
Image credit Orange 360
A Day Trip to Millthorpe: Your Self-Guided Guide from Orange
Some of the best days we see our guests have start with a quiet breakfast in their suite and end with a glass of something local and a slow drive back through farmland as the sun drops behind the hills. Nine times out of ten, those days involve Millthorpe.
Just 20 minutes from our front door at de Russie Boutique Hotel, Millthorpe is one of those places that genuinely earns the word “charming.” It is a heritage village of cobbled streets, bluestone buildings, cellar doors, and independent boutiques – the kind of place that slows you down in the best possible way. It was recently nominated in the 2026 NSW Top Tourism Town Awards (Tiny Tourism Towns category), and if you have spent any time there, you will understand why.
This is the self-guided day trip we hand to every guest who asks us what to do beyond Orange. We have put it together based on what we know works: where to start, what to linger over, where to eat, and how to make the most of a single, unhurried day.
Plan your visit Thu to Sun. Most of Millthorpe’s shops, cellar doors, and cafes operate Thursday to Sunday. We recommend timing your trip accordingly to get the full experience.
Start the Morning Right: Breakfast at de Russie Boutique Hotel

Before you even think about the drive, there is breakfast to enjoy. Every suite at de Russie Boutique Hotel comes with a complimentary continental breakfast, prepared and placed in your suite before you arrive. It is a proper start to the day: fresh, unhurried, and eaten at your own pace with no dining room schedules to worry about.
This matters more than it sounds. Millthorpe is a village best experienced slowly, and arriving there relaxed and well-fed makes a real difference. We replenish breakfast daily throughout your stay, so whether your Millthorpe day is day one or day three, the morning ritual stays the same.
Once you are ready, the drive itself is worth savouring. The route winds through rolling countryside framed by vineyards and farmland. It takes about 20 minutes and sets the tone for everything that follows.
The Cellar Doors: Where to Begin

Image credit Visit NSW + Angullong Wines Website
We recommend starting your Millthorpe visit with a wine tasting. It sets a relaxed pace and gives you something to talk about over lunch. There are two standout cellar doors to choose from, and both are worth your time.
Angullong Wines
Angullong is housed in a beautiful historic bluestone building that feels like it belongs on a postcard. The setting alone makes it worth the stop, and the wines back it up. The Angullong family has been farming this land for generations, and that connection to place comes through in the glass. It is a classic country cellar door experience done properly.
Tamburlaine Millthorpe Cellar Door
If you prefer something with a more contemporary feel, Tamburlaine is the pick. They are a certified organic producer, one of Australia’s largest, and their Millthorpe cellar door is a relaxed space to explore their sustainable varietals. It is a good conversation starter if you are curious about organic and biodynamic winemaking in the Orange wine region.
Our suggestion: Visit one cellar door in the morning before lunch, and save the second for a leisurely afternoon tasting. It paces the day well and leaves room for everything in between.
Lunch at Tonic: The Reason to Book Ahead

Image credit DNSW
Tonic is the kind of restaurant that makes a day trip feel like a proper occasion. It has been award-winning since 2003, holds a chef’s hat, and centres its menu around the best local produce and regional wines the Central West has to offer. If you are visiting Millthorpe and you do not eat at Tonic, you have left the best bit out.
“Tonic Restaurant celebrates innovative cuisine using the finest local produce and regional wines.” – Tonic Restaurant
The menu changes with the seasons, so what you eat in autumn will be different to what lands on the table in spring. That is the point. The kitchen is deeply connected to what is growing and being produced around Orange and Millthorpe, and it shows.
Tonic opening hours:
- Thursday: Dinner 5:30 pm – 9:30 pm
- Friday: Dinner 5:30 pm – 9:30 pm
- Saturday: Lunch & Dinner 12:00 pm – 9:30 pm
- Sunday: Lunch 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Bookings are essential. We strongly recommend securing a table before you arrive in Millthorpe, particularly on weekends. Saturday lunch is especially popular.
Explore the Village: What to Find on Pym Street

Image credit DNSW
After the cellar doors, Millthorpe rewards a slow wander. The village is compact and walkable, with most of its best spots along and around Pym Street. Here is what we point guests towards:
The Old Mill Cafe & Restaurant
If you want a proper coffee and something to eat before the cellar doors open, The Old Mill is the place. It sits right on Pym Street in a building that looks exactly as a Millthorpe cafe should, and it has been feeding visitors and locals since well before the village became a weekend destination. The kitchen is known for its housemade pies, cakes, and locally roasted coffee – the kind of place where you order at the counter, find a table outside in the sun, and end up staying longer than planned.
The menu runs through breakfast and lunch: wraps, salads, burgers, pies, frittata, fish and chips. Nothing fussy, all good. It is also vegetarian and vegan friendly, which is worth knowing if you are travelling with mixed dietary needs.
More Stops Worth Making
- Millthorpe Sweets and Treats – Handcrafted local sweets, nostalgic lollies, and artisanal chocolates. A genuinely lovely stop, and hard to leave empty-handed.
- Galvanised at Millthorpe (The Lampshade Shop) – One of Millthorpe’s most talked-about hidden gems. Colourful, one-of-a-kind lampshade designs and homewares that you will not find anywhere else.
- Millthorpe Providore – Small-batch pantry staples, gourmet produce, and local goods. Great for picking up something to bring home or back to the suite.
- Clothing and Gift Boutiques – Several independent stores along Pym Street stock artisan goods, regional crafts, and homewares. Worth a browse even if you are not looking for anything specific.
The Heritage Walk
If you want to stretch your legs, Millthorpe’s streetscape itself is worth exploring on foot. The village retains much of its 19th and early 20th century architecture, and the Golden Memories Millthorpe Museum features eight heritage buildings that tell the story of the town’s history. It is a quieter stop but a meaningful one, particularly if you appreciate the history of the Central West.
According to Destination NSW, Millthorpe is “a very picturesque spot that is well worth the visit” – which, if you have spent an afternoon wandering its streets, feels like an understatement.
See more to do in Millthorpe here
Return and Unwind: Your Suite is Waiting

By the time you make the 20-minute drive back to Orange, you will have covered a lot of ground for a single day: wine, lunch, boutiques, heritage streets, and more. The kind of day that feels full without ever feeling rushed.
That is exactly what a good base makes possible. At De Russie, our 25 self-contained suites are designed for this kind of travel: comfortable enough to genuinely relax in, well-appointed enough to feel like a treat, and located close enough to Orange’s CBD that nothing requires effort.
Pull into our EV charging bay if you need it, head up to your suite, and let the evening unfold at whatever pace suits you. There is no check-in desk to queue at, no restaurant sitting time to meet. Just your suite, your itinerary done for the day, and the kind of quiet that comes from a day well spent.
Frequently Asked Questions
Published: 15th April, 2026


