REVIEW · BRISBANE
Brisbane: Vertigo Experience – Sunset bites
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Vertigo Brisbane · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Food, views, then gravity. The Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites experience puts you on a shared charcuterie board four storeys above the city, with golden-hour skyline views over Brisbane Powerhouse. You’ll finish with a 17-metre dropline moment that turns dinner into an event.
The one real consideration is the physical side of access: you must be able to climb 100 stairs to reach the roof level, and there are height/weight limits (110cm and 25–120kg). If you’re sensitive to heights or unsure about harness comfort, plan your drop choice carefully and wear the right clothes from the start.
In This Review
- Key Things You’ll Love About Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites
- Dining Four Storeys Up: The Core Idea That Works
- The Harness, the Climb, and Safety Reality Check
- What You Eat: Standard vs Vegan Charcuterie Boards
- Vertigo Standard Grazing Box (GF)
- Vertigo Vegan Grazing Box (GF)
- The drink setup
- The Golden-Hour Views and Why They Matter
- The 17-Metre Dropline Finale (Plus Your Walk-Back Option)
- Price and Value: Is $140 Worth It?
- Getting There: New Farm Logistics Without Stress
- What to Wear (and What to Leave Behind)
- Who Should Book This Sunset Bites Session
- A Note on How the Evening Runs
- Should You Book Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites?
- FAQ
- Where is Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites located?
- How long is the experience?
- Do I need to choose my charcuterie option in advance?
- What food is included, and are there gluten-free options?
- Is an alcoholic drink included?
- Can I skip the dropline and just walk back down?
Key Things You’ll Love About Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites

- Four-storey dining: shared charcuterie while you hang high over Brisbane Powerhouse
- Golden-hour timing: you eat as the light softens across the city
- Standard or vegan boards: both include GF crackers, pre-selected at booking
- One drink included: plus unlimited soft drinks and water during the experience
- 17m dropline finale: adrenaline at the end, or choose to walk back down
- Staff-led safety routine: harness up, then take in the views with a guide close by
Dining Four Storeys Up: The Core Idea That Works

Brisbane Powerhouse isn’t a normal restaurant backdrop. Vertigo turns it into a vertical dining setup, so you’re eating far above street level while the building’s facade frames the whole experience. The result feels like a mix of city sightseeing and dinner with a built-in thrill.
I especially like how the experience is designed around time and position. You’re seated up high before the drop moment, so the meal isn’t rushed and the views aren’t an afterthought. Even if you’re not chasing adrenaline, the setting does a lot of the entertaining for you.
And because your meal is shared charcuterie, the vibe stays relaxed. You’re not doing formal courses or fussing with plating. You’re sampling, passing, and taking photos in between, all while suspended on the side of the building.
Other evening experiences in Brisbane
The Harness, the Climb, and Safety Reality Check

Before you get dramatic with photos, you’ll go through a safety routine. Expect harnesses, seats, and staff support throughout. You’ll also climb up to the roof level first, so this isn’t a “walk in, sit down” kind of dining.
Here’s what matters for planning: you must be able to climb 100 stairs. The experience is described as not physically demanding, but the route is still a real stair climb. If stairs are tough for you, consider asking ahead how the experience is handled for your mobility needs, even though wheelchair access is listed.
There are also height and weight requirements you should take seriously (110cm minimum height and 25–120kg weight range). If you’re on the edge of either limit, don’t guess—confirm before you book. Same idea for age: minimum age is 10.
What You Eat: Standard vs Vegan Charcuterie Boards

This is a charcuterie experience with two clear choices, and you have to pick your option at booking time: Standard or Vegan. The board is shared and served to your table, which keeps things social without turning it into a full-on food competition.
Vertigo Standard Grazing Box (GF)
The Standard board focuses on sliced meats and classic pairing flavors. You’ll get salami and mortadella, plus pickles, grapes, cheese, quince, pickled chillies, and olives. It comes with gluten-free crackers, which helps if you want a straightforward, safe base.
The mix makes sense for high-altitude dining. Salty meats and tangy pickles keep the flavors bold even when you’re busy watching the skyline. And grapes and quince add sweetness so it doesn’t feel like you’re just eating salt and fat.
Vertigo Vegan Grazing Box (GF)
The Vegan board keeps the same structure but swaps in plant-based components. Expect grilled seasonal vegetables, vegan cheddar, pickles, grapes, olives, and pickled chillies. Like the Standard option, it also comes with gluten-free crackers.
This option is good if you want a charcuterie style experience without having to guess what’s inside. The menu is specific, so you can avoid the usual “is this actually vegan?” uncertainty that makes some shared platters stressful.
The drink setup
Your package includes one alcoholic drink per person, plus unlimited soft drinks and water. One important detail: guests must have a blood alcohol level of 0.00% at the start of the experience, so don’t arrive already tipsy and expect to drink right away.
The Golden-Hour Views and Why They Matter
Vertigo’s “sunset bites” isn’t just a name. The plan is to enjoy the sky-high views at golden hour before the drop-line portion. That timing changes the whole mood: the city looks brighter and softer at the same time, and shadows help define the skyline.
Because you’re suspended off the side of Brisbane Powerhouse, your viewpoint has edges and angles you don’t get from a typical rooftop dinner. It’s not just “pretty views”—it’s an unusual sense of height combined with a stable, guided experience.
I also like that you’re not rushed through the views. You sit, you eat, and you watch light shift while the building acts like a frame. For many people, the meal becomes the excuse to slow down and actually look.
The 17-Metre Dropline Finale (Plus Your Walk-Back Option)

The end of the night is the part that turns heads. You’ll descend the Brisbane Powerhouse facade via dropline, and it’s described as a 17-metre drop under your feet. That’s a big number, and it’s the kind of moment where your brain does that quick “wait, we’re really doing this” calculation.
The good news: you have a choice. After the experience, you can do the adrenaline inducing dropline finale, or you can choose to walk back down through the Brisbane Powerhouse interior.
That choice is valuable for peace of mind. If you’re excited but not fully sure, you can plan to take the walk-back route without the guilt of skipping the signature moment. If you’re the type who wants the full story, you’ll likely love finishing with the drop.
Price and Value: Is $140 Worth It?
At $140 per person for a one-hour experience, the cost isn’t “cheap eats.” But it isn’t just paying for food either—you’re paying for the vertical setup, safety system, and the dropline finale option.
Here’s what you actually get for the price:
- Access to Vertigo Brisbane as a four-storey vertical dining experience
- A shared charcuterie board with a clear Standard or Vegan menu (GF crackers included)
- One alcoholic drink per person, plus unlimited soft drinks and water
- Staff with you through the process
- The high, golden-hour viewpoint with a 17-metre drop-line finale option
When you break it down, the drink and the board help justify the meal component, but the real value is the combo: dinner + views + a built-in thrill. If you’ve done rooftop restaurants before, this feels different because you’re not just looking at height—you’re living inside it for the evening.
Getting There: New Farm Logistics Without Stress

Vertigo starts at Brisbane Powerhouse, 119 Lamington St, New Farm. You’ll find the Vertigo Brisbane shop front located to the left of the front entrance. Traffic congestion can happen around Brisbane Powerhouse, so give yourself extra time.
For most people, the easiest approach is public transport. The venue recommends using ferry or bus, plus ride-sharing or taxis. If you’re driving, the paid car park offers around 150 parking spaces.
One practical tip: show up a little early and settle in. You’ll be climbing and doing a safety harness routine, so starting calm beats starting rushed. Also, the rules are strict about what you can bring and wear, so you want a moment to confirm you’re good before check-in.
What to Wear (and What to Leave Behind)

This experience is safety-first, and your outfit matters. The dress request is shorts or pants (avoid skirts or dresses because of the harness). Wear closed-toe, rubber-soled, comfortable shoes, since you’ll do some climbing.
The rules also get specific about accessories. The provider asks you to avoid necklaces, dangling earrings, and bangles for comfort and safety. Tie back long hair. If you forget and show up with dangling jewelry, you might spend your first minute planning fixes.
There are also clear “no” items:
- High-heeled shoes
- Sandals or flip flops
- Backpacks and bags
- Slippers and bare feet
- Pets
- Smoking and vaping
- Alcohol and drugs
One detail that surprises some people: there’s a mobile phone lanyard option. It’s listed as not included, with a cost to hire or purchase. If you want phone safety during the drop moment, plan for that ahead.
Who Should Book This Sunset Bites Session

Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites is a great fit if you want a fun, structured dinner with a strong “wow” factor. The shared charcuterie style works well for couples, groups of friends, and anyone who likes social food without formal restaurant pacing.
It also fits people who enjoy views but don’t want a passive experience. You’re actively part of the vertical setup. The finale choice—dropline or walk-back—helps too, because you can match the evening to your comfort level.
It’s not a match if:
- You’re pregnant (pregnancy is listed as not suitable)
- You’re under 10 (minimum age is 10)
- You’re outside height/weight limits
- You don’t do well with heights and harness setups, even if you pick the walk-back option
And because you need to climb 100 stairs, it’s smart to consider that up front if mobility is an issue. Wheelchair access is listed, but the stair requirement is part of reaching the roof level, so it’s worth checking what route and support looks like for your situation.
A Note on How the Evening Runs
The flow is straightforward: you arrive at Brisbane Powerhouse, get harnessed, and head into your seated setup four storeys above ground. You’ll enjoy the city views at golden hour, then you’ll be served your pre-selected charcuterie board.
After your meal and the included drink, you’ll finish with the drop-line finale or the walk-back option. The whole experience is built around a tight one-hour window, so plan to travel with buffer time and keep your schedule flexible enough to enjoy it instead of rushing it.
The staff presence is a big part of the comfort factor. One recent review highlighted how kind and supportive the team felt, and that matches what you’d want in a place where safety systems are doing most of the heavy lifting.
Should You Book Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites?
Book it if you want a Brisbane dinner that feels like a story, not just a meal. The value is strongest when you care about the full package: the four-storey charcuterie setting, the golden-hour views, and the option to end with a 17-metre dropline.
Skip or reconsider if stairs are a problem for you, if you don’t like harness-based experiences, or if the strict dress and footwear rules would be a hassle. With the walk-back alternative, you still get a memorable evening even if you’re not ready for the drop.
If you’re planning a New Farm evening and want something different from the usual restaurant circuit, this one earns its place on the list. Just plan your outfit, confirm your charcuterie choice ahead of time, and arrive with enough time to get settled before the high part of the night starts.
FAQ
Where is Vertigo Brisbane Sunset Bites located?
It takes place at Brisbane Powerhouse, 119 Lamington St, New Farm. On arrival, the Vertigo shop front is to the left of the front entrance.
How long is the experience?
The duration is 1 hour. Starting times depend on availability.
Do I need to choose my charcuterie option in advance?
Yes. You must pre-select either the Standard or Vegan charcuterie box at the time of booking.
What food is included, and are there gluten-free options?
You get a shared charcuterie board. The Standard grazing box and the Vegan grazing box are both listed as gluten-free (served with gluten-free crackers).
Is an alcoholic drink included?
Yes. The package includes 1 alcoholic drink per person, plus unlimited soft drinks and water. There is also a requirement that blood alcohol level is 0.00% at the start of the experience.
Can I skip the dropline and just walk back down?
Yes. After the experience, you can choose to do the 17-metre dropline finale or walk back down through the Brisbane Powerhouse interior.































