Looking for indoor ice skating in Melbourne?
Whether you are planning a family day out, a winter date, or just want to try something different, Melbourne has year-round rinks and seasonal pop-ups that cater to everyone from wobbly first-timers to confident skaters.
I’ll be upfront: I haven’t personally tested every rink in this guide.
What I have done is compile current information, spoken with locals who skate regularly, and gathered the practical details most people actually need: addresses, parking, nearby food options, and honest assessments of what each venue offers.
Contents
- 1 O’Brien Icehouse – Melbourne’s Premier Skating Destination
- 2 IceHQ – For Serious Skaters and Quieter Sessions
- 3 Seasonal Winter Pop-Up Rinks
- 4 First-Timer Tips That Actually Help
- 5 What It Actually Costs
- 6 Is It Good for Kids?
- 7 For Non-Sporty Adults: You’ll Be Fine
- 8 Planning Your Visit: The Practical Checklist
- 9 Quick Answers to Common Questions
- 10 Final Thoughts
O’Brien Icehouse – Melbourne’s Premier Skating Destination
- O’Brien Icehouse
- Address – 105 Pearl River Road, Docklands VIC 3008
- Phone – 1300 756 699
- Website – Obrienicehouse.com.au
What Makes O’Brien Icehouse Stand Out
The facility at O’Brien Icehouse feels professional without being intimidating. Ice quality is consistently good, public sessions run throughout the week, and there is enough space that even busy sessions don’t feel dangerously crowded.
If your kids get hooked and want lessons, the weekly programs here are well-established and reliable.
The on-site cafe (Icebergs) serves decent coffee and hot chocolate, which matters more than you would think when you’re warming up cold hands between sessions.
Basic food options include toasties and snacks, nothing fancy, but enough to keep hungry kids satisfied.
Getting To O’Brien Icehouse & Parking
Public Transport: Catch the tram to Docklands (Route 35, 70, or 86), and it’s about a 10-minute walk. The closest Southern Cross Station is a 15-minute walk.
Driving: Paid parking is available in the surrounding Docklands precinct. The District Docklands shopping centre (right next door) has parking that most people use. Rates vary, but expect around $5-15, depending on how long you stay.
What’s Around Docklands
This is where O’Brien Icehouse becomes more than just a skating rink. Docklands has transformed into a legitimate dining and entertainment hub, so you can easily make an afternoon or evening of it:
- The District Docklands shopping centre is literally adjacent to restaurants, a cinema, and shops
- Harbour Town outlet shopping is a 10-minute walk
- Waterfront City has casual dining options along the marina
- The Docklands waterfront itself is worth a stroll, especially on decent weather days
Many families grab lunch before skating, do a session, then walk along the water afterwards. It turns a one-hour activity into a proper outing.
Sessions & Pricing
Public skating sessions typically run:
- Weekday mornings and afternoons
- Weekend sessions throughout the day
- Evening sessions (particularly popular with teens and adults)
Prices: Around $24-28 for adults, $20-24 for children (including skate hire). Check their website for current rates and session times as they vary seasonally.
Book ahead during school holidays and winter weekend sessions; they genuinely sell out, especially the popular evening slots.
IceHQ – For Serious Skaters and Quieter Sessions
- IceHQ
- Address – Olympic Boulevard, Melbourne VIC 3004 (within Melbourne & Olympic Parks)
- Phone – (03) 9478 2876
- Website – IceHQ.com.au
IceHQ has a different vibe entirely. It is primarily a training facility for ice hockey and figure skating, which means public sessions are scheduled around club bookings.
This isnt necessarily a bad thing; it just means you need to be more deliberate about checking session times.
Who It Suits
This rink works best for:
- Confident skaters who don’t need the support frames and family-friendly atmosphere
- Teens and adults looking for fewer crowds and a more sports-focused environment
- People living on the eastern side of the city it is more accessible if you’re coming from Richmond, Hawthorn, or further east
If you are taking young kids for their first skating experience, O’Brien Icehouse is probably the better choice. If you are a competent skater or your teenagers want something less “family session” vibes, IceHQ delivers.
Getting There
Public Transport: The venue is within Melbourne & Olympic Parks. Take a tram to the Sports Precinct area (Route 70 stops nearby), or walk from Richmond Station (about 15 minutes).
Parking: Parking is available within the Olympic Parks precinct, though availability varies depending on which events are happening at nearby stadiums (AAMI Park, Rod Laver Arena, etc.). Expect to pay standard parking rates.
What’s Nearby
You are right in Melbourne’s sports precinct, so the surroundings cater to that:
- Richmond (10-minute walk) has excellent Vietnamese restaurants along Victoria Street
- Birrarung Marr parklands are adjacent if you want green space
- MCG and Rod Laver Arena are right there if you are combining activities
It is less of a “destination precinct” than Docklands, but the food options in nearby Richmond are genuinely better.
Sessions & Pricing
Public sessions are more limited here, typically a few sessions per week rather than daily. Check their schedule online before planning a visit.
Prices: Similar to O’Brien Icehouse, around $20-26 including hire, but confirm current rates.
Seasonal Winter Pop-Up Rinks
Every winter (typically June through August), temporary ice rinks pop up around Melbourne.
Recent years have seen them at Federation Square, Birrarung Marr, and other CBD locations, though the exact spots change annually.
What to Expect
These are not about serious skating; they are about atmosphere. Think fairy lights strung overhead, music playing, and a festive buzz that makes them perfect for dates, friend catch-ups, or a novelty experience.
The ice quality won’t match permanent rinks, and sessions are shorter (usually 45-60 minutes with timed entry). But that’s not really the point. You go for the experience, not to practice your figure eights.
Pricing: Typically $25-35 per person, including hire. Weekend sessions and school holiday slots book out weeks in advance, so jump on tickets when they are released.
Worth It?
If you have never skated on a pop-up rink and you enjoy seasonal winter activities, absolutely. Just manage expectations, you are paying for ambience and novelty rather than quality ice time.
First-Timer Tips That Actually Help
Never been ice skating? Here is what actually makes a difference:
Before You Go
Dress in layers you can remove. Rinks are cold when you walk in, but you will warm up quickly once you start moving. A light jacket you can tie around your waist works better than a heavy coat you cannot take off.
Wear thick socks or bring a second pair. Rental skates can rub, and blisters ruin the fun. Some people double-sock it.
Bring gloves. Not just for warmth when you are learning balance, you will fall, and bare hands on ice hurt more than you would expect. Cheap knit gloves from Kmart work fine.
On the Ice
Use the support frames. Both major rinks offer these walker-style aids for kids and adults. There is zero shame in using one half of the rink to hold them.
Stay near the barrier initially. Everyone clutches the edge of the wall at first. Take your time.
Bend your knees slightly and lean forward. The instinct is to stand straight and lean back, which is exactly how you fall backward. A slight forward lean gives you much better balance.
Expect to fall. Everyone does. The ice is not as hard as pavement, you are probably wearing padded layers, and rinks control the speed during public sessions. Falls are usually more embarrassing than painful.
What It Actually Costs
Standard public session pricing across Melbourne rinks:
- Adults: $20-30 including skate hire
- Kids: $18-25 including skate hire
- Family passes: Often available, check individual rink websites
Lessons cost extra (usually $25-40 per session, depending on group size). School holiday programs run around $150-250 for a week of sessions.
Peak times (weekend evenings, school holidays, winter weekends) sometimes have slightly higher pricing and definitely sell out faster. Booking online saves both money and disappointment.
Is It Good for Kids?
Absolutely, with some caveats.
Best age: Five and up. Younger kids can participate using balance frames, but attention span becomes the limiting factor more than ability.
Safety: Helmets are required for lessons and recommended for public sessions (some rinks provide them free, others charge a small hire fee). Falls happen, but they’re usually minor. The controlled environment, slower speeds during public sessions, and padded winter clothing all help.
Why families love it:
- Indoor activity that works regardless of Melbourne’s unpredictable weather
- Actually burns energy (a genuine workout disguised as fun)
- Easy to combine with food and other attractions, especially at Docklands
- Builds genuine coordination and confidence
The main downside? Once kids enjoy it, they will want to come back repeatedly, and session costs add up. Consider lesson packages if they’re genuinely interested.
For Non-Sporty Adults: You’ll Be Fine
Don’t let a lack of athletic ability stop you. Ice skating is self-paced and genuinely social; nobody is judging your technique.
Half the people on the ice during public sessions are gripping the barrier, skating slowly, or taking breaks on the benches. The music keeps things relaxed, and there is zero competitive pressure.
Go with friends, laugh at yourselves collectively, and treat it as the social activity it actually is.
Planning Your Visit: The Practical Checklist
Before booking:
- Check session times online (they vary by day and season)
- Book ahead for school holidays, and winter weekend sessions sell out
- Confirm age restrictions if you have very young children
Day of:
- Arrive 15-20 minutes early for skate fitting, especially with kids
- Bring a small bag for personal items (lockers are usually available)
- Have a backup plan for parking, particularly at Docklands when events are on
Make it an outing:
- Docklands: Combine skating with The District shopping centre or waterfront dining
- Olympic Park: Head to Richmond’s Victoria Street for Vietnamese food afterwards
- Winter pop-ups: Usually in CBD locations, it is perfect for continuing into dinner or drinks
Quick Answers to Common Questions
Can you ice skate in Melbourne year-round?
Yes. Both O’Brien Icehouse and IceHQ operate 12 months. Winter pop-ups run June-August only.
Do you need to book ahead?
Strongly recommended for weekends, school holidays, and any winter session. Weekday off-peak sessions sometimes allow walk-ins, but why risk it?
What if I have never skated before?
Both permanent rinks are beginner-friendly with support frames, patient staff, and plenty of other wobbly first-timers to keep you company.
Can you bring your own skates?
Yes, though you will still pay a small admission fee for rink access.
Final Thoughts
Ice skating in Melbourne works for more situations than you would expect. Families use it for school holiday entertainment when the weather is miserable.
Couples treat winter evening sessions as low-key dates. Friend groups turn it into a social hangout where the activity matters less than the laughs.
The consistency of Melbourne’s main rinks (especially O’Brien Icehouse) makes this a pretty low-risk activity to plan.
Even without visiting every venue personally, the pattern is clear: book ahead, dress appropriately, manage expectations for first-timers, and you will have a solid time.
If you are planning a broader family outing, this also pairs well with other things to do with kids in Melbourne, especially during school holidays or colder months.
This guide is maintained by Discover Melbourne. For venue updates, session times, or current pricing, check official rink websites before visiting.
