Why the Sunshine Coast?
Ask Australians where they'd live if they could pick anywhere, and the Sunshine Coast comes up more than almost any other answer. It's not hard to see why. The region stretches from the canal suburbs of Caloundra in the south to the headland elegance of Noosa in the north, with 60 km of beaches in between — surf breaks, sheltered coves, tidal rock pools, and long flat stretches of sand patrolled year-round by lifeguards.
But the coast is only half the story. Turn inland and within twenty minutes you're climbing through dairy country into the Blackall Range — a spine of subtropical rainforest that runs parallel to the coast, its eastern edge lined with lookouts that offer one of the great panoramic views in Queensland. The villages up here — Maleny, Montville, Mapleton, Flaxton — feel like a different climate and a different century: art galleries, cheese makers, fudge shops, second-hand bookshops, and cafés that source everything from the farms next door.
Further south, the Glass House Mountains — thirteen volcanic plugs left over from an ancient eruption — rise dramatically from flat sugarcane and pineapple country. Captain Cook named them in 1770 because their shapes reminded him of glass kilns. Today the lookouts here are among the most photographed viewpoints in South East Queensland, and the peaks hold deep cultural significance for the Kabi Kabi and Jinibara peoples.
All of this sits within easy reach of Brisbane — about ninety minutes north. That proximity, combined with the region's variety, is what makes the Sunshine Coast such an effective touring destination. In a single day you can swim in the ocean, walk through rainforest, lunch in a mountain village, spot a koala, and browse an artisan market. In a week, you can do all that at a pace that actually lets you enjoy it.
Noosa & the Headland
Noosa sits at the northern tip of the Sunshine Coast and operates on a different frequency to the rest of the region. Hastings Street — the main drag — is a low-rise, tree-lined avenue of restaurants, boutiques, and gelato bars that opens directly onto Main Beach, a north-facing crescent of golden sand with some of the calmest, clearest water on the coast. There are no high-rises. No neon. Just a village-scale beach town that happens to have exceptionally good food and one of Australia's most beautiful national parks on its doorstep.
Noosa National Park occupies the headland east of Main Beach. The 5.4 km coastal trail is the main draw — it contours the cliff edge past Tea Tree Bay (a perfect sheltered swimming spot), Granite Bay, the tidal rock pools at Fairy Pools, and out to Hell's Gates, the dramatic rocky point at the headland's tip. Along the way, koalas doze in the paperbark canopy overhead, goannas sun themselves on the track, and dolphins cruise just offshore. It's an easy-to-moderate walk that most people — including school-age children — can manage comfortably in two to two and a half hours.
The return walk takes the inland rainforest trail, which is cooler, greener, and the best section for koala spotting. Your guide will know which trees to check. Back at the car park, Main Beach and Hastings Street are a two-minute walk — swim, lunch, browse, or grab a flat white and watch the world go by.
The Noosa River
South of the headland, the Noosa River empties into the ocean through a wide, calm estuary lined with restaurants, kayak hire, and pelican-feeding spots. Gympie Terrace — the river's main promenade — is the place to end a Noosa day: golden-hour light, dolphins in the shallows, and a pace that makes you wonder why you'd ever leave. Optional kayak hire lets you explore upstream where the river narrows into mangroves and birdlife.
Noosa & Coastal Explorer
The complete Noosa day — full coastal trail, Fairy Pools, Main Beach, Hastings Street, and Noosa River.
View tour →Noosa National Park & Coastal Tours
Choose a focused half-day walk or the full Noosa experience. Compare both options.
Compare options →Noosa Day Trip from Brisbane
Return transport from Brisbane, koala spotting, Main Beach, Eumundi Markets (Wed/Sat), and the Noosa River.
View tour →The Blackall Range, Glass House Mountains & Waterfalls
The Sunshine Coast hinterland is the region's quiet counterweight to the beaches — cooler, greener, and slower. The Blackall Range rises to about 500 metres, and its eastern escarpment is draped in subtropical and temperate rainforest that has been protected in pockets since the early twentieth century. The two standout reserves are Kondalilla National Park (where Kondalilla Falls drops 90 metres into a swimming hole surrounded by rainforest) and Mary Cairncross Scenic Reserve (a 55-hectare remnant with a wheelchair-accessible boardwalk and views to the Glass House Mountains).
The villages strung along the range — Maleny, Montville, Mapleton, Flaxton — are what give the hinterland its character. Montville's main street is lined with heritage-style buildings housing art galleries, a clock shop, handmade fudge and chocolate stores, a bookshop, and cafés with views that stretch to Moreton Island on a clear day. Maleny, a few kilometres south, has a stronger agricultural identity — a cooperative community, farm-gate produce, boutique dairies, and some of the best cheese on the coast.
Glass House Mountains
South of the range, the Glass House Mountains form one of South East Queensland's most recognisable landscapes — thirteen volcanic cores rising abruptly from flat farmland. The best panoramic viewpoints are accessible by car (Wild Horse Mountain Lookout and Glass House Mountains Lookout), while several of the peaks offer challenging summit walks for experienced hikers. The cultural significance of this landscape to the Kabi Kabi and Jinibara peoples is profound; your guide shares the dreaming stories associated with the peaks.
Hinterland & Waterfalls Adventure
Waterfalls, swimming holes, Maleny, Montville, and Glass House Mountains lookouts.
View tour →Hinterland Waterfalls
Kondalilla Falls, Mapleton Falls, swimming holes, and village stops — for dedicated nature lovers.
View tour →Sunshine Coast Paradise Tour
Glass House Mountains, Mary Cairncross, Maleny, Montville, and Noosa Main Beach — both worlds in one day.
View tour →Family Beaches & Coastal Towns
The Sunshine Coast's beaches are remarkably varied. Noosa Main Beach is the glamorous headliner — calm, north-facing, and framed by national park — but the rest of the coastline holds its own. Mooloolaba, halfway along the coast, wraps around a protected bay with a fishing harbour on one side and a long esplanade of restaurants, ice-cream shops, and Norfolk pines on the other. The water is calm and warm, the sand is fine and golden, and the whole place has a relaxed family-holiday energy that's hard to beat.
Further south, Caloundra occupies a headland with multiple beaches — Kings Beach (patrolled, with rock pools and a saltwater swimming pool), Bulcock Beach (sheltered, ideal for toddlers), and Moffat Beach (a local favourite with a great café scene). Between Mooloolaba and Noosa, quieter stretches like Coolum, Peregian, and Sunshine Beach offer surf, space, and a more local feel.
Markets, Food & Local Flavour
The Sunshine Coast's food scene is driven by proximity to producers. The region's subtropical climate, rich volcanic soil, and dairy country produce everything from macadamias and avocados to artisan cheese, honey, coffee, and small-batch gin. The result is a café culture and market scene that punches well above its weight.
Eumundi Markets
The jewel in the crown is Eumundi Markets — held every Wednesday and Saturday in the small town of Eumundi, inland from Noosa. Over 600 stalls sell handmade jewellery, textiles, ceramics, woodwork, skincare, fresh produce, gourmet food, and live music fills the tree-shaded lanes. It's one of Australia's largest and most authentic artisan markets, and a highlight of most Sunshine Coast tours. Our Noosa Day Trip from Brisbane includes an Eumundi stop on Wednesday and Saturday departures.
Hinterland produce
In the hinterland, farm gates and boutique producers are scattered along the Blackall Range. Maleny is the epicentre — local dairies produce rich cheeses, the co-op stocks seasonal fruit and vegetables, and cafés use ingredients sourced from farms you can see from the window. Montville's main street adds fudge, chocolate, and preserves to the mix. Our Hinterland & Waterfalls Adventure and Paradise Tour both include village time in Maleny and Montville for browsing and tasting.
Coastal dining
On the coast, Hastings Street in Noosa is the fine-dining hub, but Mooloolaba's wharf and esplanade restaurants offer excellent seafood in a more relaxed setting. Caloundra's Kings Beach has a growing café strip. And every tour includes your guide's personal recommendations — the places locals actually eat, not just the ones with the biggest signs.
Wildlife
The Sunshine Coast is one of the best places in South East Queensland to see native wildlife in natural habitat — no sanctuaries or enclosures required.
Koalas are the headline act. Noosa National Park's resident population is one of the most accessible in the country — your guide knows which trees the koalas favour, and sightings occur on approximately 90% of walks. You don't need to go far: the inland trail section of the national park, just a few hundred metres from the car park, is prime territory.
Dolphins are regulars in the Noosa River estuary and along the headland, often visible from the walking trail. Between July and October, humpback whales migrate along the coast and can be spotted from elevated lookouts on the headland and at Point Cartwright near Mooloolaba.
Golf on the Sunshine Coast
With a subtropical climate that delivers golf-friendly weather year-round, the Sunshine Coast is home to some of Queensland's best courses. The range covers everything from Greg Norman-designed resort layouts to demanding championship tracks and relaxed coastal clubs — all set against a backdrop of hinterland mountains, river corridors, and Pacific breezes.
The standouts include Noosa Springs Golf & Spa Resort (a championship layout winding through bushland with a luxury spa on site), Palmer Coolum Resort (a former PGA Tour venue beneath volcanic Mount Coolum), Pelican Waters (Greg Norman Signature design with Glass House Mountains views), and Headland Golf Club (a challenging, great-value championship course near Buderim). For social rounds, Maroochy River and Caloundra offer scenic, relaxed play.
Planning Your Sunshine Coast Trip
When to go
The Sunshine Coast is a year-round destination. Summer (December–February) brings warm water, long days, and Eumundi night markets; autumn (March–May) offers mild temperatures and clear skies ideal for walking; winter (June–August) is dry and crisp with crystal views from the hinterland; spring (September–November) brings wildflowers, whale migration, and comfortable hiking weather. There is no bad season — only different highlights.
Getting there
The Sunshine Coast is approximately 90 minutes north of Brisbane by road. Our tours include door-to-door pick-up from Brisbane CBD hotels, Sunshine Coast accommodation (Caloundra to Noosa), and — on select tours — the Gold Coast. The Sunshine Coast also has its own airport at Marcoochydore with direct flights from Sydney, Melbourne, and Adelaide.
How long to spend
A single day tour covers one theme well — a coastal day at Noosa, a hinterland waterfalls day, or a beaches-and-family day at Mooloolaba. Two to three days let you combine coast and hinterland comfortably. Our 6-Day Sunshine Coast Tour covers the full region at a relaxed pace, including Noosa, Mooloolaba, Australia Zoo, Eumundi Markets, hinterland villages, and SEA LIFE.
- Comfortable walking shoes with grip (for trails and rock pools)
- Swimwear and towel (towels provided on most tours)
- Sunscreen, hat, and sunglasses
- Light jacket for hinterland mornings (5–8°C cooler than the coast)
- Camera and reusable water bottle
- Spending money for lunch, markets, and shopping
Who are our tours for?
Everyone. We run family tours with toddler-friendly beaches, senior-friendly tours with flat boardwalks and relaxed pacing, active tours with 5+ km coastal walks, romantic couples' escapes, corporate golf days, and private group itineraries for celebrations and events. Small groups (max 12) mean personal attention, and every itinerary is flexible enough to adapt to weather, tides, and your interests on the day.
Multi-Day & the Complete Sunshine Coast
If one day isn't enough — and for most people it isn't — our multi-day options let you see the full Sunshine Coast without rushing. The 6-Day Tour is the flagship: six guided days covering Noosa, Mooloolaba, Australia Zoo, Eumundi Markets, the hinterland, SEA LIFE, and the Noosa River, with accommodation, daily breakfast, and selected meals included.
All Sunshine Coast Tours at a Glance
Noosa & Coastal Explorer
Full coastal trail, Fairy Pools, Main Beach, Hastings Street, Noosa River
View →Noosa National Park Tours
Half-day walk or full-day Noosa experience — compare both
Compare →Noosa Day Trip from Brisbane
Koalas, Main Beach, Eumundi Markets (Wed/Sat), Noosa River
View →Hinterland & Waterfalls Adventure
Waterfalls, swimming holes, Maleny, Montville, Glass House Mountains
View →Hinterland Waterfalls
Kondalilla Falls, Mapleton Falls, swimming holes, village stops
View →Mooloolaba & Family Beaches
SEA LIFE, calm beaches, rock pools, Mooloolaba Esplanade
View →Sunshine Coast Paradise Tour
Glass House Mountains, Mary Cairncross, villages, and Noosa
View →Sunshine Coast 6-Day Tour
The complete Sunshine Coast — Noosa, Mooloolaba, Australia Zoo, hinterland
View →Sunshine Coast Golfing Tours
Noosa Springs, Twin Waters, Pelican Waters, Headland, and more
View →For a full listing with images and pricing, visit our Sunshine Coast Tours directory.