
Tag: Beach Camping in Australia
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100% Aboriginal-owned wilderness camp at the tip of the Dampier Peninsula, 240km north of Broome. Safari tents, beach shelters, and unpowered camping among red cliffs and turquoise water. Cultural tours, on-site restaurant, and unforgettable sunsets.
Snorkel straight off the beach at this 46-site campground in Cape Range National Park, right on the Ningaloo Reef coast. No power or water, but the ocean views and marine life more than compensate. Book 180 days ahead for peak…
Camp behind seven kilometres of pure white silica sand on Whitsunday Island. Boat access only from Airlie Beach, with 10 basic sites surrounded by vine forest. Bring everything you need and carry it all out. Worth every bit of effort.
Free bush camping opposite the spectacular Woolshed Cave on the Eyre Peninsula. No facilities at all, but front-row access to extraordinary geological formations, a 20km beach, and regular dolphin and whale sightings. Fully self-sufficient campers only.
The only 2WD-accessible campground in Coffin Bay National Park, with 19 sites overlooking sheltered Yangie Bay. Kayak launch, five walking trails from camp, and abundant wildlife including emus, kangaroos and winter whale watching from nearby cliffs.
Council campground on Kangaroo Island where the Harriet River meets an award-winning beach. Powered and unpowered sites, hot showers, BBQs and a playground. Wallabies through camp, koalas in the trees, and world-class fishing from the jetty.
Surf, wildlife and bush camping on the Yorke Peninsula. Three camping zones for caravans, camper trailers and tents near one of SA’s best breaks. Tammar wallabies at dusk, whale watching in winter, and the Yorkes Classic surf comp in October.
Beachfront camping on the Fleurieu Peninsula, 100km south of Adelaide. Rapid Bay offers 50 unpowered sites right on the sand, famous jetty diving with leafy sea dragons, and affordable rates from $12.50 per adult. Dogs welcome on leash.
Wild, windswept beachfront camping on the Great Ocean Road. Johanna Beach in Great Otway National Park delivers dramatic cliffs, incredible sunsets, and glow worms nearby — with basic facilities and zero crowds. Not for swimming, but brilliant for adventurous campers.
Camp behind Australia’s whitest sand beach at Lucky Bay, where kangaroos lounge on the shore and turquoise water stretches to the horizon. 56 sites in Cape Le Grand National Park, fully self-sufficient, completely unforgettable.








