Best Things to Do in Australia (2026 Guide)

Australia is a continent-nation in the Southern Hemisphere, spanning tropical reefs, red desert, ancient rainforest, and 25,000 kilometres of coastline. The Great Barrier Reef is the world's largest living structure; Uluru (Ayers Rock) is a sandstone monolith sacred to the Anangu people; and Sydney Harbour is one of the most photogenic urban anchorages on earth. This guide covers the best things to do in Australia, from the wildlife parks of Queensland to the wine regions of South Australia.

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The unmissable in Australia

These are the staple sights β€” don't leave Australia without seeing them.

1
Sydney Opera House
#1 must-see

Sydney Opera House

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2
Sydney Harbour Bridge
#2 must-see

Sydney Harbour Bridge

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3
Great Barrier Reef
#3 must-see

Great Barrier Reef

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Explore Australia on the map

Destinations in Australia

New South Wales

New South Wales

New South Wales is Australia's most populous state and its most visited, anchored by Sydney β€” one of…

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Northern Territory

Northern Territory

Australia's Northern Territory is the country's most remote and spiritually significant region, home to Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park…

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Queensland

Queensland

Queensland is Australia's sunshine state β€” home to the Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral ecosystem; the…

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South Australia

South Australia

South Australia is a state covering the central southern portion of Australia, from the wine regions and Flinders…

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Tasmania

Tasmania

Tasmania is Australia's only island state, separated from the mainland by the Bass Strait β€” a rugged, temperate…

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Victoria

Victoria

Victoria is Australia's most compact and diverse state β€” Melbourne's urban energy, the Great Ocean Road's clifftop drama,…

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Western Australia

Western Australia

Western Australia is Australia's largest state β€” a vast territory of 2.6 million sq km covering the entire…

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Browse by experience type

πŸ¦“ Nature and Wildlife Tours πŸ§— Adventure Tours πŸ—ΊοΈ Day Trips β›΅ Sailing 🚢 Walking Tours πŸ”‘ Private and Luxury 🌊 Water Tours 🏷️ Involves Animals πŸ• Food & Drink πŸ›₯️ Day Cruises ⏱️ Half-day Tours πŸ‘₯ Small Group ⛴️ Sightseeing Cruises 🎧 Audio Guides πŸ“œ Historical Tours 🌊 On the Water β›΅ Catamaran Cruises 🍷 Wine Tastings 🏷️ Cultural Tours 🍷 Wine Tours 🀿 Snorkeling 🌿 Nature Walks πŸ–οΈ Shore Excursions πŸ›» 4WD Tours πŸ₯— Lunch Cruises πŸ”₯ Extreme Sports πŸ™οΈ City Tours πŸ›οΈ Attractions & Museums 🍽️ Dining Experiences πŸš‚ Rail Tours 🚀 Jet Boat Rentals πŸ—½ Private Sightseeing Tours 🍳 Culinary Tours 🌱 Eco Tours 🏊 Swimming πŸš— Car Tours 🚠 Cable Car Tours 🚒 Coffee Cruises πŸ₯Ύ Hiking Tours πŸŒ… Sunset Cruises ✈️ Air Tours 🎈 Hot Air Balloon Rides πŸ›Ά Kayaking Tours πŸͺ‚ Skydiving 🍽️ Dinner πŸ—ΊοΈ Multi-day Tours 🚁 Helicopter Tours 🦁 Safaris 🚀 Speed Boat Rentals 🏎️ Luxury Car Tours πŸ¦’ Zoo Tickets 🌱 Sustainable Tours πŸ‹ Whale Watching 🚣 Rafting πŸ₯‘ Street Food Tours πŸ¦“ Zoos & Wildlife Parks 🍱 Lunch πŸ—Ώ Monuments and Memorials πŸŒƒ Night Cruises 🌹 Romantic Tours 🍽️ Dinner Cruises 🚌 Hop on Hop Off Buses 🎫 Sporting Event Tickets & Passes 🐬 Dolphin Watching 🎴 Restaurants 🎫 Natural Attractions πŸ”– Road Trip β˜€οΈ Full-day Tours 🚌 Bus Tours

More attractions in Australia

#4 Uluru (Ayers Rock)

Uluru (Ayers Rock)

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#5 Twelve Apostles

Twelve Apostles

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#6 Great Ocean Road

Great Ocean Road

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#7 Sydney Harbour

Sydney Harbour

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#8 Rottnest Island

Rottnest Island

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#9 Kangaroo Island

Kangaroo Island

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#10 Port Arthur

Port Arthur

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#11 Bondi Beach

Bondi Beach

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#12 Three Sisters

Three Sisters

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#13 Scenic World

Scenic World

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#14 Kakadu National Park

Kakadu National Park

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#15 Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park

Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park

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#16 Katoomba

Katoomba

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#17 Puffing Billy Railway

Puffing Billy Railway

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#18 Penguin Parade

Penguin Parade

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#19 Whitehaven Beach

Whitehaven Beach

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#20 Hill Inlet

Hill Inlet

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#21 Heart Reef

Heart Reef

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#22 Taronga Zoo Sydney

Taronga Zoo Sydney

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#23 Australian War Memorial

Australian War Memorial

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#24 Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG)

Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG)

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See all things to do in Australia

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Australia requires planning in a way that most destinations don’t, because the things to do in Australia are spread across a continent the size of Western Europe. Sydney and Melbourne are two of the world’s most livable cities, separated by a one-hour flight. Cairns is the gateway to the Great Barrier Reef and Daintree Rainforest. Adelaide is the base for Kangaroo Island and the Barossa Valley. The Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park sits in the Red Centre, a three-hour flight from the coasts. The Great Ocean Road between Melbourne and Adelaide is one of the world’s great coastal drives. Picking a region and doing it properly β€” rather than rushing between all of them β€” produces the better trip.Best time to visitAustralia’s seasons are inverted from the Northern Hemisphere. December to February is summer β€” excellent for Sydney beaches and Melbourne events (Australian Open tennis in January) but extreme heat in the interior. June through August is Australia’s winter: mild in Sydney (15-18C), perfect in Queensland (25C with no humidity), and cold in Melbourne and the south. The Top End (Darwin, Kakadu) has a wet season (November-April) with dramatic but road-blocking storms. The Great Barrier Reef is best November through May when visibility is highest. September and October are ideal for the south and east.Getting aroundDomestic flights are the only practical way to move between major regions. Qantas, Virgin Australia, and Jetstar connect all major cities. The train journey between Sydney and Melbourne (the XPT) takes 11 hours and passes through the Australian Alps; scenic but slow. Within cities, Sydney’s train network is extensive; Melbourne’s tram system is the best in Australia and covers the CBD for free. Car rental is essential for the Great Ocean Road, Kangaroo Island, and anywhere in the Red Centre.What to eat and drinkAustralian cafe culture produces some of the best flat whites in the world; Melbourne’s Degraves Street laneway espresso bars are the benchmark. Sydney’s fish markets at Pyrmont sell fresh seafood direct; Sydney rock oysters and Moreton Bay bugs (a local crustacean) are the things to eat at the harbour. In Brisbane, South Bank’s food precinct serves modern Australian cuisine β€” an informal Pacific Rim fusion that draws on Asian immigration. In Adelaide, the Central Market (opened 1869) anchors a food culture that extends to the Barossa Valley wineries an hour north. For pub culture, Melbourne’s Carlton neighbourhood has the best concentration of Victorian-era pubs.Neighborhoods to exploreThe Rocks, Sydney β€” The original European settlement of Sydney, now a cobblestone heritage district at the base of the Harbour Bridge. Weekend markets, sandstone warehouses turned galleries, and the best harbour views.Fitzroy, Melbourne β€” Melbourne’s arts and coffee neighbourhood: Brunswick Street’s galleries, vintage stores, and the highest ratio of independent coffee roasters per block in Australia.Cairns Esplanade β€” The waterfront strip of Australia’s reef-diving capital. Lagoon pool, restaurants, and the Great Barrier Reef tour departure point β€” everything within a 20-minute walk.Fremantle, Perth β€” The port city south of Perth: colonial prison (now a museum), fishing boat harbour, and the Fremantle Market. A half-day from Perth, or a destination in itself.Surfers Paradise, Gold Coast β€” High-rise beachfront city that is unashamedly tourist-facing: theme parks, beach clubs, and the Q1 tower observation deck with coast views to Brisbane.North Adelaide β€” The residential and restaurant quarter north of Adelaide’s CBD. O’Connell Street and Melbourne Street have the best independent restaurants and wine bars for exploring South Australian vintages.FAQWhat are the best things to do in Australia?The top things to do in Australia include snorkelling or diving the Great Barrier Reef from Cairns, visiting the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge, seeing Uluru at sunrise, driving the Great Ocean Road from Melbourne, and exploring the Barossa Valley wineries from Adelaide. Wildlife encounters β€” kangaroos, koalas, and quokkas on Rottnest Island β€” are extraordinary at any of these locations.How many days do I need in Australia?Three weeks is a minimum to experience three or four major regions without feeling rushed. A week gets you one city and one regional destination properly β€” for example, Sydney plus the Blue Mountains plus a Hunter Valley winery day. Australia rewards extended stays; most first-time visitors wish they had more time.Is Australia safe for tourists?Australia is very safe. The main hazards are environmental: shark-patrolled beaches (swim between the flags), box jellyfish in North Queensland waters (October-May), extreme UV radiation (wear SPF50), and the desert interior where getting stranded without water is a genuine survival situation. Cities have very low crime rates by international standards.What is the best time to visit Australia?It depends on where you’re going. For Sydney and Melbourne: September-November (spring). For Queensland and the reef: June-October (dry season, no stinger jellyfish). For the Red Centre (Uluru): April-October. For the Top End: May-October. There is no single best time for the whole country simultaneously.How do I get around Australia?Domestic flights between major cities. Car rental for regional exploration. Within cities: trains in Sydney, trams in Melbourne, buses elsewhere. Book domestic flights early β€” they can be expensive when booked last-minute. The Ghan train (Adelaide to Darwin via Alice Springs) and the Indian Pacific (Sydney to Perth) are iconic rail journeys if time allows.Is Australia expensive?Yes β€” Australia is one of the more expensive destinations in the Asia-Pacific region. A hotel room in Sydney averages $200-350 AUD per night. The Great Barrier Reef dive day tours run $180-280 AUD. A pub meal costs $20-30 AUD. Budget travellers can use hostels and self-catering to reduce costs significantly. Domestic flights often cost more than equivalent European short-haul flights.What are hidden gems in Australia?The Flinders Ranges in South Australia β€” ancient, eroded mountain ranges with gorges and Aboriginal rock art β€” are visited by almost no international tourists. The Kimberley in Western Australia offers Bungle Bungle Range and isolated gorges more dramatic than most more famous Australian landscapes. Lord Howe Island, a UNESCO-protected coral atoll two hours from Sydney, limits visitors to 400 at a time.