The Great Caravanning Dream — Four Aussie Road Trips
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Time to read 4 min
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Time to read 4 min
Hitching up the van and pointing it at the horizon is one of those quintessential Aussie things. Whether you've got a weekend, a fortnight, or six months, this country is built for caravan road trips — sealed highways, clean campsites, fuel and supplies along the way (mostly), and scenery that rivals anywhere on the planet.
Here are four classic caravan routes, ranging from a two-day weekend escape to the full lap of Australia. Pick the one that fits the time you've got and start planning.
Photo by Trevor McKinnon on Unsplash
Distance: ~250km · Time: 2-4 days easy
Australia's most famous coastal drive. Starts in Anglesea (1.5 hours from Melbourne), winds through Lorne, Apollo Bay, Port Campbell and finishes near Allansford. You could blast through it in 4 hours straight, but the whole point is to stop.
What to see:
Caravan-friendly notes: several tight bends and steep grades through the Otways — take it easy. Plenty of caravan parks in Apollo Bay, Lorne, Port Campbell. Free camps are limited along the road; book ahead in summer.
Caravan-friendly stops on the Great Ocean Road:
Photo: Trevor McKinnon / Unsplash
Distance: ~3,000km · Time: 3-4 weeks
The classic outback caravan trip. Adelaide → Coober Pedy → Uluru → Alice Springs → Darwin. Sealed road the whole way, but proper outback country either side. Pulling a van here is genuinely doable but you need to be prepared.
Highlights:
Critical caravan notes: distances between fuel stops can be 250-350km. Carry extra fuel in a jerry. Carry 2x the water you think you need. Tell people your route. Beware road trains (give them a wide berth on overtakes). Watch for kangaroos at dawn/dusk — daytime driving only is the safest rule. Don't tow into wet-season Top End (Nov–Apr).
Caravan-friendly stop in the Centre:
Distance: ~1,500km loop · Time: 2-4 weeks
The Spirit of Tasmania ferry from Geelong gets your van over to Devonport, and from there a clockwise loop hits everything that matters. Tasmania is small enough that 2 weeks gives you a generous look; 4 weeks lets you really sink in.
Suggested route:
Caravan notes: book the Spirit ferry well in advance — peak times sell out 6+ months ahead. Tassie roads are narrower than mainland; take corners slow with the van. Plenty of caravan parks plus excellent free and low-cost bush camps if you're self-sufficient.
Caravan-friendly stops on the Tassie Loop:
Photo: Kat Wallace / Unsplash
Distance: ~14,500km · Time: 6-12 months (most people)
The "Big Lap" is the dream trip many Australians do once in their life — coast-hugging circumnavigation that takes in every state, every climate, and most of the iconic destinations. Done right, it's the trip of a lifetime. Done badly, it becomes an exhausting blur.
The basic route (clockwise from your home city):
Realities of the Big Lap:
The most-cited tip from Big Lap veterans: spend longer in fewer places. Three nights minimum at any stop, a week at the great spots. The "drive 400km, sleep, drive 400km" rhythm burns people out by month three.
Whether you're doing a weekend or the Big Lap, the Campsite Explorer has thousands of caravan parks, free camps and station stays across Australia — filter by region, facilities (powered sites, dump points, pet-friendly) and what you actually need.
The best caravan trip is the one you actually do. The Great Ocean Road in 3 days teaches you whether you actually like caravanning. The Big Lap teaches you who you really are. Both are equally valid.
Pick the trip that matches your time and money, do a service before you leave, plan around the seasons, and don't try to see everything. The Aussie caravan dream rewards people who slow down.
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