Restaurant in Melbourne, Australia
CBD Italian Tradition

Caterina's on Queen St is a CBD Italian venue that suits weekday lunch regulars more than occasion diners. With easy booking and a low-key room, it's a practical choice for solo diners or small groups wanting Italian without the production of a destination restaurant. For a special occasion in Melbourne, Florentino or Flower Drum are stronger calls.
Caterina's at 221 Queen St sits in Melbourne's CBD at a corner of the market that tends to get misread: this is not a flashy destination restaurant designed for social media, and if you arrive expecting that, you will leave confused. What the address delivers is a neighbourhood-style Italian experience inside a city-centre building — closer in spirit to a local regular's spot than to the polished Italian fine dining you'd find at Florentino. Whether it earns a booking depends on what you're after, and the honest answer is that sparse public data means this one rewards a visit from someone willing to judge it on arrival rather than on credentials alone.
The Queen St address puts Caterina's squarely in Melbourne's legal and financial district, which shapes the room and the crowd more than the menu does. Lunch is the session most likely to be alive with regulars — the kind of office-adjacent Italian that fills at midday and quiets down after 2pm. If you've been once and are thinking about returning, the better move is a weekday lunch rather than a weekend dinner, when the surrounding streets empty and the energy follows them out. For a sense of how Melbourne's broader dining scene sits around this, our full Melbourne restaurants guide gives you the category context.
Counter or bar seating, if available, is the format that makes the most sense here. Italian venues at this price tier and footprint tend to work better when you're close to the action , watching plates go out, talking to staff who know the menu, and eating at a pace that suits you rather than a table-turn schedule. If you're a returning visitor, ask specifically about seating at or near the pass rather than defaulting to a table in the middle of the room. That shift in position often changes the meal more than any dish choice does.
Visually, the Queen St setting signals a room built for practicality over atmosphere , expect a fit-out that prioritises covers over drama. That is not a criticism; it sets the right expectation. You are not booking Caterina's for the room. You are booking it because you want Italian food in the CBD without the production of a special-occasion venue. For something with more theatrical presentation, Vue de Monde and Attica are in a different category entirely, both in price and in intent.
Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so walk-ins are likely viable at lunch , call ahead for dinner to be safe, as phone details are not publicly listed and the website is not available through Pearl's database at time of publication. Dress: Business casual is consistent with the CBD location; no formal dress expectation. Budget: Price range data is not confirmed in Pearl's records , budget for a mid-range Italian lunch as a baseline and verify current pricing directly with the venue. Getting there: 221 Queen St is accessible by tram along multiple CBD routes; Melbourne Central station is a short walk. See our Melbourne experiences guide for what to pair with a CBD lunch visit.
Caterina's makes most sense for CBD workers returning for a reliable weekday lunch, solo diners who want a low-pressure Italian meal close to the office, and small groups of two to four who don't need a booking three weeks out. It is not the call for a milestone dinner , for that, you're better served by Flower Drum for occasion dining with serious service depth, or Above Board if you want a counter experience that's been built around that format from the ground up. If Italian is the non-negotiable and you want to go further afield, 48h Pizza e Gnocchi Bar gives you a more focused, well-documented product to compare against.
If you're building a broader trip around Melbourne's dining scene, our guides cover hotels, bars, and wineries in full. For day-trip dining outside the city, Brae in Birregurra and Laura at Pt Leo Estate represent the upper end of Victoria's restaurant offer. Further afield, Botanic in Adelaide and Hentley Farm in Seppeltsfield are worth the trip if you're willing to cross state lines for a serious meal.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Caterina's | — | |
| Attica | — | |
| Flower Drum | — | |
| Vue de Monde | — | |
| Florentino | — | |
| 48h Pizza e Gnocchi Bar | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.