Camping near Longreach with swimming

Discover the Australian outback from this remote Queensland town.

90% (368 reviews)
90% (368 reviews)

Popular camping styles for Longreach

2 top campgrounds near Longreach with swimming

81%
(164)

Camden Park Station

7 sites · RVs, Tents20000 acres · Longreach, QLD
With 14 exclusive sites, this is a perfectly safe and convenient haven to base while you visit all that Western Queensland has to offer. Longreach is only 10 km away. The sites are 15 amp powered and under the cover of a large hay barn. Showers (4) and Toilets (4) are available. Campfires are welcome when there are no restrictions in place, please keep them contained and ensure they are completely out before leaving them unattended. Tours of the station are separate and available on certain days on request via outbackdan@camdenparkstation.com.au Pets are welcome, please keep them under control and clean up after them.
Pets
Toilets
Campfires
Showers
from 
AU$32
 / night
* Before taxes and fees
98%
(613)

Goodberry Broadwater Campground

12 sites · RVs, Tents40000 acres · Longreach, QLD
Goodberry Hills is a 40,000 acre working cattle property 37 kilometers north east of Longreach in Central Western Queensland. The property is operated by your hosts the Deane family, Jenny, Rowley, Jess, Phillip and Billy. Our family has been in the area since 1872 and have owned Goodberry Hills since 1950. Guests staying with us must be fully self contained with their own toilet/shower facilities and must take all waste and rubbish with them on departure. Well behaved pets who remain under control at all times are allowed, a two bay dog kennel will be set up near the goat yards on your way into the campsites to provide campers with a safe space to leave their pets if they are spending the day doing tourist activities in the area (it is up to the owner of the pets to ensure the water dishes in the kennels are kept full if they plan to use them). Campfires permitted in the fire pits provided. Our family came to the district in 1872 when Rowley's Great, Great, Great Grandfather Rowland Edkins arrived at Mt Cornish to take up the managers position. Mt Cornish was established from half of the original Bowen Downs holding to enable improved management after Harry Redford (Captain Starlight) stole the mob of cattle and took them to South Australia. The country around Goodberry Hills is where the cattle were stolen from. There is a small hill across the river from the campground known as Starlights Lookout, from where legend has it, Harry Redford would watch the movements of the station stockmen so he could time his raids for when they were unlikely to be about. When the big stations were resumed in 1879 and put to Ballot the family drew several blocks in the district, the main one being Bimbah where family members have lived ever since. Rowley is the fifth generation of the family to call Bimbah home. Goodberry Hills and Bimbah are now operated as one Property. Goodberry Hills was purchased by Rowley's parents in 1950. From then until recently the property ran sheep and cattle as part of an amalgamation of five holdings totalling 90,000 acres. The annual shearing produced around 620 bales of 21 micron wool from 25,000 sheep which were shorn at the Goodberry Hills Woolshed in July each year. A herd of 500 breeding cows were also run with their progeny being grown out to feeders (cattle about 400Kg liveweight ready for entry to feedlots) at around 18 months of age. We now operate Bimbah and Goodberry Hills totalling 40,000 acres running only cattle, with a herd of 300 Charbray Cross Breeding Cows and their progeny through to feeders and depending on the season up to 600 backgrounders (Weaner cattle purchased at around 200kg liveweight and grown to around 400kg liveweight ready for sale to feedlots).
Pets
Campfires
from 
AU$10
 / night
* Before taxes and fees
Value Prop
Value Prop

Camping near Longreach with swimming guide

Overview

Smack bang in the middle of Queensland and more than a 12-hour drive from Brisbane, only the most intrepid of road-trippers will make it to Longreach. If you’re looking to experience remote outback life, this is a good place to start. Visit the Qantas Founders Museum and Australian Stockmans Hall of Fame, take a ride in a historic stagecoach, and enjoy a sunset cruise along the Thompson River, then sleep in a swag beneath the stars. Campers can also stay at a local station, take advantage of free camping rest areas, or check their big rig into a Longreach tourist park or caravan park.

Where to go

Idalia National Park

About a 3-hour drive from Longreach, Idalia National Park is a lush enclave of mulga woodlands and rocky gorges with a network of hiking, mountain biking, and 4WD trails. Look out for yellow-footed rock wallabies around Murphy’s Rockhole, visit the Old Idalia stockyards, then bush camp at the Monk’s Tank camping area.

Outback Queensland

West of Longreach, the dusty outback roads etch out an epic road trip to Birdsville and the natural wonders of the Simpson Desert. Stop along the way to explore the waterholes and wetlands of the Lochern and Diamantina National Parks. Both have great bushwalking, bird-watching, and canoeing trails, alongside low-cost camping areas for tents or camper trailers.

Matilda Way

If you’re looking to escape the crowds, few Queensland road trips will take you as far off the beaten track as the 1,812-kilometre Matilda Way, which runs all the way from the NSW border to Karumba on the north coast. From Longreach (about halfway along the route), drive your motorhome north along the Landsborough Highway to Winton, the Dinosaur Capital of Australia. Fun fact—this is where Banjo Paterson wrote Waltzing Matilda, the route’s namesake.

When to go

Summer temperatures can be unbearably hot in outback Queensland, and it’s not unusual for the mercury to hit 45°C. Consequently, few road trippers pass through from November through March, and many museums, tours, and local attractions offer limited hours during this period (low-season travellers should contact Longreach Visitor Information Centre prior to travel). If you can, plan your trip from April through September, when daytime averages are a more manageable 20-25°C.

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