a rack that d’Arry Osborn and Greg Trott used to browse when they were regulars here in the 1990s. That continuum — of place, of people, of wine — is what makes the Victory genuinely irreplaceable.
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Image Credit | ALMANAK & Victory Hotel
address |
Main South Road,
Sellicks Hill SA 5174
Phone | (08) 8556 3083 / (08) 8556 3072
Website | victoryhotel.com.au
Instagram | @victoryhotel


























