Best Things to Do in Queensland (2026 Guide)

Queensland is Australia's sunshine state — home to the Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest coral ecosystem; the Daintree Rainforest, the world's oldest tropical rainforest; the Whitsunday Islands' white silica beaches; and the Gold Coast's theme parks and surf breaks. From the tropical north at Cairns to the subtropical southeast around Brisbane, Queensland's 5,200km of coastline encompasses more natural wonders per kilometre than almost any region on earth.

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Queensland Queensland

The unmissable in Queensland

These are the staple sights — don't leave Queensland without seeing them.

1
Eurimbula National Park
#1 must-see

Eurimbula National Park

📍 Eurimbula, Queensland, 4677
🕐 Mon–Sun Open 24h
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2
Seventeen Seventy (Town of 1770)
#2 must-see

Seventeen Seventy (Town of 1770)

📍 Seventeen Seventy, Queensland, 4677
🕐 Mon–Sun Open 24h
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Destinations in Queensland

Agnes Water

Agnes Water

Agnes Water is a small coastal town at the southern end of the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland,…

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Brisbane

Brisbane

Brisbane is Queensland's subtropical capital — a river city that has transformed from a laid-back provincial town into…

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Gold Coast

Gold Coast

The Gold Coast is Australia's playground — 57km of unbroken sandy beach backed by a glittering skyline, four…

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More attractions in Queensland

Eurimbula National Park 1
#1 must-see

Eurimbula National Park

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📍 Eurimbula, Queensland, 4677

Eurimbula National Park is a pristine coastal wilderness tucked along the southern shores of Bustard Bay in Queensland, Australia. Covering roughly 7,900 hectares, this largely undiscovered park protects a mosaic of mangrove creeks, eucalyptus forests, paperbark swamps, and windswept sand dunes that stretch to the Coral Sea. It forms the northern section of the broader Eurimbula–Deepwater conservation corridor, making it one of the most ecologically rich stretches of the Discovery Coast.

Wildlife encounters here are genuinely extraordinary. The park shelters sea turtles that nest on its beaches, migratory shorebirds that pause on tidal flats, and estuarine crocodiles in its northern waterways. Birdwatchers regularly spot brahminy kites, sea eagles, and glossy ibis among the mangroves. Agnes Water and the town of 1770 serve as the nearest service hubs, both just a short drive south.

Visitors can explore the park via canoe or kayak along scenic creek systems, or walk the Bustard Head Track to the heritage-listed lighthouse. Camping is available at Bustard Bay, where clear skies deliver spectacular stargazing far from urban light pollution. The park rewards patient, self-sufficient travellers with an authentically wild Queensland experience far removed from the tourist trail.

Seventeen Seventy (Town of 1770) 2
#2 must-see

Seventeen Seventy (Town of 1770)

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📍 Seventeen Seventy, Queensland, 4677

Seventeen Seventy — officially gazetted as the Town of 1770 — is a tiny, end-of-the-road settlement on Queensland's central coast that punches well above its weight as a travel destination. Named for the year Captain James Cook made his second landing on Australian soil here in May 1770, the town sits on a slender peninsula where the Southern Great Barrier Reef Lagoon meets the blue waters of Bustard Bay, creating a setting of considerable natural beauty.

The community of around 300 permanent residents swells dramatically in school holidays as caravanners and beach lovers converge on its white-sand shores, but outside peak season the pace is wonderfully unhurried. 1770 is the northern departure point for the iconic LARC amphibious vehicle tours to Deepwater National Park, a remote stretch of undeveloped coastline accessible by no other road vehicle. Local charter boats offer reef fishing, snorkelling trips, and sunset cruises, while the headland lookout provides one of the more cinematic sunset views on the Queensland coast. For those willing to bypass the better-known tourist trail, 1770 offers the kind of authentic, unhurried coastal escape that is becoming genuinely rare in modern Australia.

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Queensland is Australia’s second-largest state — 1.85 million square kilometres stretching from the New South Wales border in the south to the Gulf of Carpentaria and Cape York in the far north. Its eastern seaboard, sheltered by the Great Barrier Reef, has some of the world’s finest coastal scenery; the tropical north (Cairns, Port Douglas, Cape Tribulation) receives 2,000mm of rain annually and supports the world’s oldest continuous tropical rainforest ecosystem. Queensland’s economy is built on tourism, agriculture, and mining — but for visitors, the state is defined by its outdoors: reef, rainforest, island, and beach experiences that are simply unavailable anywhere else on earth.

Best Time to Visit Queensland

Queensland’s large size means there is no single “best time” — it depends on your destination. For the Great Barrier Reef and Tropical North Queensland (Cairns, Whitsundays): May through October is the dry season — low humidity, calm seas, excellent visibility for diving. November through April is the wet season in the far north — high humidity and rain, with reduced reef activities in the cyclone-risk months (January–March). The Gold Coast and Southeast Queensland: September through May is ideal (warm but comfortable); June–August is cooler and drier. Heart Reef helicopter access is available year-round.

Getting Around

Brisbane Airport (BNE) and Cairns Airport (CNS) are the major gateways. Hamilton Island Airport serves the Whitsundays directly from major capitals. Within Queensland, the Pacific Motorway connects Brisbane to the Gold Coast (90 minutes); the Bruce Highway runs north from Brisbane to Cairns (1,700km — plan multiple days). Internal flights connect Brisbane, Cairns, Townsville, Hamilton Island, and Mackay. For the Great Barrier Reef, day boats operate from Cairns, Port Douglas, Airlie Beach, and various island resorts. Campervan hire is popular for the coastal highway.

Great Barrier Reef

The Great Barrier Reef extends 2,300km along Queensland’s coast — the world’s largest coral structure and the most biodiverse marine ecosystem outside the tropics. It is visible from space and contains 2,900 individual reefs, 900 islands, 1,500 species of fish, and 4,000 types of mollusc. Cairns and Port Douglas are the primary bases for reef day trips: the outer reef (40-90 minutes by fast catamaran) has the best visibility and coral health; the inner reef closer to shore is more accessible for snorkellers. Agincourt Reef (from Port Douglas) is consistently rated among the finest reef experiences. The Silversonic, Spirit of Freedom, and Coral Expeditions liveaboard vessels take divers to the ribbon reefs, Cod Hole, and Coral Sea for multi-day experiences. Heart Reef in the Whitsundays — a naturally heart-shaped coral formation — is accessible by helicopter or scenic flight only.

Whitsunday Islands

The 74 Whitsunday Islands lie in the Coral Sea 600km north of Brisbane — the greatest concentration of sailing islands in Australia, ranging from resort islands (Hamilton, Hayman) to uninhabited national park islands. Whitehaven Beach on Whitsunday Island (75 Mile Beach in Fraser Island and Whitehaven are both considered among the world’s finest beaches) has 7km of silica-white sand of extraordinary purity — 98% pure silica, cool to touch even in direct sun. Hill Inlet, at the northern end of Whitehaven, forms a tidal swirl of white sand and turquoise water that creates the most-photographed image of the Whitsundays. Airlie Beach on the mainland is the jumping-off point; bare boat and crewed sailing charters are the classic way to experience the islands.

Daintree Rainforest and Cape Tribulation

The Daintree Rainforest in Far North Queensland is the world’s oldest surviving tropical rainforest — 135 million years old, predating the Amazon by 80 million years. The Daintree River, crossed by ferry (no bridge north of the Daintree — a deliberate decision to preserve the ecosystem), leads to Cape Tribulation, where rainforest meets the reef beach in a uniquely Queensland juxtaposition. Mossman Gorge, in the Mossman Gorge Centre (run by the Kuku Yalanji people), provides guided cultural walks through the rainforest with Aboriginal interpretation. The rainforest is UNESCO World Heritage listed as part of the Wet Tropics World Heritage Area.

Cairns and Tropical North Queensland

Cairns is the gateway city for Tropical North Queensland — with more natural world heritage within 2 hours than any other Australian city. The Kuranda Scenic Railway (1891, from Cairns to Kuranda through the rainforest) and the Skyrail Rainforest Cableway (7.5km above the rainforest canopy) are the classic day trip combination. The Barron Gorge National Park and Atherton Tablelands (crater lakes, waterfalls, and the world’s highest population of tree kangaroos) are within 90 minutes. Green Island (27km offshore) is the only coral cay island with tropical rainforest — walkable in an hour but with excellent snorkelling directly off the beach.

Fraser Island and the Sunshine Coast

Fraser Island (K’gari) is the world’s largest sand island — 122km long, with freshwater lakes (Lake McKenzie, Lake Wabby), ancient rainforest growing in sand, and wild dingo populations. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and accessed by 4WD barge from Hervey Bay (190km north of Brisbane). The Maheno shipwreck on the eastern beach is the island’s most photographed landmark. The Sunshine Coast, between Brisbane and Noosa, offers a more accessible coastal experience: Noosa National Park (coastal walking tracks with koalas), the Ginger Factory (Buderim), and the Original Eumundi Markets (Wednesday and Saturday) are the highlights.

Practical Tips

  • Great Barrier Reef: choose outer reef over inner reef for visibility and coral health. Certified divers have access to more of the reef; non-divers should look for day trips with underwater observatories or semi-submersibles as alternatives to snorkelling.
  • Stinger season: Box jellyfish and Irukandji (tiny, highly venomous jellyfish) make swimming in open water north of Bundaberg hazardous from October through May. Stinger suits are provided on most reef tours; patrolled beach enclosures in Cairns and Port Douglas are safe.
  • Fraser Island 4WD: the island requires a 4WD vehicle (no sealed roads). Hire from Hervey Bay or Rainbow Beach, ensure you have a current permit (available online), and deflate tyres for beach driving.
  • Reef protection: wear reef-safe sunscreen (no oxybenzone or octinoxate — these chemicals bleach coral). Do not touch, stand on, or take coral.

Frequently asked questions

Where is the best base for the Great Barrier Reef?

Cairns is the most practical base — the largest selection of reef operators, direct international flights, and easy access to both outer reef and Daintree Rainforest. Port Douglas (65km north) is smaller and more upscale, with access to Agincourt Reef (considered superior by many divers). Hamilton Island is the best base for the Whitsundays and Heart Reef helicopter access.

How long do you need in Queensland?

The state's size means it cannot be comprehensively explored in less than two weeks. A standard Queensland itinerary: 2 days Brisbane/Gold Coast, 3-4 days Whitsundays, 3-4 days Cairns/Daintree, 1-2 days Fraser Island. Those wanting the full reef experience (liveaboard diving) should budget a further 3-4 days.