7 Best Camping Spots In South Australia

The views, the quiet, the sense of being at one with nature; all these elements are offered in abundance at South Australia’s best camping spots. Want the creature comforts of home? Glamping is for you. Here’s our top 7 places to set up camp in South Australia.

1. Wilpena Pound, Flinders Ranges

Razorback Lookout, Flinders Ranges and Outback

Pitch a tent at the Wilpena Pound campground, just beyond the circle of hills enclosing the natural amphitheatre. There are powered and unpowered campsites, as well as permanent tents and bus bays. Climb the ridge in the early morning and late afternoon and watch the sun rising and setting over the pound. You can also take scenic flights over this wondrous landscape from the nearby airstrip and eat and have a leisurely drink in the friendly comfort of the resort.

Want more from your camping getaway? There are 15 luxury Safari Tents at Wilpena Pound Resort, complete with king size beds and en suite bathrooms, as well as air-conditioning in summer.

Where to find it: Wilpena Pound is located about 5 hours drive from Adelaide in the Flinders Ranges.

2. Cable Bay Campground, Innes National Park, Yorke Peninsula

Innes National Park, Yorke Peninsula

There is something sublime about Innes National Park. Located at the southern tip of the Yorke Peninsula, it is surrounded by perfect beaches, outstanding surf and dramatic cliffs. It is so far away from everything that you can spend a day walking and exploring without seeing another person.

It is wilderness at its most seductive and beautiful. Pitch a tent at the Cable Bay Campground and watch the sun rise over the Southern Spencer Gulf Marine Park. Nearby is the historic Inneston ghost town, the rusty remains of the wreck of the Ethel, and some of the best surfing anywhere in Australia.

Where to find it: Innes National Park is located about 3 and a half hours drive from Adelaide.

3. Ocean Beach, Coorong National Park

Godfreys Landing, Coorong National Park

There are 12 campgrounds with 63 designated camping sites in Coorong National Park. They are all located so the camper can enjoy the quietness of the waterway or be overwhelmed by the grandeur of the dunes that protect the Coorong from the Great Southern Ocean.

You’ll need a four-wheel drive (4WD) to access this area. There are 16 designated beach campsites and each is suitable for only two four-wheel drives and two tents or swags – but the experience of the stars, the roar of the waves and dawn waking you is unforgettable.

Where to find it: Coorong National Park is located about 1 and a half hours drive from Adelaide.

4. Vivonne Bay, Kangaroo Island

Vivonne Bay, Kangaroo Island

Kangaroo Island

has a large number of excellent campsites, but none compare to Vivonne Bay where the sands are impossibly white, the waters are turquoise blue and, when the winds are blowing, the full drama of the Great Southern Ocean can be observed from the safety of a bay protected by Point Ellen.

Enjoy a beach many consider the most beautiful in Australia, go fishing from the jetty and know you have pitched your tent in the place many regard as the best that Kangaroo Island offers. Check out our guide to the 5 best camping spots on Kangaroo Island.

Where to find it: Vivonne Bay is on Kangaroo Island, a 35 minute flight from Adelaide. From Kingscote Airport, it’s a 45 minute drive to the beach.

5. Talia Caves, Eyre Peninsula

Talia Caves, Eyre Peninsula

The beauty of the west coast of the Eyre Peninsula seems intentionally designed to take your breath away. The rugged sandstone cliffs have been eroded into “caves” or “caverns” known as The Woolshed and The Tub. The lonely beaches – wild and dangerous and edged by mountainous dunes – stretch to the horizon. Among all this passionate beauty is the Talia Caves campground – without toilets or water, but with 20 sites for bush camping.

You can fish or simply gaze at the beauty of the coastline. As a bonus, you can pitch your tent and watch the sun set over waters which, further west, are pounding against the Great Australian Bight.

Where to find it: Tahlia Caves is located about 2 hour drive from Port Lincoln, south of Port Kenny.

6. glamping, Limestone Coast

Bellwether Wines, Limestone Coast

Surround yourself with 400-year-old red gum trees while sleeping in a luxurious bell tent on-site at Bellwether Wines in the beautiful Coonawarra wine region. There is an amenities building on site with showers, toilets and a claw foot bath.

Where to find it: Bellwether is located about 4 hours drive from Adelaide.

7. Kuitpo Forest, Fleurieu Peninsula


Kuitpo Forest

After a day exploring Kuitpo forest‘s 3,600 hectares of plantation and native bushland, pitch your tent surrounded by Eucalpt woodland. The main campground, Chookarloo, lies 1.5km from the Kuitpo Forest Information Centre and is the perfect base for families and hikers traversing the Heysen and Chookarloo walking trails. Here, you’ll find 23 campsites, shelters, rainwater, a pit toilet and picnic areas.

Like something out of a fairy-tale, the forest’s magic is most apparent come winter as you stroll under dense canopies and discover fairy mushrooms and wildlife. Snuggle up by the campfire, toast marshmallows and swap stories before falling asleep under a blanket of stars. Your morning alarm is courtesy of the abundant birdlife that calls the forest home. On your doorstep, the world-famous wines of McLaren Vale and post-card worthy beaches of the Fleurieu Peninsula await.

Where to find it: Kuitpo forest is less than an hour’s drive from Adelaide on the Fleurieu Peninsula.

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