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Gastronomy, Festivities and Frivolity: A Weekender's Guide to Adelaide During Mad March

Heading to Adelaide for Mad March? Here’s how to spend a weekend during Fringe and WOMADelaide — including where to stay, eat, drink, play and wander.
Eliza Campbell
April 08, 2026

Overview

Adelaide is often sold on what sits just beyond it: The Barossa, The Adelaide Hills, The Fleurieu Peninsula — long lunches, wine tastings and the promise of a slow, restrained kind of indulgence. But during Mad March, the city makes a far louder case for itself, shrugging off some of that tidiness and slipping into something more expansive — busier, brighter and much more culturally alive than its reputation as the 'City of Churches' might suggest.

In the early days of Autumn, Adelaide feels most switched on. The parklands fill, the East End hums, the bars spill out and even the shortest walk begins to feel faintly eventful, as though the whole CBD has agreed to operate at a slightly higher frequency for a few weeks. Much of that energy comes from Adelaide Fringe, which turns the city into a kind of open-access performance map each February and March, with comedy, cabaret, theatre, circus and music scattered across venues, lawns, tents and temporary precincts in a way that makes the whole place feel less like a host city and more like part of the show.

The Adelaide Fringe Festival — Tourism Australia

Then there is WOMADelaide, which arrives with a different mood altogether. Set in Botanic Park/Tainmuntilla, it offers a softer, broader counterpoint to Fringe's after-dark buzz — more immersive than frenetic, more transportive than chaotic, and the kind of festival that encourages lingering. Where Fringe gives Adelaide its late-night pulse, WOMADelaide brings depth and drift: global music, ideas, food and performance unfolding under the trees in a setting that feels removed enough to lose entire afternoons to.

That is precisely why a specific itinerary helps at this time of year, because Mad March rewards proximity. Adelaide is never a particularly difficult city to move through, but in March, being in the right part of it makes all the difference. Keep yourself anchored around the CBD, East End and parklands, and the weekend begins to assemble itself with very little effort — breakfast bleeding into galleries, a late lunch into a show, a drink into dinner, another drink into something much later.

WOMADelaide — WOMADelaide Foundation

WOMADelaide is the one to book ahead for; Fringe, by contrast, benefits from a looser hand. Lock in a few things you really want to see, then leave enough room for instinct, overstimulation and the occasional excellent accident. Read on for our guide to the best ways to experience a weekend in Adelaide in Mad March.


Market & Meander at Hotel Indigo — Hotel Indigo Adelaide

STAY

Hotel Indigo Adelaide Markets

Set in the Market Precinct, Hotel Indigo Adelaide Markets is a cheerful boutique base that folds local references into its design language without feeling overly themed — drawing on the neighbourhood's industrial past while still delivering polish, amenities and a decided 'cool' factor. Don't let the word 'boutique' fool you, you'll find a downstairs restaurant, rooftop pool, gym and rooftop bar all within the building.

Perfect for: travellers who don't want to sacrifice personality for amenities.

Location: 23–29 Market Street, Adelaide SA 5000

Sofitel Adelaide

The Sofitel Adelaide is a polished CBD stay that brings a little more occasion to the weekend without tipping into stiffness. The appeal here is not just the refinement of the rooms or the sense of classic city luxury, but the fact that it places you within easy reach of Rundle Mall, North Terrace's major institutions and a good portion of the city's Mad March foot traffic, plus all the creature comforts you'd expect at this price point.

Perfect for: travellers after a more polished, occasion-worthy city stay.

Location: 108 Currie Street, Adelaide SA 5000


Part of the pleasure of being in Adelaide at this time of year is that you can spend entire days drifting between festival precincts, bars, food stalls and accidental snacks without ever feeling short of options. But if you want to build in a few more elevated meals — the kinds of venues worth pausing for — these spots succinctly slot into a day of Mad March adventuring.

EAT: Breakfast

Hey Jupiter — South Australian Tourism Commission

Hey Jupiter

This long-running French brasserie on Ebenezer Place has enough charm to make breakfast feel like a stop on the itinerary, rather than simply the first logistical task of the day. There is something about its Parisian lean, its terrace and its all-day sense of occasion that suits festival weekends especially well: come for something quick if you need to get moving, or settle in and let the morning stretch a little longer than planned. The petit dejeuner menu spans croissants and cultured butter to croque monsieur, brioche French toast and richer, more old-world options like oeuf meurette or a breakfast cassoulet laced with pork belly, smoked ham and duck confit.

Must order: Oeuf Meurette

Location: 11 Ebenezer Place, Adelaide SA 5000

Arlo's

If the morning calls for something faster and more functional, Arlo's offers a nonchalant practicality in the form of coffee, fresh juices, cabinet-loaded breakfast and quick turnarounds. In an effort to not let convenience diminish qualtiy, the offerings are simple — but expertly executed. Smoked salmon bagels, chicken schnitzel rolls, ham-and-cheese croissants, quiche and the sort of pastries that quietly suggest breakfast is the perfect time to carb-load.

Must order: Cinnamon Scroll

Location: Shop 7, 82 King William Street, Adelaide SA 5000


EAT: Lunch

OMADA Bar & Grill

OMADA

OMADA is Currie Street's new Greek-inspired bar and grill. An easy-breezy interior faintly suggests a Cycladic shoreline, paired with a menu primarily communicates via coal and fire — taking cues from Greek tradition without being overly reverent about it. Cloud-like pita dipped into salty tarama, chargrilled octopus, avgolemono-laced dolmades and larger-format meats and seafood designed to be passed around the table. The drinks list carries just as much identity, with locally-made aperitifs and spirits, and a whole page of the menu dedicated to ouzo and tsipouro as they're meant to be treated — slowly, properly and with enough time to turn a long lunch into something that starts to resemble a pleasantly hazy afternoon.

Must order: Roast Pork Gyros

Location: 46 Currie Street, Adelaide SA

Kiin

Kiin takes Thai-inspired cooking and runs it through a more polished, contemporary filter, resulting in a lunch offering that feels both high-impact and highly considered. The menu moves between bright, sharp and playful flavours — oysters with turmeric and ginger vinaigrette, prawn and lychee pop sticks, tuna crudo, red curry cheeseburger sliders — and richer, more substantial dishes like pad kee mao spaghetti, braised beef in green curry and roast coconut potatoes. The drinks program pulls in accompanying flavours of pandan, makrut lime, Thai tea, mango-coconut and spice for a twist on the usual house classics

Must order: Red Curry Sliders

Location: 73 Angas Street, Adelaide SA 5000


EAT: Dinner

Tarantino's — The Big Easy Group

Tarantino's

Tarantino's takes an old-school New York-Italian mood and gives it a more contemporary, slightly unrulier menu than you might expect. Executive chef Shane Wilson centres the open-hearth grill, but the food moves well beyond straightforward red-sauce nostalgia, folding in Asian accents through dishes like lobster with bonito butter and parmesan rind dashi or cucumber and fennel salad with basil, sesame and chilli crisp. It leans into a more atmospheric, occasion-driven style of dining, the sort of place that suits a city weekend built around late starts, late finishes and the idea that dinner should feel like part of the entertainment rather than simply a stop between other plans. 

Must order: Woodfired Scallops with Nduja Butter

Location: 30 Vardon Ave, Adelaide SA 5000

Africola

If you want one meal that captures Adelaide in full Mad March mode, Africola is it. The high-voltage menu (in flavour, not in spice) is African-inspired rather than narrowly regional, and thrives on smoke, spice, ferments and open-flame grills — with vegetables given as much swagger as the meats. One minute you are in kingfish sashimi and fermented chilli territory, the next in peri peri chicken, dahl, white bean and chilli crisp, or grilled and smoked cuts that feel built to meet the room's energy head-on. Housed in a colourful East End building, dinner here should be lively, a little unruly and ideally followed by a drink somewhere nearby.

Must order: Chicken Skin Sandwich (and the off-menu 'Peri-Back' shot)

Location: 4 East Terrace, Adelaide SA 5000


DRINK

The Stag Public House — Josh Geelan

Proof

Proof earns its place in an Adelaide weekender, not because it is trying to overly dazzle, but because the drinks list is more interesting than most bars of its size have any right to be. Wine is taken seriously, cocktails lean inventive without becoming overwrought, and there is enough curiosity in the back bar — absinthes, Australian vermouths, brandies grouped by fruit origin — to reward anyone who wants something a little less obvious than a standard spritz. Even the food follows the same logic: toasties, cheeses, sardines and anchovies that feel chosen for what they do with a drink rather than tacked on as an afterthought.

Location: 9a Anster Street, Adelaide SA 5000

The Stag

The Stag brings a different kind of energy — more public-house than cocktail bar, but still with enough personality to earn a place in the itinerary. During Mad March, venues like this matter just as much as the more polished ones, because sometimes what the day calls for is not another high-concept drink but somewhere central, easy and pleasantly low-pressure to reset, regroup or let one round become two. Plus, it's as close as you can humanly be to The Fringe festivities without actually being inside The Garden [of Unearthly Delights]. 

Location: 299 Rundle St, Adelaide SA 5000


PLAY

2K.W. Bar and Restaurant — South Australian Tourism Commission

2K.W.

Adelaide as a city rates pretty damn high on the prettiness scale. If you want to begin the evening somewhere you can really soak in all that Colonial-era architecture (while being far away from the Mad March riff-raff), 2K.W. is the move. Set high over King William Street, it turns a rooftop perch into something much more persuasive — all broad city views and the kind of cocktails-and-small-plates atmosphere that makes it very easy to stay longer than intended.

Location: 2 King William Street, Adelaide

Cry Baby

If the night is still going, Cry Baby is a rough-edge (at least by Adelaide standards) option, ready to sweatily embrace you with open arms. It has the spirit of a dive, but with enough intention behind it to stop the whole thing from collapsing into cliché: strong spirits, loud music, a working jukebox, and a late-night temperament that makes it feel entirely plausible to stay far later than originally planned.

Location: 11 Solomon Street, Adelaide SA 5000


Garden of Unearthly Delights — South Australian Tourism Commission

WANDER

Mad March may be the hook, but Adelaide is very easy to fill in around the edges, which is part of what makes it such a good city for this kind of weekend. The East End is the clearest place to start, not least because it already contains so many of the trip's natural overlaps: bars, boutiques, cafes, galleries, laneways and a longstanding relationship with Fringe that gives the whole precinct a built-in sense of movement during March.

From there, it is easy to stitch together a day that includes Adelaide Central Market, the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide Botanic Garden, Rundle Street and Ebenezer Place, with very little sense that you are ever leaving the city's main current behind.

Kiin Restaurant

And if you want to stretch the trip beyond Mad March proper, that is when Adelaide's proximity to the regions comes back into focus. One of the city's more persuasive qualities is that it allows you to do both things well: immerse yourself in a festival-heavy city weekend, then tack on an extra day of wineries and slower lunches without much effort at all. Mad March may be the reason to book the trip, but it does not have to be the reason it ends there.

Concrete Playground was a guest of the South Australian Tourism Commission.

Images: South Australian Tourism Commission (see individual credits)

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