Restaurant · Brisbane
Best restaurants in Brisbane ranked by Google reviews.
We pulled the top-ranked restaurants in Brisbane from Google’s own
listings. Here’s the leaderboard, what the leaders share in common, and how
a branded biglove.to link helps yours close the gap.
Data refreshed from Google Places.
Leaderboard · top 10
Who’s winning the review race in Brisbane.
- 01
Exhibition Restaurant
Basement 2/109 Edward St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.9 ★ · 383 reviews
- 02
Opa Bar & Mezze
123 Eagle St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.8 ★ · 3,917 reviews
- 03
Rich & Rare Restaurant
97 Boundary St, West End QLD 4101
4.8 ★ · 3,260 reviews
- 04
Longwang Restaurant
144 Edward St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.8 ★ · 1,940 reviews
- 05
Pompette
The Star Brisbane, The Terrace, Level 4/33 William St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.8 ★ · 1,577 reviews
- 06
Stilts Dining
147E Alice St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.8 ★ · 919 reviews
- 07
Massimo Restaurant & Bar
123 Eagle St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.7 ★ · 4,013 reviews
- 08
Dark Shepherd
The Star Brisbane, The Terrace, Level 4/33 William St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.7 ★ · 1,131 reviews
- 09
Toscano Bar & Kitchen
2 Edward St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.7 ★ · 1,116 reviews
- 10
Naldham House
33 Felix St, Brisbane City QLD 4000
4.7 ★ · 402 reviews
What the leaders share
Patterns from the top of the leaderboard.
Restaurants live and die on Google reviews. The places at the top of this list have figured out how to ask — politely, repeatedly, without gating.
- They ask every customer, every visit. Not just the obvious fans. The compounded effect of asking 100% of customers — even shyly, even with friction — beats asking 10% of customers enthusiastically.
- They make the link short enough to say out loud. The restaurants at the top of the Brisbane leaderboard print a memorable URL on receipts, table tents, or cards. Long Google review URLs don’t survive the trip from till to phone.
- They don’t gate. No "rate us 5 stars first" forms. No satisfaction filters that route happy customers one way and frustrated customers another. Google’s 2026 review policy and the FTC’s 2024 Consumer Reviews Rule both prohibit gating, and the leaderboard reflects it — the top Brisbane restaurants are clean.
- They follow up once, never twice. The polite single ask converts. The pushy second ask annoys.
How to climb the Brisbane restaurant leaderboard
Five steps that move the needle in 90 days.
- 01
Claim a memorable review URL.
Pick a slug that customers can read off your receipt.
biglove.to/your-restaurantbeats the long Google URL on every printed surface. Free preview at biglove.to/check — no signup needed to see your slug + QR. - 02
Print the QR somewhere your customers see it twice.
Receipt and door sticker is the highest-conversion combo. The customer sees the QR when they pay, again when they leave, and again at home if they keep the receipt. Three impressions beats one impression by a wide margin.
- 03
Make the ask part of the script.
Train staff to mention the QR card during natural pauses ("If you enjoyed this, our Google review code is right here on the receipt"). Don’t script a 5-star pitch — that’s gating. Just point at the QR.
- 04
Reply to every review within 48 hours.
Public replies signal an active, accountable restaurant — both to future customers reading the reviews AND to Google’s ranking signals. A short, sincere thanks is enough; engagement matters more than length.
- 05
Track which ask path works.
Pro tier on biglove.to gives you click analytics — country, hour, device, referrer — so you can tell whether the receipt QR or the email signature is actually driving the reviews. Optimize what you can measure.
Run a restaurant in Brisbane? Claim your slug.
Type your business name in the slug checker and see your printable QR card in under 30 seconds. Free preview, no signup needed. Pay only when you’re ready to print.
Find my restaurant →$37/year or $4/month · cancel anytime · slug locked in