Best Things to Do in Victoria (2026 Guide)
Victoria is Australia's most compact and diverse state — Melbourne's urban energy, the Great Ocean Road's clifftop drama, the Grampians' Aboriginal rock art and sandstone ranges, the Penguin Parade at Phillip Island, and the gold rush architecture of Ballarat and Bendigo are all within three hours of each other. No Australian state packs as much variety into as small an area.
Find Things to Do →The unmissable in Victoria
These are the staple sights — don't leave Victoria without seeing them.
Great Ocean Road
Twelve Apostles
Penguin Parade
Destinations in Victoria
More attractions in Victoria
Puffing Billy Railway
Wilsons Promontory National Park
Grampians National Park
Federation Square
Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG)
National Gallery of Victoria
Queen Victoria Market
Flinders Street Station
Sovereign Hill
Loch Ard Gorge
Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria
Healesville Sanctuary
💎 Hidden Gem by Locals
Brambuk – the National Park & Cultural Centre
💎 Hidden Gem by Locals
Cape Otway Lightstation
Great Otway National Park
Nobbies Centre
Yarra River
Fitzroy Gardens
Flagstaff Gardens
Hosier Lane
Immigration Museum
Victoria occupies the southeastern corner of Australia — 227,416 square kilometres (smaller than California) containing Australia’s second-largest city, its most famous coastal drive, its most significant gold rush heritage, and some of its finest wine regions. The state was established as a separate colony from New South Wales in 1851, just as gold was discovered at Ballarat and Bendigo — the resulting gold rush transformed it from an agricultural backwater to Australia’s wealthiest and most populous colony within a decade. That wealth funded Melbourne’s extraordinary Victorian-era architecture and cultural institutions. Today Victoria’s diversity — urban, coastal, mountain, and agricultural — makes it the most efficient state for visitors who want variety without vast distances.
Best Time to Visit Victoria
October through April is the warmest period for coastal and outdoor activities. The Great Ocean Road is accessible year-round; winter (June–August) brings dramatic storm waves at the Twelve Apostles and fewer crowds. The Grampians are most accessible September through May (spring wildflowers in September–October are exceptional). Ski season at Mount Hotham and Falls Creek runs June through September. Melbourne’s events calendar peaks in January (Australian Open tennis), March (Formula 1 Grand Prix), and September–October (AFL Finals and Melbourne Cup).
Getting Around
Melbourne Airport (MEL) is the primary gateway. V/Line trains and coaches connect Melbourne to regional Victoria; Ballarat, Geelong, and Bendigo are on direct train lines. A car is essential for the Great Ocean Road, Grampians, and the wine regions. The Great Ocean Road runs from Torquay (100km from Melbourne) to Warrnambool (260km from Melbourne) with no public transport connection — day tours from Melbourne are available for those without vehicles.
Great Ocean Road
The Great Ocean Road runs 243km along Victoria’s storm-coast from Torquay to Allansford, hand-built by returned servicemen from World War I between 1919 and 1932. The Twelve Apostles — a series of limestone sea stacks rising from the Southern Ocean, with eight still standing after erosion has claimed four — are the most photographed site in rural Australia. Loch Ard Gorge, named for the clipper ship that wrecked here in 1878 with only two survivors, is more intimate than the Apostles and equally dramatic. The road itself through the Otway Ranges (past Cape Otway Lightstation and the Great Otway National Park’s ancient temperate rainforest) is as rewarding as any individual stop. Surf culture begins at Torquay (Surf World Museum, Rip Curl and Quiksilver headquarters); Bells Beach hosts the Rip Curl Pro (world’s longest-running professional surfing event) each Easter.
Phillip Island
Phillip Island, 90km southeast of Melbourne via the San Remo bridge, is Victoria’s most visited day trip destination. The Penguin Parade at Summerlands Beach is the primary attraction — each evening at sunset, the world’s largest colony of little penguins (also called fairy penguins) emerge from the sea and waddle to their burrows in a phenomenon that has occurred nightly for thousands of years. The Conservation Reserve charges entry and runs guided tours with bleacher seating; the premium Underground Viewing experience positions visitors below the penguins’ path. The Nobbies Centre at the island’s western tip overlooks a fur seal colony (6,000+ animals at Churchill Island). The Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit hosts the Australian MotoGP each October.
Grampians National Park
The Grampians (Gariwerd to the Djab wurrung and Jardwadjali peoples) is a sandstone mountain range in western Victoria — 167,000 hectares of eucalypt woodland, Aboriginal rock art sites, dramatic rock formations, and exceptional native wildlife. The Brambuk National Park and Cultural Centre (Halls Gap) interprets Djab wurrung culture and the region’s 22,000 years of Aboriginal occupation. MacKenzie Falls is the largest waterfall in Victoria. The Pinnacle Lookout above Halls Gap provides the classic Grampians panorama. In spring (September–October), Victoria’s largest concentration of wildflowers blooms across the range — 1,000 species of plants, including 20% endemic to the Grampians.
Gold Rush Heritage: Ballarat and Bendigo
Ballarat (110km west of Melbourne) was the centre of the 1851 gold rush and remains the best-preserved gold rush city in Australia. Sovereign Hill is the flagship living history museum — a recreated 1850s gold mining township where visitors pan for gold, watch underground mining demonstrations, and experience the period through costumed interpretation. The site of the 1854 Eureka Rebellion (where gold miners rebelled against colonial licensing laws — a foundational event in Australian democracy) is commemorated at the Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka (MADE), with the extraordinary Eureka Flag. Bendigo’s Art Gallery has one of Australia’s finest regional art collections.
Food & Drink
Victoria produces more wine varieties than any other Australian state — the Yarra Valley (Pinot Noir, Chardonnay), the Mornington Peninsula (Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris), the Grampians (Shiraz), and the Rutherglen region (fortified Muscat and Topaque) are the major wine regions within day-trip distance of Melbourne. The Yarra Valley also has artisan cheese, chocolate, and cider producers — the Yarra Valley Chocolaterie and Healesville’s farm-gate food trail are popular weekend drives.
Practical Tips
- Great Ocean Road direction: most guides recommend driving west (Melbourne to Warrnambool) to keep the ocean view on the passenger side. Staying overnight at Lorne, Apollo Bay, or Port Campbell turns it from a rushed day trip to a genuine road trip.
- Twelve Apostles: helicopter tours operate from the Twelve Apostles Helicopters base. Dawn and dusk are the best light; the apostles are illuminated until 11pm. Allow 2-3 hours at the site.
- Penguin Parade timing: the penguins emerge at sunset (times vary seasonally — check the Phillip Island website). Underground and Ranger-guided experiences require advance booking; standard bleacher seats can be purchased on the day outside peak season.
- Sovereign Hill: allow a full day. The Sound and Light Show (“Blood on the Southern Cross,” a multimedia experience about the Eureka Rebellion) runs nightly and is separately ticketed.
Frequently asked questions
Can you do the Great Ocean Road in one day from Melbourne?
It is possible but rushed — a dawn departure reaching the Twelve Apostles by mid-afternoon and returning to Melbourne by night makes for a 14-hour day. Better to stay at least one night in Lorne or Apollo Bay, breaking the drive and allowing sunrise/sunset at the apostles. Two nights allows the Otway rainforest, Cape Otway Lighthouse, and unhurried exploration of the best lookout points.
What is Victoria best known for?
The Great Ocean Road and Twelve Apostles are Victoria's international calling cards; the Penguin Parade and Melbourne's food and coffee culture are the runner-up attractions. Domestically, Victoria is known for Australian Rules football (the AFL was founded in Melbourne in 1897) and for the Melbourne Cup, which retains its status as a genuine national cultural event despite the city's growth and the sport's internationalisation.