Canberra & ACT Travel Guide 2026
Canberra is Australia's purpose-built national capital — population 460,000, sitting at 570 metres altitude on the Limestone Plains of southeastern Australia, 280 kilometres south-west of Sydney and 660 kilometres north-east of Melbourne. The city was designed in 1913 by Chicago architects Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin, winners of an international design competition, and the geometric precision of their Parliamentary Triangle still shapes every major view in the city.
The Australian Capital Territory contains almost all of Australia's most significant national institutions — Parliament House (the seat of democracy since 1988), the Australian War Memorial (one of the world's great war museums), the National Gallery of Australia (166,000+ works including Jackson Pollock's Blue Poles and the world's largest collection of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art), the National Museum, the Portrait Gallery, the National Library, Questacon, and more. Most of these are free to enter. They are genuinely world-class.
Beyond the institutions: the Canberra District wine region (40+ boutique wineries across 140+ vineyards within 35 minutes of the CBD — cool-climate Shiraz, Riesling, Pinot Noir), Namadgi National Park (46% of the ACT — alpine wilderness, Aboriginal rock art, subalpine meadows, Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve with reliable koalas, platypus, and kangaroos), and the four genuinely distinct seasons that coastal Australia doesn't offer. Autumn (March-May) is Canberra's most photogenic season. Winter (June-August) is truffle season. Spring (September-October) is Floriade — Australia's biggest celebration of spring, with one million tulips and bulbs planted each year in Commonwealth Park. This is Ngunnawal country.
Why Canberra Surprises Everyone
A planned city turns out to have the most concentrated set of national institutions in the Southern Hemisphere, a cool-climate wine region, four real seasons, and a food scene that has quietly become one of Australia's best.
Canberra holds Australia's national institutions in a single compact district. Parliament House, the Australian War Memorial, the National Gallery of Australia, the National Portrait Gallery, the National Museum of Australia, the National Library, the National Arboretum, and the Australian National Botanic Gardens are all free to enter. Questacon (the National Science & Technology Centre) is the main paid institution. These are not second-tier local museums — they are world-class, well-funded, and frequently ranked among the best of their kind globally. A visitor can spend three days in Canberra doing nothing but free cultural institutions and leave genuinely impressed.
Canberra's altitude (570m) and continental inland position give it a four-season climate that coastal Australia does not have. Autumn (March-May) is arguably Canberra's most photogenic season — the deciduous trees lining its streets (elms, oaks, liquidambars, ginkgos) produce some of Australia's best autumn colour. Winter (June-August) brings frost, the occasional snow fall, and truffle season — the Canberra region is Australia's truffle capital, with Périgord black truffles harvested June-August. Spring (September-November) is Floriade and tulips. Summer (December-February) is warm, dry, and made for cycling around Lake Burley Griffin.
The Canberra District wine region is Australia's most underrated wine region. 40+ boutique wineries across 140+ vineyards within 35 minutes of the CBD, concentrated in the Murrumbateman and Lake George sub-regions (just over the NSW border, but marketed as Canberra). The high-altitude (750m) continental climate produces wines more like Burgundy or the Rhône than Australia's warmer wine regions — exceptional Riesling, Shiraz, Pinot Noir, and Chardonnay. Clonakilla's Shiraz Viognier has been rated among Australia's greatest wines for two decades. Most wineries are family-owned with intimate cellar-door experiences.
Namadgi National Park covers 46% of the Australian Capital Territory — 106,000 hectares of alpine wilderness, granite gorges, subalpine meadows, and snow gum woodland extending south from Canberra to the Victorian border. The park is genuine wilderness: Aboriginal rock art at Yankee Hat (a 6km return walk to an overhang with hand stencils and kangaroo figures), three Namadgi summits over 1,900m, and excellent day hikes. Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve, within the park's northern boundary, offers reliable koala, platypus, and kangaroo sightings in bushland settings, plus the Deep Space Communication Complex (the NASA tracking station that supported the Apollo moon landings).
We acknowledge the Ngunnawal people as Traditional Custodians of the Canberra region and the Australian Capital Territory, and pay respect to Elders past, present, and emerging. The ACT is also recognised as being of cultural significance to the Ngambri and Ngarigo peoples — the Ngambri are recognised as having continuous connection with the Canberra environs, and the Ngarigo people are the Traditional Custodians of the alpine country of Namadgi and the southern ACT. The Yankee Hat rock art in Namadgi National Park — hand stencils and kangaroo figures in a granite overhang — documents at least 21,000 years of continuous Aboriginal presence in this region. We recognise the continuing cultural, spiritual, and educational relationship all three peoples have with the land, the waters, and the alpine country we share with our guests.
When to Visit Canberra
Four real seasons — each with its own character. Spring gets Floriade and the crowds; autumn gets the colour without them; winter gets truffles and value; summer gets long cycling days.
Weather: 5–20°C, warming, dry, days lengthening. Floriade (12 Sep – 11 Oct 2026) fills Commonwealth Park with over one million tulips and spring bulbs — the Southern Hemisphere's biggest celebration of spring. Daytime entry is free; the NightFest evening event is ticketed. Most popular visiting season — book accommodation 2-3 months ahead. Beyond Floriade, the gardens across the city come alive, and the Lake Burley Griffin cycle loop is at its most pleasant.
Weather: 12–28°C, warm and dry, long evenings. Parliament is often in recess (January especially), so Question Time visits are unavailable — but the buildings themselves remain open. The Enlighten Festival (late February to early March) projects large-scale digital art onto the national institutions at night — Parliament House, the National Library, and the National Gallery all become canvases. Long light evenings make summer the right season for Lake Burley Griffin cycling, outdoor dining in Braddon and Kingston, and late-afternoon wine region visits.
Weather: 6–20°C, mild, crisp clear days, dropping humidity. The best season for visual photography — Canberra's deciduous trees (the elms, oaks, liquidambars, and ginkgos planted across the city a century ago) produce some of Australia's most spectacular autumn colour, with the peak usually in late April to early May. Fewer crowds than spring. Harvest season at the vineyards — April tastings see the fruit of that year's work. Restaurants at their seasonal best. The Canberra International Film Festival (late October to early November) is a quieter cultural highlight.
Weather: 0–12°C, cold, frost at dawn, occasional light snow, clear bright days. The Canberra region is Australia's truffle capital — Périgord black truffles (Tuber melanosporum) are harvested June to August across the region's cool-climate farms. Several producers offer public truffle hunts with trained dogs, truffle farm lunches, and truffle dinners at partner restaurants. Accommodation is at its best value (30-40% less than peak Floriade rates), the galleries are quiet, and the restaurant scene is at its most ambitious — winter is when Canberra's chefs source their best seasonal ingredients. Pack layers. Frost on the lawns at dawn is normal.
| Month | Temp | Crowds | Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 12-28°C | Low | Summer outdoor events, Parliament in recess |
| Feb–Mar | 13-28°C | Moderate | Enlighten Festival — projections on national buildings |
| Apr–May | 6-20°C | Low-Moderate | Autumn colour peak — the photographer's months |
| Jun–Aug | 0-12°C | Low | Truffle season, cosy dining, best accommodation value |
| Sep–Oct | 5-20°C | Peak | Floriade — book 2-3 months ahead |
| Nov | 8-22°C | Moderate | Spring gardens beyond Floriade, jacarandas |
| Dec | 10-26°C | Moderate | Parliament sits early December, then recess |
The National Institutions
Canberra's reason-for-being. Most of these are free. All are world-class. Allow three days minimum to do the top six properly — and even then, you'll want to come back.
Australian War Memorial
One of the world's great war museums. The Hall of Memory (the domed inner sanctum with the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier beneath an extraordinary stained-glass window), the Roll of Honour (102,000+ names of Australians killed in service), the aircraft hall (including Lancaster G for George that flew 90 operations over Europe), the Vietnam Gallery, and the Anzac Hall galleries. The Last Post Ceremony at 4:55pm each day tells the story of one individual from the Roll — profoundly moving regardless of nationality. Arrive at opening to avoid crowds; allow 3+ hours minimum.
Parliament House
Australia's seat of democracy since 1988 — the building topped by the 81m stainless steel flagpole that has become Canberra's defining landmark. The grass-covered roof (walkable — the public can stand on top of Parliament) is a deliberate architectural gesture: democracy under, people above. Walk the marble foyer, the Great Hall (with the Arthur Boyd tapestry, one of the largest in the world), the House of Representatives and Senate chambers, and the Members' Hall. When Parliament is sitting, Question Time (2pm Monday-Thursday) is free to watch from the public gallery. Free guided tours run on non-sitting days.
National Gallery of Australia
166,000+ works. The collection's highlights include Jackson Pollock's Blue Poles (bought by the Whitlam government in 1973 for $1.3M — controversial at the time, now priceless), the world's largest collection of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art (an entire purpose-built wing, with monumental works like the Aboriginal Memorial of 200 painted hollow log coffins), the sculpture garden (with Rodin, Henry Moore, and Fujiko Nakaya's fog sculpture), and rotating special exhibitions. General entry free; special exhibitions ticketed. Free daily highlights tour at 11am.
Lake Burley Griffin & Precincts
The centrepiece of Griffin's design — a 664-hectare artificial lake created in 1963 to give the city its central axis. The Captain Cook Memorial Jet (a 147m water fountain running midday hours as a permanent tribute), the National Carillon on Aspen Island (a 50m tower with 55 bronze bells, gifted by the British government for Canberra's 50th anniversary), Commonwealth Park (the Floriade venue), Kings Park, and 40km of lakeside cycling and walking paths — the 28km Lake Burley Griffin loop is the city's most popular cycling route, flat and passing every major institution.
National Museum of Australia
Australia's social history told through powerful permanent galleries — the First Australians gallery (65,000+ years of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history and continuing living culture), the Landmarks gallery (100+ objects defining moments that shaped modern Australia — from a merino fleece to an Indigenous protest banner), Eternity (50 Australian life stories), and rotating special exhibitions. The striking 2001 building by Ashton Raggatt McDougall wraps around a peninsula overlooking Lake Burley Griffin — the architecture is as interesting as the collection.
Questacon — National Science Centre
The National Science and Technology Centre — 200+ interactive exhibits across 8 galleries. Excellent for families and for curious adults. The Free Fall slide (a 6-metre vertical drop that teaches terminal velocity the hard way), the Earthquake simulator (shake-tested in a replica of a 1989 San Francisco apartment), the Perception gallery, and the Mini Q area for under-6s. Plan 2-3 hours minimum; children can happily spend a full day. Entry fee applies (adults ~$25, children ~$20 in 2026). The only major paid institution — and the one least likely to disappoint.
Other free institutions worth knowing about: the National Portrait Gallery (Australia's faces told through 400+ paintings, photographs, and sculptures — opposite the National Gallery, often overlooked), the National Library (the gorgeous 1968 modernist building, free reading rooms, regular exhibitions in the ground-floor galleries), Old Parliament House / Museum of Australian Democracy (the pre-1988 Parliament building preserved as a museum — the stories behind the dismissal, the 1975 constitutional crisis, the long history of political theatre). A 2-3 day Canberra visit realistically covers six major institutions; passionate visitors return for the rest.
Beyond the Institutions
Canberra is a 460,000-person city with genuinely great gardens, a major national park, and a wildlife reserve that sees koalas and platypus. Half a day away from the museums and galleries is worth taking.
National Arboretum Canberra
One of the world's most ambitious public arboreta — 100 forests of rare and endangered trees on 250 hectares, with long panoramic views over the city and Lake Burley Griffin. The Pod Playground (cubby-pod playground among acorn sculptures) is one of Australia's best children's playgrounds. The National Bonsai and Penjing Collection (Australia's largest public bonsai collection) and the Village Centre Café with panoramic views. Free entry; the shaded lawns are among the best picnic spots in the ACT. Allow 2-3 hours; longer if children are present.
Australian National Botanic Gardens
Australia's premier collection of exclusively native flora — 6,200 species of Australian plants on a 40-hectare site at the foot of Black Mountain. The rainforest gully, the eucalypt lawn, the Aboriginal Plant Use trail, and the spectacular spring wildflower displays. The gardens are Australia's most comprehensive living documentation of the continent's botanical diversity — a place to understand Australian flora properly. Free entry, free guided walks at 11am and 2pm daily. The café has the best-value lunch in the ACT's cultural precinct.
Namadgi National Park
46% of the Australian Capital Territory — 106,000 hectares of alpine wilderness extending south from Canberra toward the Victorian border. Yankee Hat rock art (a 6km return walk to a granite overhang with Aboriginal hand stencils and kangaroo figures documenting 21,000+ years of continuous presence), three summits above 1,900m, and excellent day hikes in snow gum woodland and subalpine meadows. The park is genuinely wild; mobile coverage is patchy. Winter brings snow at the higher peaks; spring wildflower displays are spectacular. National Parks camping with permits at Orroral, Honeysuckle, and Mount Clear campgrounds.
Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve
5,500 hectares of bushland within Namadgi's northern boundary, 45 minutes from the CBD — and the most reliable wildlife viewing in the ACT. Koalas (in the dedicated Koala Habitat), platypus (in the Sanctuary pools at dawn and dusk), eastern grey kangaroos and swamp wallabies (across the Sanctuary grasslands), emus, and wombats. The Dalsetta loop is the classic 2-hour circuit. The Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex, within the reserve, is the NASA tracking station that supported the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing broadcast — free visitor centre with Apollo-era equipment.
Food, Wine & Truffles
Canberra's food scene has undergone a quiet revolution. With 40+ boutique wineries 35 minutes away, a truffle industry that is now Australia's largest, and two genuinely good dining precincts, the capital has become a food destination in its own right.
Canberra District Wine Region
40+ boutique wineries across 140+ vineyards in the Murrumbateman and Lake George sub-regions, just across the NSW border but marketed as Canberra. The high-altitude (750m) continental climate produces wines closer to Burgundy or the Rhône than the warmer Australian regions — exceptional Riesling, Shiraz, Pinot Noir, and Chardonnay. Clonakilla (the Shiraz Viognier, rated among Australia's greatest wines for 20+ years), Helm (the Riesling specialist — a single-variety winery at the top of its craft), and Mount Majura (the Tempranillo and the Canberra-signature Riesling) are the anchors. Most cellar doors are open weekends; weekdays by appointment.
Braddon & Lonsdale Street
Canberra's trendiest precinct — converted industrial warehouses now housing Italian, Japanese, Middle Eastern, and modern Australian restaurants, rooftop bars, specialty coffee, and craft breweries. The strip running along Lonsdale Street has the highest concentration. BentSpoke Brewing (the city's best-known craft brewery — the Crankshaft IPA is the Canberra staple), Italian pasta bars, the Midnight Hotel rooftop, and the Lonsdale Street traders. Walk the strip any evening Thursday to Sunday for the choice.
Kingston Foreshore
Waterfront dining along the east end of Lake Burley Griffin — Ottoman Cuisine (Turkish fine dining, long-established institution), Italian & Sons (Canberra's finest Italian restaurant, Enoteca alongside), Temporada (modern Australian with a serious wine list), and waterfront bars. The Old Bus Depot Markets run every Sunday — one of Australia's longest-running and best-regarded markets, with artisan foods, crafts, and Canberra-specific makers. Relaxed lakeside atmosphere; sunset dining at its best April-October.
Truffle Season (June–August)
The Canberra region is Australia's largest truffle producer — Périgord black truffles (Tuber melanosporum) harvested across cool-climate farms in Murrumbateman, Lake George, and the Snowy Mountains foothills. Truffle hunts (2-3 hour experiences with trained dogs on working farms), truffle farm lunches with fresh-harvested truffle featuring, and truffle dinners at partner restaurants across the city. The Truffle Festival (June) is the formal celebration. The Capital Region Farmers Market (Saturdays 7:30am-11:30am at EPIC) is direct-from-grower the rest of the season.
Capital Region Farmers Market — Saturday mornings: Held every Saturday at EPIC (Exhibition Park in Canberra) 7:30am-11:30am, this is one of Australia's best regional farmers markets — direct-from-producer with 60+ stalls. Canberra-region cheese, artisan bread, heritage vegetables, local honey, free-range eggs, and truffle products in season. Worth going early (before 9am) for the best selection. The Capital Region's growers have been supplying Canberra's restaurant scene for a generation; this is where they also sell directly.
Canberra 2026 Events Calendar
Four events cause meaningful accommodation pressure — Floriade, Enlighten, the Truffle Festival, and the Canberra Day long weekend. Book early if your dates overlap.
Enlighten Festival
Large-scale digital art projections transform Parliament House, the National Library, and the National Gallery each night. Night Noodle Markets, food precincts, live music. Late Feb–early Mar 2026.
Canberra Day Long Weekend
Second Monday in March — the ACT's public holiday celebrating the city's founding in 1913. Hot air balloons over the city at dawn for the Balloon Spectacular week; Commonwealth Park food and music events.
Truffle Festival
The opening of truffle season — farm lunches, truffle hunts, degustation dinners at restaurants across the Canberra region. Murrumbateman is the hub.
Floriade 2026
Australia's biggest celebration of spring — 1,000,000+ tulips and spring bulbs in Commonwealth Park. Free daytime entry. NightFest (ticketed) evening event. Book accommodation 2-3 months ahead.
Canberra International Film Festival
Two-week arthouse film festival at Palace Electric and independent cinemas across the city. Quieter cultural highlight of the year.
Last Post Ceremony & Markets
The Last Post Ceremony at the War Memorial runs every day at 4:55pm year-round. Capital Region Farmers Market Saturdays 7:30-11:30am at EPIC. Old Bus Depot Markets Sundays.
Getting to & Around Canberra
Canberra is compact and well-connected — 3 hours from Sydney by road, direct flights from all major capitals, and the most bikeable city in Australia.
By Air
Direct flights from Sydney (45 min), Melbourne (1 hr), Brisbane (1.5 hrs), Adelaide, and Perth. Qantas, Virgin, and Rex operate the main routes. Canberra Airport is just 7 km from the CBD — taxi (AUD $25-30) or rideshare into the city takes 10-15 minutes. Some international connections via Singapore (Singapore Airlines) and Qatar (seasonal). Bus services into the city centre also operate from the airport.
By Road
The 280 km / 3-hour drive from Sydney via the M5/Hume Highway is sealed dual-carriageway the entire way — a classic Australian road trip. The Federal Highway (Route A23) branches off the Hume near Goulburn and runs directly into the ACT. From Melbourne, it's 660 km / 7 hours via the Hume Highway — often broken at Albury or Holbrook. Canberra is a common stopover on Sydney-to-Snowy Mountains road trips. Parking in the CBD is generally easy and reasonably priced.
Getting Around Canberra
Canberra's light rail (opened 2019) runs from Gungahlin (northern suburbs) through the CBD via Northbourne Avenue. Transport Canberra buses cover the suburbs comprehensively. The city is famously bikeable — separated cycle paths, flat terrain, and the 28km Lake Burley Griffin loop passes all major institutions. Bike hire is available throughout the CBD. Canberra is also car-friendly with easy parking — but a guided tour is the most efficient way to see institutions on different sides of the lake in a single day.
Where to Stay
Civic / CBD: walking distance to Parliament, War Memorial, and the galleries — the default choice for first-timers. Kingston / Manuka: Canberra's best dining precinct; lakeside atmosphere, easy drive to institutions. Braddon: trendy, walkable, great bars and cafés; ideal for shorter stays. Barton: quiet, close to Parliament House and the galleries — the diplomat's neighbourhood. Floriade and Enlighten fill all precincts — book accommodation 2-3 months ahead for those dates.
Canberra Itineraries (1 / 2 / 3 / 4–5 days)
Four structures for the four most common Canberra trip lengths. The national institutions alone could fill a week; these are the realistic picks.
Morning (9am-noon) · Australian War Memorial
Arrive at opening. The Hall of Memory, Roll of Honour, aircraft hall, and Vietnam Gallery. Allow 3 hours. This is the most time-significant stop.
Midday (noon-2pm) · Parliamentary Triangle
Drive the Triangle — past the National Library, across Commonwealth Avenue Bridge (Captain Cook Memorial Jet running), lunch at the National Gallery café or Parliament House café.
Afternoon (2pm-5pm) · Parliament House
If Parliament is sitting, watch Question Time from 2pm. If not, free guided tour. Walk the rooftop lawn, the Great Hall with the Boyd tapestry, the chambers.
Evening · Dinner in Kingston or Braddon
Italian & Sons or Ottoman at Kingston Foreshore; or any Lonsdale Street option in Braddon.
Day 1 · War Memorial & Parliament
Morning: War Memorial. Afternoon: Parliament House. Evening: Braddon dinner (or the Canberra-by-Night guided tour with Parliament illuminations).
Day 2 · Galleries & Arboretum
Morning: National Gallery of Australia (Blue Poles, the Indigenous wing, the sculpture garden). Lunch at the Gallery Café or the Portrait Gallery café opposite. Afternoon: National Portrait Gallery and the National Museum (Acton Peninsula). Late afternoon: drive to the National Arboretum for the sunset view over Canberra.
Day 1 · Institutions
War Memorial, Parliament House, Lake Burley Griffin precincts (as Day 1 above).
Day 2 · Galleries & Arboretum
National Gallery, Portrait Gallery, Questacon (if travelling with children), National Arboretum.
Day 3 · Canberra District Wine Region
Full day in Murrumbateman — Clonakilla (the Shiraz Viognier), Helm (the Riesling specialist), Mount Majura (the Tempranillo). Long lunch at one of the vineyard restaurants (Four Winds or the Smokehouse at Clonakilla). Return Canberra evening.
Day 1 · War Memorial & Parliament
The two essential institutions plus the Parliamentary Triangle drive.
Day 2 · Galleries
National Gallery, Portrait Gallery, Questacon. Evening: Kingston dinner.
Day 3 · Wine Region
Murrumbateman cellar doors and vineyard lunch.
Day 4 · Namadgi & Tidbinbilla
Morning: Namadgi National Park — Yankee Hat rock art walk (6km return, 2-3 hours) or an alternative day hike. Afternoon: Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve — reliable koalas, platypus at the Sanctuary, eastern grey kangaroos grazing.
Day 5 · Lake, Arboretum & Gardens
Lake Burley Griffin bike loop (28km, allow 3 hours), National Arboretum for lunch and views, Australian National Botanic Gardens for the afternoon. Farewell dinner in Braddon.
Why Choose Cooee Tours for Canberra
Canberra's logistics matter — institutions are on opposite sides of the lake, Question Time timings are specific, and Floriade accommodation sells out months ahead. 35 years of experience does the planning for you.
Plan Your Canberra Trip
Tell us what you have in mind and our team will reply within 24 hours with a personalised itinerary. For Floriade departures (September-October), contact us by June for the best accommodation availability.
Canberra Traveller Stories
4.8/5 across 50,000+ travellers. Read all verified reviews →
"The War Memorial moved me to tears. Our guide's storytelling brought the history alive in a way I didn't expect. The Last Post Ceremony at 4:55pm — a single story from the Roll of Honour told in front of the Pool of Reflection — is something every Australian should witness once. Four hours there and it didn't feel like enough."
"We had no idea Canberra had such serious wineries. Three cellar doors in one day — Clonakilla, Helm, Mount Majura — all family-owned, all pouring exceptional wine at a level I'd compare to Mornington or Adelaide Hills. The Rieslings in particular were outstanding. Why don't more Australians talk about this region? A genuine surprise."
"Parliament House blew us away. We happened to visit on a sitting Wednesday and watched Question Time from the public gallery — the political theatre up close is fascinating. The Great Hall with the Boyd tapestry, the chambers, the walkable rooftop lawn (democracy under, people above — the symbolism was explained properly by our guide). Far more impressive than expected."
"Canberra in autumn is stunning — I had no idea Australian cities looked like this in May. The streets are lined with gold and crimson deciduous trees (the century-old elms and oaks planted when the city was built), the light was beautiful at dawn, and the galleries were uncrowded. Blue Poles at the National Gallery was on the list for 20 years; finally saw it. Already planning a return trip for Floriade."
"Floriade with a million tulips was spectacular — the Commonwealth Park planting beds are even more impressive in person than the photos suggest — but the real discovery was the National Gallery's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander wing. The Aboriginal Memorial of 200 painted hollow log coffins is one of the most powerful artworks I've ever seen. Our guide's insights made the difference."
"Took the kids to Questacon and the War Memorial — both outstanding in totally different ways. The Free Fall slide at Questacon had them screaming, and the War Memorial's Last Post Ceremony had them in reflective silence. Perfect contrast day. Then Tidbinbilla the next morning for actual-koalas-in-actual-gum-trees and a platypus at the Sanctuary pool. The three-day trip worked."
Australia's Designed Capital. Properly Explored.
See our 2026 Canberra departures, or talk to our team for a custom itinerary. Floriade accommodation pre-booked from June — by the time the city sells out to the public.