Ranked: Australia's 25 most beautiful outback towns
The back of beyond
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Australia has an astonishingly diverse and stunning outback region that's home to some of the world's most isolated communities. Along the long, red-dust roads there are vibrant, historic towns and remote outposts that will give visitors an insight into life in this unique part of Australia, its rich Indigenous culture and colourful history. We've ranked them for their beauty, although it should be noted that this is based purely on our personal taste.
In our opinion, these are the most beautiful outback towns in Australia. Click through the gallery to see how we've ranked them...
25: Winton, Queensland
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This lonely little town is famous for a few remarkable reasons – firstly it's where Australia’s most famous song Waltzing Matilda stems from. Banjo Paterson is said to have been moved by the suicide of a shearer at the nearby Combo Waterhole and first performed the song in Winton’s North Gregory Hotel in 1895. It’s also where the world’s only evidence of a dinosaur stampede is recorded – the Dinosaur Stampede at Lark Quarry Conservation Park. The nearby Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum has an impressive collection of fossils.
24: Oodnadatta, South Australia
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The Oodnadatta Track – a traditional Aboriginal trading route – begins at Marree in South Australia and travels roughly northwest for 385 miles (620km) through the tiny town of Oodnadatta before looping back to the Stuart Highway at Marla. Once a stop on the original Ghan Railway, tiny Oodnadatta has a pub (in the Transcontinental Hotel, which is owned by the local Aboriginal people), the hard-to-miss Pink Roadhouse, post office and an intriguing little museum in one of the town’s old railway station buildings.
23: Daly Waters, Northern Territory
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This tiny settlement, which lies on the Stuart Highway from Katherine to Darwin, is all about its pub. Literally. But it's a beauty. Picture an outback pub and tiny Daly Waters hotel is it: corrugated tin roof, screens, overhanging porch and walls lined with memorabilia from travellers who pass through. This being the Northern Territory, there's plenty of wild caught barramundi on the menu. There's also an airstrip, constructed around 1930 to service the Daly Waters Airmail run, which was later used as an RAAF base in the Second World War.
22: Tibooburra, New South Wales
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A 17-hour drive northwest of Sydney, Tibooburra is in 'Corner Country' – set near the borders of NSW, Queensland and South Australia. As with others, the small town has been affected by dreadful droughts in NSW in recent years. The hardy locals at the friendly Family Hotel are happy to chat about life in the outback though. Meanwhile the vast surrounds of the Sturt National Park showcase 450-million-year-old granite tors, plus a section of the dingo fence, the world’s largest man-made fence.
21: Marree, South Australia
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This dusty central South Australia township is where two famous outback tracks begin, the Birdsville and Oodnadatta tracks, but it's a worthy place itself. Its charms are small but sweet – the lovely Marree Hotel is heritage-listed and the old railway station, which opened in 1884, was a stop on the original Ghan Railway line. There are also scenic flights to see the mysterious Marree Man, a modern geoglyph of a giant man that was etched into the arid land owned by the Arabana people. No one knows who did it or why.
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20: Melrose, South Australia
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19: Mount Magnet, Western Australia
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A remote red dirt town, Mount Magnet is the longest surviving gold mining settlement in Western Australia and rich in historic and natural attractions. The 22-mile (35km) trail from the town centre (complete with Art Deco facades and charming old pubs) reveals the area's old and modern goldmine sites, as well as Warramboo Hill where the region's rugged granite rock formations are on display.
18: Menzies, Western Australia
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Most people follow the road north from Kalgoorlie and on to Lake Ballard – a vast salt lake with strong connections to the Aboriginal Seven Sisters’ dreaming story. It also has the country’s largest outdoor art installation, Inside Australia by Antony Gormley. En route is Menzies, another mining town in the state’s bountiful goldfields region. Once a bustling gold-rich town home to 5,000, today only around 150 people live here. But there are plenty of points of interest and exquisite turn-of-the-century architecture to admire.
17: Leonora, Western Australia
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Set in the Goldfields-Esperance region in the state's southwest, Leonora was one of WA's boom towns during the gold rush of the 1890s. Its high street retains its historic charm with wide verandas, quaint shopfronts and classic turn-of-the-century hotels. The town's heritage trail and more historic buildings in Gwalia, just to the south, teaches visitors about Australian gold rush history. The ghost town was once the site of a gold mine, which was managed by a young Herbert Hoover before he went on to become the 31st President of the US.
16: Cue, Western Australia
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Established in 1893, Cue is another picturesque gold rush town with plenty of well-preserved stone buildings (including an old jail and gentleman’s club) and characterful places to stay. It's also a prime spot to see the wildflowers, which spring up after the winter rains across the rust-red plains of the Gascoyne-Murchison region from July to October. But the town’s major attraction lies 30 miles (48km) to the west – Walga Rock. This huge granite monolith is of deep cultural and spiritual significance to the traditional landowners. Its cave houses an extensive gallery including 10,000-year-old Aboriginal rock art.
15: Tennant Creek, Northern Territory
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Set on the main route from Darwin down to Alice Springs, there’s lots to recommend pulling over and staying a while in this blink-and-you-miss-it township. The Nyinkka Nyunyu Art and Culture Centre showcases Indigenous art and stories of the Warumungu people’s legends. Other highlights include an old gold mine and the historic telegraph station, which provided Australia with its first line to Britain. Just nearby is one of the outback’s iconic rock formations, Karlu Karlu (the Devil’s Marbles) – beautiful at sunrise or sunset.
14: Cobar, New South Wales
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Cobar’s excellent Great Cobar Heritage and Visitor Information Centre is packed with local memorabilia. Set between Dubbo and Broken Hill, the characterful country town has a clutch of handsome historic buildings, including a courthouse and the late 19th-century Great Western Hotel, complete with exquisite veranda. Mount Grenfell, on the way out of town, offers some of the best examples of rock art in Australia.
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13: Kalgoorlie-Boulder, Western Australia
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Deep into WA’s goldfields region is one of Australia's most famous frontier towns with lots of character and a colourful history. The gold-rich twin towns of Kalgoorlie-Boulder are a mine of information when it comes to the gold industry both past and present (Kalgoorlie's Super Pit is one of the richest gold deposits in the world). Many beautiful buildings remain from its 19th-century gold rush days, including its heritage hotels, museums and the Questa Casa Bordello, one of the world's oldest working brothels.
12: William Creek, South Australia
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Situated along the unsealed Oodnadatta Track and within the world’s largest working cattle property, Anna Creek Station, is remote outpost William Creek. It's the smallest town in the state and mostly a stop-off for people visiting Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre, a vast salt lake. Beers at its beloved tin-roofed pub, the William Creek Hotel, is a popular pastime. There are also scenic flights from the township over the lake and beyond to Wilpena Pound.
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11: Birdsville, Queensland
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The 320-mile (515km) Birdsville Track from Marree reaches the frontier town of Birdsville in southwestern Queensland. The historic drover track showcases the outback scenery in all its dusty and desolate glory – the atmospheric ruins of the Carcory Homestead (pictured) are a popular stop off. Birdsville has a population of 115 and is home to a friendly and lively outback pub. Nearby Big Red Sand Dune offers excellent sunset views. It's the setting for an annual music festival. In September, the tiny town teems with 6,000 race goers during the Birdsville Races (known as the Melbourne Cup of the Outback).
10: Lightning Ridge, New South Wales
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Visitors usually go down into a working opal mine to try fossicking for the prized gem in this quirky outback town. Set within the scorched land of far northwestern New South Wales, it sprung up around the rare black opal industry. As well as opal mines and stores, other highlights are soaking in the free Artesian Bore Baths, outdoor pools filled with naturally heated water from the Great Artesian Basin, the John Murray gallery, and Bevan’s Cactus Nursery.
9: Katherine, Northern Territory
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Sat on the rugged banks of Katherine River, the laid-back town of Katherine is a popular pit stop for roadtrippers driving from Western Australia to the tropical north. After soaking up the town’s hot springs, visitors usually explore the stunning Nitmiluk (or Katherine) Gorge, a cluster of 13 gorges that is of great importance to the Jawoyn Aboriginal people. There are also waterfalls, ancient rock art and astonishing wildlife.
8: Parachilna, South Australia
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The stunning outback landscape around Parachilna has attracted numerous movie makers and film stars. Kate Winslet and Harvey Keitel dropped by during the filming of Holy Smoke and the Australian movie Rabbit-Proof Fence was also filmed here. The nearby Ediacaran fossil site, dating back some 600 million years, is a major attraction. Another big draw is the Prairie Hotel (pictured), famous for its Feral Food Platter (emu, kangaroo, goat and lamb are all on the menu). The hotel also regularly exhibits work by Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal artists.
7: Alice Springs, Northern Territory
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Gateway to the barren and bewitching Red Centre and important Aboriginal cultural centre, Alice Springs is the ultimate outback town. As the closest town to Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park and King’s Canyon, it is a bustling desert region with plenty of places to shop, stay and eat. It's also got plenty of attractions of its own, including the Royal Flying Doctor Service and the world's largest classroom – the School of Air. Cultural highlights here include seeing the central Australian Aboriginal art on display at the Araluen Arts Centre and the Boomerang Art – Aboriginal Fine Art Gallery.
6: Beechworth, Victoria
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The immaculately preserved gold rush architecture of this town in Victoria's High Country is a big draw, as is its connection to one of Australia’s most infamous historical figures. Bushranger Ned Kelly was thrown in jail here before being sent to Melbourne to hang. Today, the town is very much a picture of respectability. It has a reputation for independent stores, bakeries and microbreweries and there are great restaurants too including renowned chef Michael Ryan's lauded Provenance. Highlights in the town are The Burke Museum and Historic Precinct, a living history museum that walks visitors through the town's gold rush history.
5: Silverton, New South Wales
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Location for seminal 1970s movie Mad Max, the diminutive dusty town (population is around 50) had its heyday at the turn of the century when it was the site of a short-lasting silver mine. Today, though, it usually draws filmmakers and tourists with its outback charm – all red dirt, blue skies and aesthetically-pleasing dilapidated buildings. Silverton is a popular day trip from nearby Broken Hill. The Mad Max Museum and the Silverton Gaol Museum are usually high on visitors' itineraries.
4: Coober Pedy, South Australia
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Opal mining town Coober Pedy is the archetypal gem in the rough. Mind-bendingly remote, blisteringly hot and with a lunar-like landscape, there’s not much to keep visitors above ground. But, on closer inspection, there are doors hidden in the sandstone. Most of its population live underground in 'dugouts' to escape the intense heat. Churches, bars, bookshops and even hotels are also tunnelled into the rock. Not surprisingly opals are an obsession here. Hand-dug Old Timers Mine, which dates from 1916, is a popular attraction while a guided tour of Tom’s Working Mine reveals why the rainbow gems are so special.
3: Broken Hill, New South Wales
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Encircled by striking outback landscapes, there’s remote and then there’s Broken Hill. The National Heritage listed mining town lies 710 miles (1,142km) northwest of Sydney, 520 miles (837km) northwest of Melbourne, and 320 miles (515km) northeast of Adelaide. But with historic buildings (including the Palace Hotel, one of Australia’s most iconic outback pubs and location for Priscilla, Queen of the Desert), a rich mining history and Indigenous heritage, it's packed with charm. Be sure to check out some of the 30-plus art galleries and wonderful outdoor sculpture park.
2: Kununurra, Western Australia
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An oasis-like town on the banks of the Ord River, Kununurra is at the eastern end of the legendary Gibb River Road, an unsealed track which traverses 410 miles (660km) through the beautiful wilderness of the Kimberley region. It's a beaut of a base to explore East Kimberly. Water is the main attraction here with the town’s name derived from Aboriginal language meaning big water. Days here are all about exploring the area's striking waterways. Highlights include canoeing down the river to spot freshwater crocs (the small, less scary variety), wallabies and lizards sunbaking on the banks. Hike up Kelly's Knob (also known as Thegoowiyeng) to watch the sun set over majestic hills.
1: Longreach, Queensland
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Stranded far west in the dusty and dry interior of the vast state, Longreach – which tops our ranking of the most beautiful outback towns – can be a shock to the system. The surprisingly large and thriving spot is also big on attractions. Top activities include bumping along the old Longreach-Windorah mail route in a restored stagecoach, drawn by five stock horses, cruises on the Thomson River and learning about life in rural Australia at the Stockman’s Hall of Fame and Outback Heritage Centre. There's also Australia’s first ever passenger aircraft on display at the Qantas Founders Outback Museum.
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