Flinders Ranges Holidays & Travel Guide

The ultimate travel guide to theFlinders Ranges

Rusty red roads, rugged mountain ranges and the incredible feeling of being completely and utterly remote – the Flinders Ranges in South Australia’s Outback really is something else. A locality within the mountain range of the same name (the ranges stretch over 430 kilometres from Port Pirie to Lake Callabonna) is home to some of the country’s most fascinating natural sights, many of them the result of millions of years of erosion. Ikara (Wilpena Pound), located within Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park, is renowned for its majestic, natural amphitheatre, though it’s got equally stunning gorges and canyons, too.

Spend your days here exploring its Mars-like landscapes on a hike, scenic flight or four-wheel drive tour. At night, bundle into your tent at a bush campsite or curl up by your own private fire pit at a luxury resort.

While seeing the Flinders Ranges is an experience to tick off your Aussie travel bucket list, once you have, you’ll no doubt want to return again and again; there truly isn’t anywhere else quite like it.

Top things to do in the Flinders Ranges

Walking & hiking

Flinders Ranges has a great mix of trails, ranging from strolling to strenuous hiking. Hills Homestead Walk (6.6 kilometres) will see you leaving from the Wilpena Visitor Centre and walking through the peaceful Pound Gap into Wilpena Pound. Red Hill Lookout Hike (8.4 kilometres) will see you hiking to the top of Red Hill for views of the Aroona Valley and peaks of Wilpena Pound. And on the Arkaroo Rock Hike (3.1 kilometres), you’ll walk to a rock shelter featuring rock paintings from the Adnyamathanha people and see spectacular views of the Chace Range. Mount Ohlssen Bagge Hike (5.6 kilometres), Aroona to Youngoona Hike (13.4 kilometres) and, if you can spare a whole day, Bridle Gap Hike (18.6 kilometres) are other hikes to consider. For more information on walking and hiking in Flinders Ranges, visit Walking South Australia.

4WD self-drive & tours

While you don’t need a four-wheel drive to get around in Flinders Ranges, experiencing it on one can be an incredibly exhilarating experience. Join a four-wheel drive tour with Rawnsley Park Station, Flinders Experience Tours or Wilpena Pound Resort. Or rent a four-wheel drive and hit the tracks at Merna Mora Station, Horseshoe Rim 4WD Adventure or Worumba Station. For more details on four-wheel driving in the park, visit The Flinders Ranges Council.

Nature & Wildlife

While Wilpena Pound is easily the most known attraction within Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park’s 95,000 hectares, the Heysen Range, Brachina Gorge and Bunyeroo Gorge are also popular and worth seeing. Wildlife-wise, yellow-footed rock wallabies, red kangaroos and western grey kangaroos can all be found in Flinders Ranges. The area is also home to numerous bird and reptile species, including the grey-fronted honeyeater, the wedge-tailed eagle and the Lake Eyre dragon. For better luck spotting the wildlife, head to Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary, a 61,000-hectare private sanctuary, where you can book a tour.

Best places to stay in the Flinders Ranges

Caravan parks

Set among bushland, Rawnsley Park Caravan Park is a pet-friendly park with a camp kitchen, grocery shop and pool. Don’t want to lug around a tent? Book into its Bunkhouse. Caravans and campervans can also be parked at the campground at Wilpena Pound Resort, the only accommodation within Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park. The campsite has 40 powered campsites and 300 unpowered bush sites.

Camping

There are roughly 10 campgrounds dotted in and around Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park. Hookina Ruins Campgrounds, just off the Outback Highway, offers dog-friendly, free camping. Koolamon Campground, located on Aroona Creek at the base of the ABC Range, has 15 unpowered sites, while Flinders Bush Retreats has six unpowered bush campsites.

Trezona Campground, Rawnsley Park and Brachina East Campground are also good options nears Flinders Ranges. And, if you’re looking for somewhere a bit closer to the highway, Horrocks Pass Bush Camp is an hour and 30 minutes drive from Flinders Ranges and also a good bet.

Unique accommodation

Flinders Ranges takes full advantage of its surroundings with a number of stays that embrace the outdoors, alongside a healthy offering of lodges, cottages and bed and breakfasts. At Flinders Bush Retreats, you can glamp in an eco-tent.

Glamping is also available at Ikara Safari Camp at Wilpena Pound Resort. Here, each safari tent has a bathroom, king bed and air-con, as well as its own private deck and fire pit.

In addition to its bush campsites, Rawnsley Park Station also has a range of other accommodation options, including eco-villas, a homestead and holiday units.

For a wildly luxurious stay, look no further than Arkaba, which welcomes just 10 guests at a time on its 24,000-hectare wildlife conservancy property. Hop on a safari here and you’ll spot mobs of kangaroos, emus and some of Australia’s rarest wildlife.

Restaurants & dining in the Flinders Ranges

The most awarded hotel in the Outback, Prairie Hotel in Parachilna is a quirky-meets-elegant pub serving fine food, craft beer and tasty wines.

The Woolshed Restaurant at Rawnsley Park is housed in an actual iron woolshed and is known for its country-style fare and friendly service. Book in for its Lamb Tasting dinner and you’ll get to dine with the station manager.

Grab a coffee at Dunes Café in Roxby Dunes, dried fruit from O’Reilly’s Orchard and sweets or ice cream from Harts Sweetopia. For snacks for hikes or car trips, head to the Spalding General Store.

Getting to Flinders Ranges

The Flinders Ranges are just under a 17-hour drive from Sydney, a 12.5-hour drive from Melbourne and a five-hour drive from Adelaide. You don’t need a four-wheel drive to explore the region. The nearest airports are in Port Augusta, Coober Pedy and Wilpena Pound.

Best time to visit Flinders Ranges

The best time to visit Flinders Ranges is in the cooler months – from April to October – when you’ll experience warm, clear days and cooler mornings and evenings. In autumn, the fall foliage turns the landscape orange, red and brown. In spring, wildflowers turn it red, yellow and purple. In winter, with more rain, the creeks and gorges fill with water and you have a better chance of spotting wildlife.

Tours & packages for the Flinders Ranges

For an overview of the area, visit Flinders Ranges Visitor Information Centre in the town of Quorn. Wilpena Pound Resort has 4WD tours, walking tours and scenic flights that take you over the park’s highlights and, on longer flights, Lake Eyre. Its sunset tours will see you get to take in one of the area’s spectacular sunsets, beer or wine-in-hand.

Rawnsley Park Station: Flinders Ranges Discovery Tours also 4WD and walking tours, as well as scenic flights. If you only have one day to see the Flinders Ranges, book its nine-hour Central Flinders Explorer. The eight-hour Wallabies, Rocks and Copper Tour will also give you a good feel for the area. For multi-day tours, join The Arkaba Walk, a Wild Bush Luxury experience, which will see you trekking for four days, and Wallaby Tracks, which has three, to eight-day tours.