REVIEW · SYDNEY
Infinity by Mark Best – Sydney Tower Elegant Dining Experience
Book on Viator →Operated by Trippas White Group · Bookable on Viator
Sydney’s skyline looks better from up high. Infinity by Mark Best is a 81-story, revolving-dining experience with modern Australian-French fusion and panoramic windows that slowly turn the whole city into your main course. I like the 360-degree rotation—it turns the view into something you watch change—and I like that the meal leans on Australian produce with thoughtful fine-dining touches. One possible drawback: you’re paying for the location and pacing, so if you want simple, loud, casual value, this may feel pricey.
You start with a lift up, then settle into your table at Infinity inside Sydney Tower. The included meal is built around a 3-course à la carte menu, with freshly baked bread and cultured butter, plus a chef-selected side dish. Dress is smart casual, and your table is held for 10 minutes from your reservation time—so plan to arrive early and get your bearings fast.
In This Review
- Key Points Worth Knowing
- Sydney Tower’s Revolving Dining Room: Views That Change at Your Pace
- What You Actually Get in the 3-Course Mark Best Meal
- Champagne, Cocktails, and Wine Pairing: How to Plan Your Spend
- From Westfield to Infinity: Finding the Entrance Without Losing Time
- Timing the Rotation: Sunset Magic vs. Daylight Clarity
- Atmosphere and Service Pace: Intimate Fine Dining, Not a Food Factory
- Smart Casual Dress and Small Rules That Matter
- Who Should Book Infinity by Mark Best (and Who Might Not)
- Practical Value: Why This Price Can Make Sense
- Should You Book It? My Honest Recommendation
- FAQ
- How long is the Infinity by Mark Best dining experience?
- What meal is included in the price?
- Are drinks included?
- What’s the dress code?
- Where do I meet for the experience?
- How long will my table be held?
- How many people is the experience limited to?
- Do I need ID for check-in?
- Can I get a refund if my plans change?
Key Points Worth Knowing

- Revolving restaurant at 81 floors up: enjoy changing views over a ~70-minute full rotation
- Modern Australian-French fusion with an emphasis on Australian land-and-sea produce
- Included 3-course à la carte plus freshly baked bread and cultured butter
- Views that run wide: Harbour Bridge/Opera House to the Blue Mountains on clear days
- Small group size (max 8) keeps the room feeling intimate
- Smart casual dress and a 10-minute table-hold rule mean timing matters
Sydney Tower’s Revolving Dining Room: Views That Change at Your Pace

The big reason to book Infinity is simple: you eat while the city slowly moves around you. The restaurant sits in Sydney Tower about 81 stories up, and it rotates so you get a full 360° view during the meal. That slow turn is what makes the experience feel less like a restaurant and more like a guided viewing event—without needing a headset.
On a clear evening, you can track Sydney’s famous landmarks as your table turns. The view stretches from the Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Opera House out toward the Blue Mountains. Even if you know the postcard spots, seeing them from this height gives you a different sense of scale—especially when the harbour water glints or the city lights start to pop.
I also like that the room is set up with panoramic windows. That matters because skyline dining isn’t just about height; it’s about having lines of sight. Infinity’s layout is designed so you can look out comfortably while you eat, not just lean over a small window like some tower venues.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Sydney
What You Actually Get in the 3-Course Mark Best Meal
Infinity’s included experience centers on a 3-course à la carte menu. That’s a key detail: it’s not just a fixed set meal with no choices. You’ll also get freshly baked bread, cultured butter, and a chef’s selected side dish, which is the kind of small luxury that makes fine dining feel complete instead of snacky.
The restaurant positions the kitchen around Australian ingredients. The menu is described as being crafted exclusively from Australian produce sourced from land, coast, and regions. In practice, that usually means you’re more likely to get flavors that feel tied to where you are—rather than generic international restaurant tastes.
Because it’s à la carte, it’s also worth paying attention to how the menu is presented. Some past diners found it too complicated and mentioned added items coming mid-meal (for example, truffle suggestions). The operator has since launched a new, easier-to-understand menu, but the takeaway for you is still the same: read the menu carefully before ordering add-ons, and don’t feel shy asking what is included in your chosen courses.
One more value tip: this is a meal where presentation matters. In the feedback, people highlighted dessert moments—like a blueberry gelato described with fresh blueberries—and one person noted a dry-ice-style dessert presentation. You shouldn’t expect any one dessert every time, but the kitchen seems to lean into visual plating, which is part of what makes the whole thing feel like a treat.
Champagne, Cocktails, and Wine Pairing: How to Plan Your Spend

Beverages aren’t included, so the price can move depending on what you drink. The info is clear that champagne or cocktails are available at the iridescent bar either before or after your meal, but they’re own expense.
A lot of diners added wine, and some even described wine pairing as a highlight. One person called out a wine waiter who matched wine with each course and made the pairing feel logical, not random. If you’re the type who enjoys pairing, that’s where your extra money can feel most useful.
If you’re watching your budget, you can still have a great time without upgrading. The included meal is built around the view and the dining experience, so treat drink add-ons like options, not requirements. I’d also suggest looking at the overall value in context: you’re not only buying food, you’re buying the revolving restaurant setting and the full skyline show.
From Westfield to Infinity: Finding the Entrance Without Losing Time

Infinity by Mark Best is located at Sydney Tower inside Westfield Sydney, on Level 4, at 108 Market St, Sydney NSW 2000. The meeting point is labeled as Infinity at Sydney Tower, still within the Westfield complex. That’s convenient—public transportation is nearby, and you won’t be hunting through quiet backstreets at night.
That said, location confusion comes up in the feedback. One person said map directions pointed them to a different nearby building area, which created a late arrival risk. Another mentioned the meeting spot instructions on an app being unclear. My practical advice: don’t trust only one route link. Use the exact wording from your reservation (Westfield Tower / Infinity at Sydney Tower) and give yourself buffer time.
Also keep this rule in mind: your table is held for 10 minutes from your reservation time. Late arrivals can be treated as cancellations without refund, so the best strategy is boring and effective—arrive early, check in, then take a breath.
Timing the Rotation: Sunset Magic vs. Daylight Clarity

Infinity’s rotation is described as taking about 70 minutes for a full circle, and your views change as the room turns. That means your reservation time affects the experience you get, especially around sunset.
Here’s how I’d think about it if you want the best “oh wow” factor:
- Sunset bookings: you often get daylight views first, then the harbour lights and city glow take over as the rotation continues. This tends to feel cinematic because the city shifts from crisp to sparkling.
- Late evening: you’ll likely spend more of your meal staring at night lights and the dark outline of landmarks. Great if you love night photos, but fog or cloud can dim the effect.
- Daytime: if the weather is great, daylight makes distances easier to read—bridge, opera house, and even the Blue Mountains feel clearer.
Weather matters. One diner noted it was foggy and rainy when they went, which would obviously shrink visibility and reduce the skyline drama. You can’t control Sydney weather, but you can reduce stress by dressing for shifting conditions and keeping your expectations flexible.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Sydney
Atmosphere and Service Pace: Intimate Fine Dining, Not a Food Factory

Infinity is described as an intimate, stylish fine dining experience with contemporary Australian-French fusion. The room is set for tables and slower attention, not quick turnover.
Most feedback points to friendly, attentive service. People praised staff professionalism and called out specific helpful moments, like a staff member pointing out major monuments as the scenery changed. That kind of live context can turn a good view into a memorable one.
That said, not every meal feels perfectly timed. A couple of diners felt the service started rushed or that courses came too quickly, while others said service was slow or that course pacing felt disjointed. My takeaway for you: if you’re celebrating something, consider setting the tone early—let staff know if you want a calmer rhythm.
Also note that table allocations are at the manager’s discretion on the night. If you’re booking multiple tables or want to sit together with a group, the instruction is to inform them before your date so they can try to accommodate. With a maximum of 8 travelers for this experience, it’s usually easier to manage than larger groups, but it’s still not automatic.
Smart Casual Dress and Small Rules That Matter

This isn’t a beach restaurant or a hoodie-and-sneakers plan. The dress code is listed as smart casual, which usually means neat layers and closed-toe shoes are the safe bet.
There are a few rules that are small on paper but big in the moment:
- ID check at check-in: you’ll be asked to show ID
- Table held for 10 minutes: don’t treat that as a suggestion
- Late arrivals may be canceled without refund: again, arrive early
- Most tables are assigned by the manager: if you care about seating, communicate beforehand
If you’re traveling solo, you’ll still get the full experience. One person even said they didn’t feel uncomfortable dining alone, which aligns with the room’s small, attentive setup.
Who Should Book Infinity by Mark Best (and Who Might Not)

This experience fits best if you want a two-hour chunk of Sydney that feels special but still grounded in real local ingredients.
It’s especially good for:
- couples doing a date night above the city
- visitors who want one “signature” view with a real sit-down meal
- people who enjoy plated fine dining and don’t mind beverage add-ons
- small groups who appreciate a calm atmosphere (max 8)
It may not fit as well if:
- you want maximum food quantity for minimum money
- you hate menu complexity or surprise add-ons
- you’re sensitive to pacing—either too fast or too slow can disappoint
- weather is a deal-breaker for skyline visibility (if it’s foggy/rainy, the view can lose some punch)
Also, if you prefer very straightforward dining, be sure you understand what’s included in your exact menu choices. The experience has had feedback about add-ons and mid-meal cost changes, and the operator says they’ve launched a clearer menu. Still, you’ll feel better if you know what you’re ordering before the first course arrives.
Practical Value: Why This Price Can Make Sense
At $114.76 per person, you’re paying for more than calories. You’re paying for:
1) the revolving restaurant experience at extreme height
2) a composed fine-dining meal built around modern Australian-French fusion
3) included bread, cultured butter, and a chef-selected side
4) service designed for an intimate room, not a food hall
Yes, beverages cost extra. And if you add wine pairings or multiple drinks, the total can climb quickly. But even with drinks excluded, the value logic is: you’re buying a rare skyline setting plus a full dining flow, not just a view ticket.
If you’re the type who already loves Sydney Tower sights and you want them paired with a real meal, the pricing starts to feel fair. If you’re only after the cheapest way to see the city from above, you’ll likely find cheaper options elsewhere. Infinity is for the “I want the full experience” mindset.
Should You Book It? My Honest Recommendation
Book Infinity by Mark Best if you want a calm, stylish, small-scale fine dining evening with 360° skyline views that actually change during the meal. It’s one of those rare experiences where the food and the setting work together instead of competing.
Skip it or rethink if you’re expecting bargain pricing, you dislike anything that feels too menu-technical, or you’re likely to arrive late. The 10-minute table hold and the need to check in with ID make timing part of the deal.
If you do book, choose your time with the view in mind. Sunset slots tend to deliver the best mix of daylight clarity and after-dark sparkle, especially if the sky cooperates. And when you arrive, give yourself time to find the correct Infinity entrance within Westfield—don’t let a map link turn a special dinner into a stress test.
FAQ
How long is the Infinity by Mark Best dining experience?
It runs for about 2 hours (approx.), with the restaurant described as completing a full 70-minute rotation during the experience.
What meal is included in the price?
The experience includes a 3-course à la carte menu, plus freshly baked bread, cultured butter, and a chef’s selected side dish.
Are drinks included?
No. Beverages are available to purchase, including champagne or cocktails at the bar.
What’s the dress code?
The dress code is listed as smart casual.
Where do I meet for the experience?
You start at Infinity at Sydney Tower, Westfield Sydney, Level 4/108 Market St, Sydney NSW 2000.
How long will my table be held?
Your table is held for 10 minutes from your selected reservation time. Late arrivals may be treated as cancellations without refund.
How many people is the experience limited to?
The experience has a maximum of 8 travelers.
Do I need ID for check-in?
Yes. Guests will be asked to show ID at check-in.
Can I get a refund if my plans change?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience start time.
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