Australia's capital is far more rewarding than its reputation suggests — world-class galleries and museums (most of them free), a lake at its heart, a serious food scene and some of the country's best autumn colour. Here's everything you need to plan a trip, from a family-owned Australian operator helping travellers since 1974.
Browse the Guides Start PlanningTwo to three days covers the national institutions, the lake and the dining precincts. Add days if you want to explore the surrounding region.
Autumn (March–May) for the famous foliage, or spring (September–October) for Floriade. Winter is cold but quiet and cheap.
Central trips work on the light rail, buses and a bike; a hire car helps for the spread-out institutions and day trips. See our transport guide.
Canberra carries an unfair reputation as a city of roundabouts and public servants — and travellers who write it off miss one of Australia's most quietly rewarding short breaks. Purpose-built as the national capital and laid out by Walter Burley Griffin around the broad sweep of Lake Burley Griffin, it's a city of grand vistas, generous parkland and an extraordinary concentration of national institutions, most of which cost nothing to enter.
In a single compact area you can stand in the chamber of Parliament House, walk the moving galleries of the Australian War Memorial, see the country's masterpieces at the National Gallery, and explore the National Museum, the National Library, the Portrait Gallery and Questacon — almost all of them free. Beyond the institutions, the capital has grown a genuine personality: the design hotels and laneway dining of NewActon and Braddon, a thriving coffee and craft-beer culture, cool-climate wineries on the doorstep, and avenues that blaze red and gold each autumn.
It also makes an ideal base. Within a couple of hours you can reach the Snowy Mountains, the beaches of the NSW South Coast and the historic Southern Highlands. Whether you come for a long weekend of galleries and good food or as a stop on a wider south-east Australian trip, Canberra repays the visit. This guide brings together everything you need to plan it well.
Our in-depth Canberra guides, written to answer the questions travellers actually ask. We're adding to the series over time — start with these two.
An honest, area-by-area guide to the capital's precincts — Civic, NewActon, Braddon, Barton, Kingston and Manuka — with budget tiers, the midweek-versus-weekend pricing quirk, and the events that move prices.
Read the guide →The light rail, MyWay+ buses and fares, the airport, driving and parking, cycling the lake, rideshare, and how to reach the capital from Sydney and Melbourne — plus a point-to-point reference.
Read the guide →Understanding the city's layout is the key to planning a smooth trip, because Canberra isn't a single dense centre but a series of distinct precincts arranged around the lake. Lake Burley Griffin is the great divider.
North of the lake sits the practical, social half of the city: Civic (the central business district, and the southern end of the light rail), the buzzing food-and-bar district of Braddon, the design-led NewActon precinct on the waterfront, and the Australian National University. This is where most of the hotels, restaurants and nightlife are.
South of the lake lies the ceremonial and cultural half: the Parliamentary Triangle, home to Parliament House, the National Gallery, Old Parliament House and the major institutions, flanked by the genteel dining suburbs of Barton, Kingston and Manuka. The Australian War Memorial anchors the grand land axis that runs north from Parliament across the lake.
Most visitors split their time across both halves, so easy movement between them matters — and because the attractions are spread out, a little planning around transport and where you base yourself pays off. Our companion guides on where to stay and getting around cover both in detail.
The experiences that define a visit to the capital — and the reasons it surprises people.
The National Gallery, National Museum, National Library, Portrait Gallery and Questacon cluster around the lake — a world-class set of collections, and most are free to enter.
Tour the working Parliament House on Capital Hill and the historic Old Parliament House, now the Museum of Australian Democracy — the civic heart of the country.
One of the most moving museums in the country, anchoring the land axis north of the lake, with the daily Last Post ceremony a quietly powerful experience.
The city's centrepiece, ringed by a flat cycle-and-walking loop that passes most of the landmarks — one of the best ways to take in Canberra.
Australia's biggest spring flower festival fills Commonwealth Park each September–October, joined through the year by Enlighten, the Balloon Spectacular and Summernats.
Braddon and NewActon lead a genuinely good dining scene, backed by specialty coffee, craft breweries and the cool-climate wineries of the Canberra District.
Unlike the subtropical coast, Canberra has a true four-season inland climate, and the season you choose shapes the whole experience — and, around the festivals, the price of a room.
| Season | What to Expect | Good For |
|---|---|---|
| Autumn Mar–May | Crisp, clear days and the city's avenues turning spectacular red and gold. A local favourite. | Foliage, photography, the Enlighten period, comfortable sightseeing |
| Winter Jun–Aug | Genuinely cold by Australian standards — frosty mornings, fog, crisp sun. The Snowy Mountains are within reach. | Galleries and museums, cosy dining, the quietest and cheapest rooms |
| Spring Sep–Nov | Warming days, blossom and Floriade. The prettiest and busiest stretch for accommodation. | Floriade, gardens, outdoor dining — but book ahead |
| Summer Dec–Feb | Warm to hot and dry. Some quiet weeks over the Christmas break; Summernats and the Multicultural Festival are the spikes. | Lake activities, cycling, festivals, long evenings |
Canberra runs on government and business, so hotel demand is built around the working week. Outside major events, a weekend stay is often cheaper than midweek — the opposite of a beach town. We explain how to use this in the Where to Stay guide.
Canberra Airport sits just eight kilometres from the city and has direct flights from most major Australian cities, generally under two hours from the east coast. By land, it's about a three-hour drive from Sydney, around seven from Melbourne, and reachable by the NSW TrainLink train from Sydney (about four and a half hours) or by coach.
The city has a light rail line up its northern spine to Gungahlin, a comprehensive bus network, excellent cycle paths and short, low-cost rideshare hops. A central trip can be car-free; a hire car helps for the spread-out institutions and regional day trips. Full detail is in our Getting Around Canberra guide.
Public transport uses the MyWay+ system on both buses and light rail, paid by tapping on and off with a contactless card, a MyWay+ card or the app. Fares are modest, with free transfers within 90 minutes — and, helpfully for visitors, travel is free for everyone every Friday.
Canberra is mid-priced by Australian capital standards. Most of the headline attractions are free, which keeps daily costs down; accommodation is the main variable, swinging with the working week and the events calendar. Our Where to Stay guide breaks down the budget tiers.
We're a family-owned Brisbane operator, and our independent travel guides cover destinations right across the country. If your trip also takes in Queensland, our small-group day tours there include hotel pickup.
Enough for the institutions, the lake and the dining precincts. Stretch it longer if you want to add the Snowy Mountains, the coast or the wine country.
The National Gallery, museums, library and Parliament cost nothing to enter — budget for parking, food and the odd special exhibition rather than entry fees.
North (Civic, Braddon, NewActon) for dining and energy; south (Barton, Kingston, Manuka) for the institutions and calm. Decide what you're here for first.
Autumn foliage and spring's Floriade are the two standout windows. Book well ahead for Floriade in September and October.
Buses and light rail are free for everyone every Friday — a smart day to sightsee by public transport.
If you visit June to August, bring layers — Canberra is far colder than coastal Australia, with frosty mornings and crisp, clear days.
Dive into our in-depth guides to where to stay and getting around the capital, and explore our independent, family-written travel guides covering destinations right across Australia.
Where to Stay Getting Around