
7 public toilet locations mapped across Australia's most famous wine region — 80+ cellar doors, 1 hour from Adelaide. From Tanunda's main street to Menglers Hill Lookout, every guaranteed dunny in wine country sorted. Because the gap between cellar doors with customer loos and the next public toilet can catch you out on a tasting day.
7 facilities available in Barossa Valley
📍 Street View
Click on a toilet marker to see the street view
The Barossa is spread across 4 main towns with 10-15 minutes between each. Here's where to find a dunny based on what you're doing.
Cellar door customer toilets + Tanunda/Angaston public
Most cellar doors have customer toilets during tasting hours. Between stops, use Tanunda or Angaston main street facilities.
The 80+ cellar doors generally offer toilet access to tasting customers. But if you're just driving past or it's after hours, the public toilets in Tanunda, Angaston, or Nuriootpa are your only guaranteed options. Seppeltsfield Road has no public toilets along its 6km stretch.
Tanunda Main Street toilets
Central public toilet on Murray Street near the shops, cafes, and galleries.
Tanunda is the Barossa's main town for visitors. The public toilets on Murray Street are well-maintained and centrally located. Most cafes and restaurants also offer customer facilities.
Bethany Reserve + town facilities
The Barossa Trail passes through Tanunda, Nuriootpa, and Angaston. Bethany Reserve is mid-route.
If you're cycling the Barossa Trail or riding between cellar doors, plan for Bethany Reserve between Tanunda and the eastern wineries. The main towns are each 10-15 minutes riding apart on the trail.
Market portables + Angaston main street
Saturday morning market at Vintners. Portable toilets provided on market days.
The Barossa Farmers Market at Angaston has portable facilities on site. The permanent Angaston main street toilets are a 2-minute walk if you prefer a proper loo.
Restaurant customer toilets
All winery restaurants have customer toilets. These are your best facilities in the valley.
Restaurants like Hentley Farm, Appellation, and 1918 all have excellent customer facilities. If you're dining, you won't need public toilets — but between lunch and your next cellar door, know where the public ones are.
Barossa Visitor Centre (Lyndoch)
First stop entering the valley. Accessible toilets, baby change, visitor information.
Coming from Adelaide via Gawler, the Barossa Visitor Centre at Lyndoch is your first guaranteed toilet in the valley. It's well-signed on the Barossa Valley Way. After Lyndoch, next public toilet is Tanunda (15 minutes).
The Barossa has 80+ cellar doors — most offer customer toilets during tasting hours. But they're not public toilets. Here's what to know.
Australia's premier wine region — world-class Shiraz, 180 years of winemaking history, and some of the country's best food. An hour from Adelaide with enough to fill a long weekend.

80+ cellar doors from iconic (Penfolds, Jacobs Creek) to tiny family operations. Shiraz is king but the old-vine Grenache and Riesling from Eden Valley are world-class.
Every Saturday 7-11:30am at Vintners, Angaston. Local produce, artisan bread, smallgoods, cheese. The Barossa's foodie heart. Arrive early for the best selection.
The sealed Barossa Trail connects Tanunda, Nuriootpa, and Angaston. Flat, easy riding through vineyards. Hire bikes in Tanunda. Perfect for winery-to-winery rides.
Panoramic views across the entire Barossa Valley. Short drive from Tanunda via Menglers Hill Road. Sunrise and sunset are spectacular. Toilet on site.
6km heritage road lined with date palms connecting 12+ cellar doors. Walk, cycle, or drive. The most iconic wine road in Australia. No public toilet — use cellar doors.
Celebrity chef Maggie Beer's farm shop and eatery in Nuriootpa. Tastings, cooking demos, and the famous Pheasant Farm pate. Customer toilets available.
The Barossa Reservoir dam wall creates an acoustic phenomenon — whisper at one end, hear it 140m away at the other. Free, family-friendly. No toilet on site (use Lyndoch).
Artisan cheese at Barossa Valley Cheese Co, smallgoods at Schulz Butchers, olive oil, chocolate. The Barossa is as much about food as wine.
Three main bases for exploring the valley. Tanunda is the tourist hub, Angaston is quieter and foodie-focused, Nuriootpa/Lyndoch gives you the northern or southern end.
The main tourist town. Most accommodation options, restaurants, and shops. Walking distance to cellar doors. Central to everything in the valley.
Nearest dunny: Tanunda Main Street toilets (accessible, baby change, 24hr).
Quieter, more upmarket. Close to Eden Valley wineries and the Farmers Market. Boutique B&Bs and heritage cottages. The foodie end of the valley.
Nearest dunny: Angaston Main Street toilets (accessible, 24hr).
Nuriootpa is the commercial centre (supermarkets, services). Lyndoch is the gateway from Adelaide. Both have caravan parks and budget options alongside quality stays.
Nearest dunny: Coulthard Reserve (Nuriootpa) or Barossa Visitor Centre (Lyndoch).
From luxury vineyard estates to heritage pubs. All have ensuite bathrooms — the Barossa is well set up for overnight visitors.
| Property | Type | Location | Ensuite | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Novotel Barossa Valley Resort | Resort | Rowland Flat | Yes | Golf course, pool, restaurant. Midrange option between Lyndoch and Tanunda. |
| The Louise | Luxury | Marananga | Yes — premium | Luxury vineyard accommodation. Appellation restaurant on site. The Barossa's finest. |
| Vine Inn Barossa | Hotel/Motel | Nuriootpa | Yes | Solid midrange. Restaurant, bar, central Nuriootpa location. Good value. |
| Tanunda Hotel | Heritage pub | Tanunda | Yes — renovated | Historic pub with renovated rooms above. Walking distance to everything in Tanunda. |
The Barossa food scene matches the wine. All restaurants below have customer toilet facilities.
| Restaurant | Cuisine | Location | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fermentasian | Asian fusion | Tanunda | $$ | Asian-inspired dishes with Barossa produce. Casual, popular. Book ahead. |
| 1918 Bistro & Grill | Modern Australian | Tanunda | $$$ | Heritage building. Regional produce menu. Excellent wine list. Tanunda institution. |
| Maggie Beer Farm Eatery | Regional produce | Nuriootpa | $$ | Farm shop and eatery. Tastings, picnic hampers, cooking demos. Tourist favourite. |
| Appellation | Fine dining | Marananga | $$$$ | At The Louise. Tasting menu with vineyard views. One of Australia's best regional restaurants. |
| Hentley Farm | Fine dining | Seppeltsfield | $$$$ | Multi-course set menu in a restored stable. Award-winning. Book weeks ahead. |
Budget-friendly options with full amenities. The Barossa has several well-equipped caravan parks — all with toilet and shower blocks.
| Park | Toilets | Showers | Powered | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barossa Valley Tourist Park | Yes | Yes | Yes | Tanunda location. Pool, camp kitchen. Walking distance to town. Most popular option. |
| Barossa Discovery Park | Yes | Yes | Yes | Lyndoch. Cabins and powered sites. Pool, playground. Good for families. |
| Nuriootpa Centennial Park | Yes | Yes | Yes | Council-run park in Nuriootpa. Basic but affordable. River setting. |
All parks have 24-hour toilet and shower access for guests. Hot showers included in site fees.
Yes. There are 7 public toilet facilities across the Barossa Valley in Tanunda, Angaston, Nuriootpa, Lyndoch, and at reserves between towns. Most cellar doors also offer customer toilets during tasting hours, but these are not guaranteed public facilities.
Most of the 80+ cellar doors in the Barossa Valley have customer toilets available during opening hours. However, access is generally for tasting customers only. If you're cycling between wineries or just driving through, the public facilities in Tanunda, Angaston, and Nuriootpa are your reliable options.
The Barossa Trail cycling path passes through Tanunda, Nuriootpa, and Angaston — all with public toilets. Between towns, Bethany Reserve has a toilet facility. On Seppeltsfield Road, you'll need to rely on cellar door customer facilities or ride to Tanunda (5-10 minutes from most points).
The Barossa Farmers Market operates at Vintners Bar & Grill in Angaston every Saturday morning. Portable toilet facilities are provided on market days. The Angaston main street public toilets are also a short walk away.
The Barossa Valley is approximately 60km from Adelaide CBD, about 1 hour's drive via the Barossa Valley Way through Gawler and Lyndoch. The Barossa Visitor Centre at Lyndoch is the first public toilet you'll reach coming from Adelaide.
Yes. The Tanunda main street facility, Nuriootpa's Coulthard Reserve, and the Barossa Visitor Centre at Lyndoch all have wheelchair accessible toilets. Many larger cellar doors (Jacobs Creek, Seppeltsfield, Penfolds) also have accessible customer facilities.
Yes. Menglers Hill Lookout on Menglers Hill Road between Tanunda and Angaston has a basic toilet facility. It's a popular scenic viewpoint over the valley and the toilet is available 24 hours.
The main towns (Tanunda, Nuriootpa, Angaston) are each about 10-15 minutes' drive apart, and all have public toilets. If you're doing cellar doors along Seppeltsfield Road or between towns, the longest gap without a guaranteed public toilet is about 20 minutes of driving. Most cellar doors offer customer facilities during tasting hours.
The Barossa Valley is 60km northeast of Adelaide in South Australia. Population approximately 23,000 across the council area. Established 1842 by Silesian Lutheran settlers. Peramangk and Ngadjuri country. Australia's most famous wine region with 80+ cellar doors producing world-renowned Shiraz, Grenache, and Riesling.