Bass & Flinders Distillery
232 Balnarring Rd, Tuerong VIC 3915 · $$
A Peninsula gin distillery with a gin-school blending session that has quietly become one of the region's best wet-weather plans.
Mornington Golf Club is the closest Peninsula course to Melbourne — about 60 minutes from the CBD via the freeway. That proximity makes it the obvious choice for a day-trip round or an after-work nine, and the reason casual Melbourne golfers know it well. The course itself is parkland, relatively short, and more practical than dramatic. Not the round you drive down for; the round you take when you are already in Mornington. Visitor play is straightforward — the club takes public bookings, and the weekend pressure is less than at the coastal links courses. The facilities are solid. The course drains reasonably well through winter. Pricing is fair. For a first-visit Peninsula golfer who wants to play somewhere scenic without the drive to Cape Schanck or Fingal, Mornington is a reasonable start. Pair it with brunch at Commonfolk, a walk along the Esplanade, and the Wednesday farmers' market if your timing lines up.
Pair it with a booking
The best explore pages should lead somewhere next.
232 Balnarring Rd, Tuerong VIC 3915 · $$
A Peninsula gin distillery with a gin-school blending session that has quietly become one of the region's best wet-weather plans.
16 Progress St, Mornington VIC 3931 · $$
The Peninsula's most serious roaster, hidden in a Mornington warehouse with a cafe out the front.
Main Street, Mornington VIC 3931 · $$
The Mornington town-centre day spa, reliable treatments, sensible pricing, and the sixty-minute option that fits before lunch on Main Street.
Keep going
The foreshore walk between Mornington and Mount Martha is the Peninsula's most dog-friendly significant walk and one of its most reliably beautiful - seven kilometres one way along the coast, with sweeping Port Phillip Bay views, heritage bathing boxes, clifftop lookouts, and several quiet little beaches you can detour into along the way. Start at Mornington Pier and walk south toward Mount Martha, or reverse the direction for a later-afternoon light run. The track is well-formed throughout, accessible to most fitness levels, and supports everything from a fast morning run to a leisurely family stroll. It is the best long morning walk on the bayside, followed by coffee at either end. For the full seven kilometres, allow 90 minutes walking at a brisk pace or two hours with stops. For a shorter segment, the stretch between Mills Beach and Fossil Beach is particularly good.
Open the guide →MPRG is the region's most consistently interesting art institution - a public gallery with a permanent collection weighted toward Australian modernism and a rotating program of contemporary shows that punches well above the town's weight. The building is understated, the staff are genuinely helpful, and entry is free. This is the Peninsula's best wet-weather fallback, and more importantly it is the move that stops a Mornington day from feeling like a brunch-and-shop circuit. Check the program before you go - the photography and print shows are especially good, and the gallery occasionally lands major national touring exhibitions that would normally require a drive into the city. Combine with lunch on the Mornington main street and a walk down to the Esplanade afterwards.
Open the guide →Mount Martha is the gentlest swim on the Peninsula. The beach curves south in a long, shallow arc of pale sand, protected from the prevailing winds, shallow enough for kids, and deep enough fifty metres out for a real swim. The northern end carries the famous heritage-listed bathing boxes; the southern end runs into the coastal reserve and eventually hits the cliff track south toward Balcombe. Unlike the back beaches at Sorrento, this is a swim-first beach rather than a walk-first one. If you only have one bay-facing afternoon on the Peninsula and you want it to feel genuinely restorative rather than dramatic, come here. Easy parking outside of January. A single beach kiosk. Nothing to plan - which is exactly the point.
Open the guide →Further reading
2 May 2026
Mornington is the Peninsula's commercial hub, but that undersells it badly. Done properly, it is the best entry point for first-timers — a town with enough main-street life, foreshore access and market culture to explain the region before you drive any further south.
9 April 2026
The long lunches get the headlines. But the Peninsula's first hour of the day - the flat white, the croissant out of the oven, the eggs on a working bakery's sourdough - is the quieter, better-value half of the food story. Here is where locals go, and the order to do it in.
Where to eat