The Sunday roast is a religion in Manchester. Not in a church way — in a serious, deeply held belief that one day a week should be spent eating a large plate of meat, potatoes, vegetables, and gravy while sitting in a pub with people you like. These fifteen places understand that.
1. Hawksmoor — Deansgate
The best Sunday roast in Manchester and it is not particularly close. Hawksmoor does roast beef with bone-in short rib that falls apart when you look at it, properly crisp Yorkshires, triple-cooked roast potatoes, and a gravy that tastes like someone has been making it since Thursday. The sides are served family-style in the middle of the table. It is expensive but it is the benchmark.
Price: £28–35 per person. Order: Bone-in short rib, all the sides. Book: Essential. Fills up by Wednesday.
2. The Wharf — Castlefield
Canalside pub in Castlefield with a Sunday roast that delivers every week without fail. The beef is well rested and properly pink in the middle. The Yorkshires are homemade and the size of a cereal bowl. The setting by the canal is lovely in any weather, and after your roast you can walk along the towpath to burn off approximately none of the calories.
Price: £16–20. Order: Roast beef, extra Yorkshires. Vibe: Proper canalside pub.
3. Albert’s Schloss — Peter Street
A Bavarian beer hall doing a Sunday roast sounds wrong but it works. The meat is carved to order from a trolley wheeled to your table. The portions are enormous because Albert’s does not do small. Add a stein of beer and live music from the house band and you have the most theatrical Sunday lunch in the city.
Price: £18–24. Order: Whatever they are carving that week + a stein. Vibe: Loud, fun, theatrical.
4. The Metropolitan — Didsbury
Didsbury’s big pub on Burton Road does a Sunday roast that keeps the locals coming back every single week. The lamb shoulder is slow-cooked until it collapses on the plate. The roast potatoes are crisp. The cauliflower cheese side is dangerously good. The beer garden is massive if the weather cooperates, and after lunch you can walk off the damage through Fletcher Moss.
Price: £15–19. Order: Lamb shoulder, add cauliflower cheese. Vibe: Didsbury at its best.
5. The Refuge — Oxford Road
Inside the old Principal hotel on Oxford Road, The Refuge does a Sunday roast in one of the grandest dining rooms in Manchester. High ceilings, stained glass, the kind of room that makes you sit up straighter. The food matches the setting — well-sourced meat, seasonal veg, rich gravy, and a wine list to go with it.
Price: £20–26. Order: The beef with a glass of red. Vibe: Grand hotel dining.
6. The Marble Arch — Rochdale Road
A Victorian pub with original tiled walls and its own brewery. The Marble Arch’s Sunday roast uses meat from local farms and the beer to wash it down with is brewed on site. The room is one of the most beautiful pub interiors in Manchester — glazed tiles from floor to ceiling, a long curved bar, and a sloping floor that adds to the character. The roast sells out early. Book or arrive at opening.
Price: £14–18. Order: Roast beef + Marble Pint. Tip: Get there by noon or it’s gone.
7. Elnecot — Ancoats
Elnecot on Blossom Street does a Sunday lunch that is more restaurant than pub, and all the better for it. The menu is short — two or three choices — and everything is cooked from scratch. The roast chicken with bread sauce and proper stock gravy is comfort food elevated. The room has those big Ancoats mill windows and looks out onto Cutting Room Square.
Price: £18–22. Order: Roast chicken, all the trimmings. Book: Yes, small room.
8. Sam’s Chop House — Chapel Walks
Sam’s has been serving Sunday lunch since 1872. One hundred and fifty years of roast dinners and the place still runs. The interior is Victorian — dark wood, brass, tiled floors. The roast is traditional in the best sense: no twists, no reinventions, just a properly cooked joint, proper sides, and a pint of cask ale. This is what Sunday lunch looked like when your grandad was a lad and it has not changed because it did not need to.
Price: £16–22. Order: Roast beef, sticky toffee pudding after. Vibe: Victorian institution.
9. The Beagle — Chorlton
Chorlton’s favourite pub does a Sunday roast that reflects the neighbourhood — relaxed, quality-focused, dog-friendly. The meat is from local suppliers, the Yorkshires are made in-house, and the gravy is proper. The garden fills up fast on sunny Sundays. Book ahead because Chorlton takes its roast dinners seriously and The Beagle is always first choice.
Price: £15–18. Order: The pork belly if it’s on. Vibe: Chorlton Sunday, dogs welcome.
10. Hispi — Didsbury
Gary Usher’s neighbourhood bistro on School Lane does a Sunday lunch that regularly appears on national best-of lists. The beef is 55-day aged, the potatoes are cooked in dripping, and the Yorkshire pudding is the size of a planet. Hispi was crowdfunded by locals when it opened and the community still treats it like their own. Which, in a way, it is.
Price: £20–26. Order: 55-day aged beef, all sides. Book: Absolutely essential.
11. Dukes 92 — Castlefield
Dukes is famous for cheese boards and canalside drinking but the Sunday roast holds its own. The setting is the star — canalside terrace in the summer, cosy inside in the winter. The roast is solid without being flashy. Good meat, good potatoes, good gravy. After lunch you are already in Castlefield so a walk along the canal is the natural next step.
Price: £15–19. Order: The roast + cheese board to share. Vibe: Canalside classic.
12. The Britons Protection — Great Bridgewater Street
One of the best pubs in Manchester that happens to do a very good Sunday roast. The Britons Protection has over 300 whiskies, two snug rooms, and a back garden. The roast is traditional and unpretentious. Beef, lamb, or chicken, all well cooked, all served with proper sides. The pub itself is worth the visit regardless of the food — it has survived two world wars and the building of the Bridgewater Hall.
Price: £14–17. Order: The beef, then a whisky by the fire. Vibe: One of the great Manchester pubs.
13. TNQ — Northern Quarter
The Northern Quarter Restaurant and Bar does a Sunday lunch that is a step above most of its NQ neighbours. Well-sourced meat, seasonal veg, good wine list. The room on High Street is smart without being stiff. This is the roast you suggest when someone wants something nice but does not want to leave the Northern Quarter.
Price: £16–22. Order: Two courses, glass of red. Vibe: Smart NQ lunch.
14. The Oast House — Spinningfields
The timber-framed pub in Spinningfields does a weekend roast that suits the location — a bit smarter than a standard pub lunch. The meat is carved and the sides are fresh. The hop garden with fairy lights is the reason people come, and on a Sunday afternoon with a roast and a pint it is a genuinely nice place to be.
Price: £17–22. Order: The roast + a beer in the hop garden. Vibe: Spinningfields relaxed.
15. Kala Bistro — King Street
Kala on King Street uses Bury black pudding from Chadwicks (the best maker in the country) in their roast, which tells you everything about how seriously they take sourcing. The full Sunday plate is a thing of beauty — properly rested meat, seasonal sides, a gravy that has clearly seen a stock pot for days. The room is one of the most elegant dining spaces in the city centre.
Price: £22–28. Order: The full roast with black pudding side. Vibe: Proper restaurant Sunday lunch.
The Verdict
Hawksmoor is the best if money is no object. Hispi and Kala are the foodie choices. The Marble Arch, Sam’s Chop House, and The Britons Protection are the proper pub choices where the building is as important as the plate. And The Metropolitan and The Beagle are the south Manchester favourites where you will bump into half your neighbours. Sunday lunch in Manchester is not a meal. It is a way of life.