4
4
25%
8
1
Only 4 restaurants operate in Mount Gravatt according to available data โ a surprisingly thin dining layer for a suburb within Brisbane's 2.7 million metro area. Each serves a different cuisine: Japanese, Thai, Indian street food, and pizza. With zero cuisine overlap, direct head-to-head competition between restaurants is minimal.
But restaurants aren't just competing with each other. They share the local dining dollar with 8 cafes, 8 fast food outlets, and 1 pub โ 21 food businesses in the immediate area. Fast food and cafes combined outnumber restaurants nearly 4:1, meaning the real contest is for the sit-down dining dollar against quick-service alternatives.
Website adoption is notably low. Only 1 of 4 restaurants โ Jay Bhavani โ has a website, representing just 25%. The remaining 75% rely on third-party platforms, foot traffic, or word of mouth. For a suburb with solid daytime activity and proximity to shopping centres, this is a meaningful visibility gap that a digitally active competitor could exploit.
The current cuisine mix covers four distinct types but leaves obvious gaps. There's no Chinese, Vietnamese, Mediterranean, or modern Australian restaurant listed. A new entrant in any of those categories would face zero direct competition.
Proximity to shopping precincts
Mount Gravatt sits near major retail centres and the Logan Road strip, so customers expect restaurants that fit into a convenient errand run rather than requiring a dedicated trip.
Sit-down value over fast food
With 8 fast food outlets in the area, customers choosing a restaurant over a quick meal expect noticeably better food and experience to justify the extra time and cost.
Sole representative pressure
Each cuisine type โ Japanese, Thai, Indian street food, pizza โ has only one restaurant locally, so customers judge that single option harshly; there's no alternative if quality disappoints.
Discoverability on Google Maps
With only 25% of local restaurants having a website, many customers searching online simply won't find most dining options, making basic digital presence a deciding factor.
Parking and Logan Road access
Mount Gravatt is a car-dependent suburb, and customers factor in parking availability and ease of access off Logan Road when choosing where to eat.
A sample of real restaurants in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.
| Business | Type |
|---|---|
| Dami Japanese Restaurant | Japanese |
| Pinto Thai Eatery | Thai |
| Jay Bhavani | Indian Street Food |
| Pizza Hut | Pizza |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Get your Google Business Profile working hard
With 75% of Mount Gravatt restaurants lacking a website, your Google Business Profile may be the first and only thing potential customers find. Complete every field โ hours, menu, photos โ and respond to reviews. It's the minimum viable online presence in a market where most competitors have none.
Make the sit-down experience count
You're competing against 8 fast food outlets for the same hungry customers. The food alone won't win โ you need table service, atmosphere, and a menu that can't be replicated at a drive-through. Give people a reason to sit down and stay.
Fill a cuisine gap
The four existing restaurants cover Japanese, Thai, Indian street food, and pizza. There's no Chinese, Vietnamese, or Mediterranean option listed in Mount Gravatt. If your cuisine fills one of these gaps, you'll be the only restaurant in that category โ a strong position with minimal direct competition.
Mount Gravatt's restaurant scene is thin โ just 4 establishments covering 4 different cuisines. Direct competition between restaurants is low, but the broader food market is crowded with 21 total businesses. The real pressure comes from 8 fast food outlets and 8 cafes pulling casual dining dollars. Pizza, Thai, Japanese, and Indian street food are each represented once, leaving significant cuisine gaps. The biggest competitive advantage available right now is digital: three out of four local restaurants have no website. Any operator who invests in basic online visibility can immediately stand out in this underserved market.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.