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Pick Your Own Farms
Guide

Best fruit picking near Melbourne: farms worth the drive

Melbourne sits within a couple of hours of five fruit-growing districts, from Dandenong Ranges cherries to Mornington Peninsula strawberries and Bellarine Peninsula berries. This guide rounds up real, verified pick-your-own farms worth the drive, with actual prices, season windows and what each one is like to visit.

Melbourne's five fruit-picking districts

Victoria's u-pick farms cluster into a handful of districts within roughly ninety minutes of the Melbourne CBD, and each has its own character. The Dandenong Ranges and neighbouring Yarra Valley are the closest and busiest, packed with cherry orchards and berry farms among the hills east of the city. The Mornington Peninsula adds a coastal day-trip option to the south-east, while the Bellarine Peninsula covers the south-west via Geelong. Further out, South Gippsland rewards a longer drive with quieter farms and a longer strawberry season than most. Exact opening dates move with the weather every year, so treat everything below as a normal-year guide rather than a fixed calendar, and check a farm's site or social media the morning you plan to go.

Quick comparison: fruit picking near Melbourne

Here's how the ten farms in this guide stack up on crop, season and price, so you can match a farm to your weekend before reading the detail below.

FarmDistrictCropTypical seasonPrice (2026)
CherryHill OrchardsDandenong RangesCherriesLate Nov–early Jan~$22.50–$25 adult, all-you-can-eat
Rayner's OrchardDandenong RangesStone fruit, apples, pears, citrusDec–May, some varieties year-roundGuided tour, price on booking
Truffle ValleyDandenong RangesTrufflesMid Jun–end AugPrice on booking
Fielderberry FarmDandenong RangesRaspberries, blueberries, blackberriesDec–MarNo entry fee, pay by weight
Kookaberry Strawberry FarmYarra ValleyStrawberries, raspberries, blackberriesNov–AprCall ahead for current pricing
Rocky Creek Strawberry FarmMornington PeninsulaStrawberries, blueberries, raspberries, blackberriesNov–AprNot published — call ahead
Ripe 'N' Ready Cherry FarmMornington PeninsulaCherriesMid Nov–mid Jan$25 adult / $10 child orchard entry
Lomas OrchardsBellarine PeninsulaStrawberries, apples, pearsNov–MayBy weight, cash only
Tuckerberry Hill Berry FarmBellarine PeninsulaBlueberries, strawberries, stone fruitNov–MarBy weight
Macca's FarmSouth GippslandStrawberriesSep–AprNot published, containers provided

Seasons shift with the weather. Always call the farm to confirm what's ripe and that they're open before you drive out.

Dandenong Ranges — the closest cherry and berry country

About forty-five minutes to an hour east of the CBD, the Dandenong Ranges are the district most Melburnians reach for first, thanks to a dense run of cherry orchards and berry farms tucked among the hills around Wandin, Silvan and Seville.

CherryHill Orchards, Wandin East/Coldstream

CherryHill Orchards runs two picking sites and more than forty cherry varieties, open daily through its cherry season from late November to early January. Entry is all-you-can-eat while you're in the orchard, priced at roughly $22.50 for adults on weekdays rising to about $25 on weekends, with kids a little cheaper and family packages available. Booking is required, both sites have a cafe, and the Coldstream site has a play area for younger kids while you take turns at the trees.

Rayner's Orchard, Woori Yallock

Rayner's Orchard grows more than 450 fruit varieties, so the pick depends on when you visit — stone fruit through summer, apples and pears autumn, and at least eight varieties, including some citrus, available most of the year. Picking here is part of a guided tractor tour with tasting, departing every half hour, so it suits families who'd rather be shown around than wander a paddock alone. Booking is required and there's an on-site cafe for lunch afterwards.

Truffle Valley, Seville

If you're reading this in winter, Truffle Valley is one of the only genuine harvest experiences actually running near Melbourne right now. Trained dogs lead guided hunts through the truffiere from mid-June to the end of August, and visitors get to touch, smell and dig up black winter truffles themselves before buying some from the farm gate shop. It's booking-only and kid-friendly, and makes a good cold-weather alternative to a summer berry patch.

Fielderberry Farm, Cockatoo

Fielderberry Farm has no entry fee at all — you simply pick raspberries, blueberries and blackberries and pay for what ends up in your container, from early December through to March depending on the crop. There's homemade berry ice cream and Belgian waffles on site, alpacas wandering the property, and a bed and breakfast if you want to make a weekend of it. No booking needed — just check their social media for which berries are currently open before you drive out.

Yarra Valley — strawberries alongside the wineries

Next door to the Dandenongs and about the same distance from the CBD, the Yarra Valley is better known for wine, but Wandin North's Kookaberry Strawberry Farm is a solid detour for strawberry picking from November through to April. The farm grows 100% Australian berries and also makes its own jams, syrups and vinegar to take home. Hours shift with what's ripe, so it's worth calling ahead of a visit; booking is recommended on weekends when the valley's cellar doors bring extra traffic through the district.

Mornington Peninsula — a coastal day trip, about ninety minutes out

The Peninsula's picking farms sit around Red Hill and Main Ridge, deep enough into the hills that it's more a full day out than a quick after-work drive — figure on ninety minutes each way from the CBD, longer with beach traffic in summer.

Rocky Creek Strawberry Farm, Main Ridge

Rocky Creek Strawberry Farm (the property formerly known as Sunny Ridge) opens daily on a walk-in basis through its November-to-April season, with strawberries, blueberries, raspberries and blackberries all in the one paddock. There's an on-site cafe, and well-behaved dogs are welcome in the cafe area, though not in the picking rows themselves. No booking required, but it does close over winter, so this one's a spring-and-summer plan rather than a July outing.

Ripe 'N' Ready Cherry Farm, Red Hill

Ripe 'N' Ready Cherry Farm runs an all-you-can-eat orchard entry from mid-November to mid-January, priced at around $25 for adults and $10 for children aged three to fifteen, with cherries to take home charged separately at $15–$22 a kilogram. Dogs are welcome on leash, and the farm shop stays open year-round selling eggs, honey and seasonal produce even once the cherry season itself has wrapped up.

Bellarine Peninsula — Geelong's berry and apple country

Around an hour south-west of Melbourne via the Geelong Ring Road, the Bellarine Peninsula pairs picking with a coastal day out around Ocean Grove and Drysdale.

Lomas Orchards, Wallington

Lomas Orchards, a fourth-generation family farm also known locally as Wallington Strawberry Farm, has been growing fruit since 1938 and offers strawberry picking priced by weight from November through to May, plus more than thirty heritage apple varieties mostly sold at the farm gate. It's cash only — the nearest ATMs are in Ocean Grove or Leopold — and dogs aren't permitted for biosecurity reasons. Open Wednesday to Saturday, with hours that shift between winter and summer.

Tuckerberry Hill Berry Farm, Drysdale

Tuckerberry Hill Berry Farm combines berry picking with an on-site microbrewery, art gallery and cafe, so it works even if half the family isn't fussed about fruit. Blueberries typically run mid-December to early February, with strawberries on weekends and stone fruit both running November to March. No booking is required, but picking availability depends on the week, so check the farm's Instagram "Friday Fruit Report" before you drive out.

South Gippsland — the longest strawberry season near Melbourne

About ninety minutes south-east of the city, close enough to Phillip Island to combine with a beach day, Macca's Farm at Glen Forbes runs one of the longest strawberry windows anywhere near Melbourne, from September through to April. A kilometre of wheelchair-accessible, waist-high rows makes it an easier pick than a bent-over paddock, containers are provided or you can bring your own, and there's a farm shop and cafe selling free-range meat and produce on site. Open Wednesday to Sunday, no booking required.

What's actually open near Melbourne in winter

If you're planning this trip in the middle of the year, it's worth being upfront: most of the farms above are summer and autumn operations, and by July they've already closed for the season and won't reopen until spring. Truffle Valley is the exception, running its guided truffle hunts through winter, and Rayner's Orchard keeps at least a handful of varieties available year-round. For a fuller picture of what's ripe across the country this month, see our fruit picking season calendar, or browse what's in season now before you plan the drive.

Beyond strawberries and cherries

Strawberries and cherries dominate the ten farms above, but they're not the only fruit within reach of the city. Fielderberry Farm and Tuckerberry Hill both grow blueberries, Rayner's Orchard and Lomas Orchards both run apple seasons alongside their headline crops, and several Dandenong Ranges and Yarra Valley farms add raspberries to the mix once berry season is underway. For the full picture of what's growing near the city right now, see our strawberry picking near Melbourne and cherry picking near Melbourne pages, or the national apple picking guide and cherry picking guide for season timing across the rest of the country.

Before you go: a quick checklist

Most of the practical advice that applies to any Australian u-pick farm applies here too — our what to bring fruit picking guide and pick-your-own etiquette guide cover the general rules. For a Melbourne-district trip specifically:

  • Check the farm's website or social media on the morning you plan to go — several of these farms, including Fielderberry Farm and Tuckerberry Hill, post same-day picking updates.
  • Book ahead for CherryHill Orchards, Rayner's Orchard and Truffle Valley, all of which require a booking rather than accepting walk-ins.
  • Bring cash as a backup — Lomas Orchards is cash only, and several smaller farms have patchy card reception in the hills.
  • Pack a jumper for Dandenong Ranges and Mornington Peninsula visits — both districts sit at altitude and cool down fast once the sun drops.
  • If travelling with a dog, Rocky Creek and Ripe 'N' Ready both allow dogs in outdoor areas but not in the picking rows themselves; Lomas Orchards doesn't allow dogs on site at all.
  • Bring a cooler bag for the drive home, especially for berries and cherries in warm weather.

Seasons shift with the weather. Always call the farm to confirm what's ripe and that they're open before you drive out.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I go strawberry picking near Melbourne?

The closest options are Kookaberry Strawberry Farm in the Yarra Valley and Rocky Creek Strawberry Farm on the Mornington Peninsula, both about an hour to ninety minutes from the CBD. Lomas Orchards on the Bellarine Peninsula and Macca's Farm in South Gippsland are further out but run longer seasons, with Macca's picking from September through to April. Most run roughly November to April or May.

Where can I pick cherries near Melbourne?

CherryHill Orchards at Wandin East/Coldstream in the Dandenong Ranges and Ripe 'N' Ready Cherry Farm at Red Hill on the Mornington Peninsula are the two main pick-your-own cherry farms within easy reach of the city, both roughly an hour to ninety minutes away. Both run from mid-to-late November through to early or mid-January, and both charge an all-you-can-eat orchard entry fee rather than pricing by weight.

How much does fruit picking cost near Melbourne?

It varies widely by farm and crop. Berry farms like Fielderberry Farm charge no entry at all and simply weigh what you pick, while cherry orchards charge an all-you-can-eat entry fee of around $22.50 to $25 for adults, since you're eating as you go rather than paying by the kilo. Strawberry farms typically sit in between, charging by weight with no separate entry cost.

Do you need to book ahead for fruit picking near Melbourne?

Some do, some don't. CherryHill Orchards, Rayner's Orchard and Truffle Valley all require a booking, since CherryHill and Rayner's manage numbers through the orchard and Truffle Valley's hunts are guided. Fielderberry Farm, Rocky Creek Strawberry Farm, Lomas Orchards and Macca's Farm are walk-in, though calling ahead on a busy weekend never hurts.

Can you go fruit picking near Melbourne in winter?

Options are limited. Nearly every berry, cherry and strawberry farm around Melbourne closes for the season by autumn and doesn't reopen until spring. Truffle Valley in the Dandenong Ranges is the main exception, running guided truffle hunts from mid-June to the end of August, and Rayner's Orchard keeps a handful of varieties available year-round.