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Caravan Parks In Queensland | CARAVANingLife

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Quick Overview

<p>Queensland is the spiritual home of Australian caravanning, and its holiday parks, national-park campgrounds and highway rest areas carry an enormous share of the country touring traffic. The draw is simple: a long, warm coast fringed by the Great Barrier Reef, a dry tropical winter while the southern states shiver, and a deep network of parks set up for long stays. This is where the grey-nomad migration heads each winter, and once you have followed the dry season north, with the reef on one side and the rainforest on the other, you understand exactly why so many travellers keep coming back.</p><p>The private holiday-park sector is the backbone of a Queensland trip. The big networks dominate the coast: <a href="https://www.big4.com.au/caravan-parks/qld">BIG4</a> runs family favourites like the Adventure Whitsunday Resort with its thirteen-slide water park and Ingenia Holidays Cairns Coconut, while Discovery Parks and G'Day Parks cover Townsville, Mackay and Rockhampton, and NRMA and Tasman hold prime beachfront sites on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts. These parks offer powered sites with electricity and water, ensuite and drive-through options, pools and camp kitchens, and a network membership pays back over a long trip.</p><p>On the public side, the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service runs more than 165 designated campgrounds in <a href="https://parks.qld.gov.au/">national parks</a>, from the sandstone walls of Carnarvon Gorge to the Whitsunday islands and the world-heritage sands of K'gari, formerly Fraser Island. Most are unpowered and basic, which suits self-contained rigs that can manage their own power and water, and they deliver the most memorable, budget-friendly nights in the state. Camping needs a permit booked online, issued by email, and the best sites should be reserved at least six weeks ahead in peak periods.</p><p>Free and low-cost camping fills the gaps. You cannot wild camp in Queensland; you must use a designated site or a signed rest area, where vehicle-based stays of 20 to 72 hours are common. Plenty of these line the Bruce Highway, several with toilets and dump points, places like the Calliope River and Bluewater Park, and apps such as WikiCamps map them along with public dump points. Used well, rest-area nights dramatically lower the cost of a long coastal run.</p><p>The single most important idea in Queensland is to tour by season. The dry-season winter from June to September is prime time, with warm, dry, low-humidity days in the tropical north, which is exactly when the grey nomads pour up the highway and parks fill. The summer wet season from December to February brings monsoon rain and cyclone risk to the north, so northern touring largely pauses while the southeast coast enjoys its beach-holiday peak. Follow the dry season north, book the reef and island sites early, and mix private parks, national parks and rest areas, and Queensland delivers the definitive Australian caravan trip.</p>

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Browse RV Parks by City (318)

Advancetown

Agnes Water

Allenstown

Alligator Creek

Allora

Amamoor Creek

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Ayr

Babinda

Bakers Creek

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Beaudesert

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Beerwah

Bells Bridge

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Blackall

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Blackwater

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Devereux Creek

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Duingal

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Dysart

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East Feluga

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Emerald

Emu Park

Esk

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Fishery Falls

Flying Fish Point

Fordsdale

Forrest Beach

Forsayth

Gargett

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Gin Gin

Gladstone

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Glendale

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Golden Fleece

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Gracemere

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Hampton

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Helidon Spa

Hervey Bay

Home Hill

Hope Vale

Horn

Horse Creek

Hughenden

Illinbah

Imbil

Ingham

Ipswich

Jacobs Well

Jandowae

Jondaryan

Jubilee Pocket

Julatten

Julia Creek

Kalbar

Kallangur

Karumba

Kenilworth

Keppel Sands

Kilcoy

Kinchant Dam

Kingaroy

Kinka Beach

Kulangoor

Kuranda

Kuttabul

Laidley Heights

Lake Clarendon

Lake Eacham

Lake Manchester

Lake Proserpine

Landsborough

Lanskey

Leslie Dam

Lowood

Malanda

Mapleton

Mareeba

Marian

Maryborough

Miara

Middlemount

Midgee

Mighell

Miles

Millaa Millaa

Millmerran

Millstream

Mirani

Mission Beach

Mitchell

Moffatdale

Monduran

Monkland

Monto

Moogerah

Moonford

Moore

Moore Park Beach

Moranbah

Mossman

Mount Archer

Mount Isa

Mount Rooper

Moura

Mowbray

Mulambin

Mundowran

Mundubbera

Murgon

Myrtlevale

Nanango

Nanum

Nebo

Newell

Nobby

Nome

Noosa North Shore

Normanton

Northhead

North Isis

North Mackay

North Stradbroke Island

Oakey

Oak Valley

Oakwood

Orange Hill

Paget

Parkhurst

Peak Crossing

Pie Creek

Pikedale

Pine Mountain

Pioneer

Pittsworth

Point Lookout

Pomona

Port Douglas

Preston

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Queensland

Rainbow Beach

Rathdowney

Ravenshoe

Redcliffe

Redridge

Reids Creek

Riverbend

River Heads

Roma

Round Hill

Rubyvale

Russell Island

Sandstone Point

Sandy Creek

Sapphire Central

Sarabah

Sarina

Scarborough

Seisia

Seventeen Seventy

Severnlea

Sharon

Sheldon

Somerset Dam

South Bingera

South Kolan

South Mission Beach

South Nanango

South Stradbroke

Speewah

Spring Creek

Springsure

Stanmore

Stanthorpe

St George

St Helens

Sunshine Coast

Tamborine Mountain

Tamrookum Creek

Tara

The Gemfields

Thulimbah

Thursday Island

Tieri

Tinana

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Tolga

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Toogoom

Toomulla

Toorbul

Toowoomba

Townsville

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Tully Heads

Umagico

Undullah

Upper Lockyer

Upper Tenthill

Vale View

Victory Heights

Walkamin

Wallangarra

Wandoan

Ward

Warwick

Weipa

White Rock

Whitsundays

Willowbank

Winston

Wivenhoe Hill

Womina

Wonga Beach

Wongaling Beach

Woodford

Woodgate

Woombye

Woongarra

Woorabinda

Yandaran

Yandina

Yarraman

Yeppoon

Yungaburra

Getting Around Queensland by RV

Queensland touring runs on the Bruce Highway, the sealed coastal spine that links Brisbane to Cairns and carries most of the caravan traffic, with the Pacific Motorway serving the Gold Coast and the Warrego and Capricorn Highways heading inland toward the outback. The coastal route is well suited to caravans and large motorhomes, with regular fuel, supermarkets and LPG refills in the towns, so resupply is easy along the populated coast. Brisbane, Townsville and Cairns airports serve travellers who want to fly in and rent a rig.

The cautions lie inland and on the islands. Outback legs on routes like the Matilda and Capricorn Highways can have long gaps between fuel and water, so carry extra of both and never assume the next station is close. Many national-park access tracks and island roads, including most of K'gari, are gravel or four-wheel-drive only and unsuitable for road caravans, so check conditions before committing a big rig. In the wet season, northern roads and national parks can close with little notice, so monitor conditions and keep your plans flexible if you travel through the summer storms.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Queensland trip, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.

Check your RV insurance coverage

A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.

Know your roadside assistance options

RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.

Decide about an extended warranty early

Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.

Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees

A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.

RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.

RV Parks Costs in Queensland

<p>Caravanning Queensland can be budget or comfortable depending on how you mix your nights. Powered sites at private holiday parks generally start around 40 Australian dollars a night, with weekly discounts bringing that down a little, while resort parks and peak holiday periods push higher and cabins start well above site rates. National-park camping through QPWS is far cheaper, usually charged per person per night, and free rest areas along the Bruce Highway cost nothing at all for self-contained rigs that observe the time limits.</p><p>The way to control costs is to alternate: use free and national-park sites for most nights, and book the full-service private parks when you genuinely want pools, laundry and powered hookups. Watch for extras such as pet fees and peak-season surcharges, and travel outside school holidays to dodge the steepest pricing. A holiday-park network membership earns discounts over a long trip, and because Queensland distances are large, fuel is often the biggest single line in the budget, so factor it in generously alongside your nightly site fees.</p>

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Best Time to Visit Queensland by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

21°C (70°F) - 30°C (86°F)

Crowds: Medium

These months (December to February) are the Queensland summer and the wet season. The tropical north sees monsoon rain, high humidity and cyclone risk, with road and national-park closures, so most northern touring stops. The southeast hits its beach-holiday peak on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts, so book coastal parks over the Christmas and January school holidays.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

16°C (61°F) - 27°C (81°F)

Crowds: Medium

These months (March to May) are the Queensland autumn, a fine shoulder season as the wet eases in the north. Humidity drops, the landscape is green, and crowds are thin before the winter rush. A good all-round time to start working north along the coast, with comfortable temperatures almost everywhere in the state.

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Summer

Jun - Aug

14°C (57°F) - 26°C (79°F)

Crowds: High

These months (June to August) are the Queensland winter and the dry season, the prime touring window. Tropical North Queensland is warm, dry and around 25 to 30 degrees with low humidity, which is exactly why the grey-nomad migration heads north now and the Bruce Highway parks fill. The southeast is mild and pleasant. Book popular national-park sites well ahead.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

17°C (63°F) - 28°C (82°F)

Crowds: Medium

These months (September to November) are the Queensland spring, the end of the dry season and a warming shoulder. The north is hot and humid building toward the wet, so the southeast coast and hinterland are more comfortable. Crowds ease after the winter peak, and it is a good time for the reef and the islands before the summer storms arrive.

Explore Queensland

<p>A few things seasoned Queensland travellers do. They follow the dry season north from June to September, timing their run up the Bruce Highway with the warm, rain-free tropical winter, which is the difference between a superb trip and being washed out. They book popular national-park campgrounds at least six weeks ahead for school and public holidays, and they grab coastal holiday parks early over the Christmas and Easter breaks. And they keep the WikiCamps app handy for free rest areas and public dump points, which turns the highway corridor into a string of cheap overnight options.</p><p>For the practical side, remember you cannot wild camp here: stay in designated sites or signed rest areas and respect the 20 to 72 hour limits, because councils enforce them. Empty tanks only at a proper dump point, carry extra fuel and water for outback and island legs, and check whether a track is sealed before you take a big rig down it. If you travel with a dog, plan around pet-friendly private parks, since dogs are banned from most national parks, and never leave a pet in a hot vehicle in the Queensland heat.</p>

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Queensland

What are the best caravan parks in Queensland?

Queensland has a deep choice of private holiday parks along the coast. The big networks lead the way: BIG4 runs standouts like the Adventure Whitsunday Resort with its thirteen-slide water park and Ingenia Holidays Cairns Coconut, while Discovery Parks and G'Day Parks cover Townsville, Mackay, Rockhampton and beyond with powered and ensuite sites. NRMA and Tasman holiday parks hold prime beachfront positions on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts. For scenery on a budget, the QPWS national-park campgrounds in places like Carnarvon Gorge and the Whitsunday islands are hard to beat.

Do Queensland caravan parks have powered sites and hookups?

Yes. Private holiday parks across Queensland offer powered sites with an electric hook-up and water, and many add ensuite, drive-through and slab options along with camp kitchens, pools and laundries. Full sewer at the site is uncommon, so you empty tanks at the park dump point. National-park campgrounds run by QPWS are different: most are unpowered and basic, set up for self-contained rigs that manage their own power and water. If you rely on mains electricity, book a powered site at a private park rather than a national-park campground.

How much does a powered site cost in Queensland?

Powered sites at private holiday parks generally run from about 40 Australian dollars a night, with discounts for longer stays, for example around 39 dollars a night for stays of seven nights or more at some BIG4 parks. Premium resort parks and peak holiday periods push higher, and cabins start well above site rates. National-park camping through QPWS is far cheaper, often charged per person per night, and free rest areas along the Bruce Highway cost nothing for self-contained travellers. Mixing private parks with national-park and rest-area nights keeps a long trip affordable.

How far ahead should I book camping in Queensland?

For the dry-season winter peak from June to September, book early. Popular QPWS national-park campgrounds should be reserved at least six weeks ahead, and longer for school and public holidays, while coastal holiday parks fill over the Christmas and Easter breaks. The grey-nomad migration north along the Bruce Highway adds to winter demand. Outside those windows, and especially midweek, you have far more freedom, and many highway rest areas operate first-come for a 20 to 72 hour stay. Book the headline reef and island sites first.

When is the best time to go caravanning in Queensland?

For most of the state, the dry-season winter from June to September is the prime time, with warm, dry, low-humidity days in the tropical north and mild weather in the southeast. This is peak grey-nomad season, so parks are busy and you should book ahead. The shoulder months of autumn and spring are good all-round windows with fewer crowds. The summer wet season from December to February brings monsoon rain and cyclone risk to the north, so northern touring largely pauses then while the southeast coast enjoys its beach-holiday peak.

Can big rigs and large caravans travel Queensland?

Along the coast, yes. The Bruce Highway and Pacific Motorway are sealed and suit large motorhomes and twin-axle caravans, and coastal holiday parks are built for big rigs with powered drive-through sites. The cautions are inland and on the islands. Outback routes can have long gaps between fuel and water, and many national-park access tracks and island roads, including much of K'gari (Fraser Island), are gravel or four-wheel-drive only and unsuitable for road caravans. Research conditions before committing, and keep a big rig to the sealed network where you can.

Can I free camp in Queensland?

Not in the wild-camping sense. In Queensland you cannot simply pull up and camp anywhere; you must stay in a designated campsite or a signed rest area. You can sleep in your vehicle at many highway rest areas for a limited period, commonly 20 to 72 hours depending on the site, but you cannot set up as if it were a campground unless it is a designated camping area. Plenty of free and low-cost rest areas line the Bruce Highway, several with toilets and dump points, which makes budget touring easy for self-contained rigs that respect the time limits.

Do I need a permit to camp in Queensland national parks?

Yes. Camping in Queensland national parks requires a permit booked through the Queensland National Parks Booking Service, with your permit issued by email. There are more than 165 designated campgrounds across the state, and bookings are required at almost all of them. For popular spots and peak periods such as school and public holidays, book at least six weeks ahead, as the best sites sell out fast. Most national-park sites are basic and unpowered, so they suit self-contained campers, and fees are modest, generally charged per person per night.

What is the grey-nomad migration?

The grey-nomad migration is the annual movement of older Australian travellers, often retirees, who head north for the winter to escape the cold southern states and chase the warm, dry tropical season. From around April to October, and peaking from June to September, they travel up the Bruce Highway and inland routes in caravans and motorhomes, often for three to six months at a time. It is why northern Queensland parks and rest areas are busiest in winter, and why coastal towns gear up for the long-stay trade during the dry season.

Where can I empty my tanks in Queensland?

Private holiday parks provide dump points for guests, and Queensland has an extensive network of public dump points as well, many at highway rest areas, showgrounds and council facilities along the Bruce Highway and major routes. Apps such as WikiCamps map public dump points, low-cost camps and amenities with reviews from other travellers, which makes planning a tank-empty along your route straightforward. Never empty waste anywhere but a proper dump point. For a deeper utility focus, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Queensland.

Are Queensland caravan parks pet-friendly?

Many private holiday parks in Queensland welcome dogs, though policies vary by park and some restrict numbers, require dogs on a lead, or keep pet-free zones, so check when you book. The bigger restriction is the national parks: dogs are banned from most Queensland national parks and QPWS campgrounds to protect native wildlife, so a pet rules out a lot of the scenic public camping. If you travel with a dog, plan a route around pet-friendly private parks and rest areas, carry waste bags, and never leave a dog in a hot vehicle in the Queensland heat.

What are the must-see regions for a Queensland caravan trip?

The classic run is up the coast on the Bruce Highway. Start on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts for beaches and theme parks, take in the Fraser Coast and K'gari, then push north to the Southern Great Barrier Reef, the Whitsundays at Airlie Beach, and Townsville. The grand finale is Tropical North Queensland around Cairns and the Daintree, where rainforest meets reef. Inland, Carnarvon Gorge and the outback routes reward those with time. Most trips follow the reef and the dry season north, then turn for home before the wet.

How do I get around Queensland in a caravan or motorhome?

Queensland touring runs on the Bruce Highway, the sealed coastal spine from Brisbane to Cairns, with the Pacific Motorway serving the Gold Coast and the Warrego and Capricorn Highways heading inland to the outback. The coastal network is well suited to caravans and motorhomes, with regular fuel, supermarkets and LPG in the towns. Inland and on the islands, distances grow and services thin out, so carry extra fuel and water and check whether tracks are sealed before you commit a big rig. Brisbane, Townsville and Cairns airports serve fly-and-rent trips.

What are the best caravan parks in Queensland?

Queensland has a deep choice of private holiday parks along the coast. The big networks lead the way: BIG4 runs standouts like the Adventure Whitsunday Resort with its thirteen-slide water park and Ingenia Holidays Cairns Coconut, while Discovery Parks and G'Day Parks cover Townsville, Mackay, Rockhampton and beyond with powered and ensuite sites. NRMA and Tasman holiday parks hold prime beachfront positions on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts. For scenery on a budget, the QPWS national-park campgrounds in places like Carnarvon Gorge and the Whitsunday islands are hard to beat.

Do Queensland caravan parks have powered sites and hookups?

Yes. Private holiday parks across Queensland offer powered sites with an electric hook-up and water, and many add ensuite, drive-through and slab options along with camp kitchens, pools and laundries. Full sewer at the site is uncommon, so you empty tanks at the park dump point. National-park campgrounds run by QPWS are different: most are unpowered and basic, set up for self-contained rigs that manage their own power and water. If you rely on mains electricity, book a powered site at a private park rather than a national-park campground.

How much does a powered site cost in Queensland?

Powered sites at private holiday parks generally run from about 40 Australian dollars a night, with discounts for longer stays, for example around 39 dollars a night for stays of seven nights or more at some BIG4 parks. Premium resort parks and peak holiday periods push higher, and cabins start well above site rates. National-park camping through QPWS is far cheaper, often charged per person per night, and free rest areas along the Bruce Highway cost nothing for self-contained travellers. Mixing private parks with national-park and rest-area nights keeps a long trip affordable.

How far ahead should I book camping in Queensland?

For the dry-season winter peak from June to September, book early. Popular QPWS national-park campgrounds should be reserved at least six weeks ahead, and longer for school and public holidays, while coastal holiday parks fill over the Christmas and Easter breaks. The grey-nomad migration north along the Bruce Highway adds to winter demand. Outside those windows, and especially midweek, you have far more freedom, and many highway rest areas operate first-come for a 20 to 72 hour stay. Book the headline reef and island sites first.

When is the best time to go caravanning in Queensland?

For most of the state, the dry-season winter from June to September is the prime time, with warm, dry, low-humidity days in the tropical north and mild weather in the southeast. This is peak grey-nomad season, so parks are busy and you should book ahead. The shoulder months of autumn and spring are good all-round windows with fewer crowds. The summer wet season from December to February brings monsoon rain and cyclone risk to the north, so northern touring largely pauses then while the southeast coast enjoys its beach-holiday peak.

Can big rigs and large caravans travel Queensland?

Along the coast, yes. The Bruce Highway and Pacific Motorway are sealed and suit large motorhomes and twin-axle caravans, and coastal holiday parks are built for big rigs with powered drive-through sites. The cautions are inland and on the islands. Outback routes can have long gaps between fuel and water, and many national-park access tracks and island roads, including much of K'gari (Fraser Island), are gravel or four-wheel-drive only and unsuitable for road caravans. Research conditions before committing, and keep a big rig to the sealed network where you can.

Can I free camp in Queensland?

Not in the wild-camping sense. In Queensland you cannot simply pull up and camp anywhere; you must stay in a designated campsite or a signed rest area. You can sleep in your vehicle at many highway rest areas for a limited period, commonly 20 to 72 hours depending on the site, but you cannot set up as if it were a campground unless it is a designated camping area. Plenty of free and low-cost rest areas line the Bruce Highway, several with toilets and dump points, which makes budget touring easy for self-contained rigs that respect the time limits.

Do I need a permit to camp in Queensland national parks?

Yes. Camping in Queensland national parks requires a permit booked through the Queensland National Parks Booking Service, with your permit issued by email. There are more than 165 designated campgrounds across the state, and bookings are required at almost all of them. For popular spots and peak periods such as school and public holidays, book at least six weeks ahead, as the best sites sell out fast. Most national-park sites are basic and unpowered, so they suit self-contained campers, and fees are modest, generally charged per person per night.

What is the grey-nomad migration?

The grey-nomad migration is the annual movement of older Australian travellers, often retirees, who head north for the winter to escape the cold southern states and chase the warm, dry tropical season. From around April to October, and peaking from June to September, they travel up the Bruce Highway and inland routes in caravans and motorhomes, often for three to six months at a time. It is why northern Queensland parks and rest areas are busiest in winter, and why coastal towns gear up for the long-stay trade during the dry season.

Where can I empty my tanks in Queensland?

Private holiday parks provide dump points for guests, and Queensland has an extensive network of public dump points as well, many at highway rest areas, showgrounds and council facilities along the Bruce Highway and major routes. Apps such as WikiCamps map public dump points, low-cost camps and amenities with reviews from other travellers, which makes planning a tank-empty along your route straightforward. Never empty waste anywhere but a proper dump point. For a deeper utility focus, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Queensland.

Are Queensland caravan parks pet-friendly?

Many private holiday parks in Queensland welcome dogs, though policies vary by park and some restrict numbers, require dogs on a lead, or keep pet-free zones, so check when you book. The bigger restriction is the national parks: dogs are banned from most Queensland national parks and QPWS campgrounds to protect native wildlife, so a pet rules out a lot of the scenic public camping. If you travel with a dog, plan a route around pet-friendly private parks and rest areas, carry waste bags, and never leave a dog in a hot vehicle in the Queensland heat.

What are the must-see regions for a Queensland caravan trip?

The classic run is up the coast on the Bruce Highway. Start on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts for beaches and theme parks, take in the Fraser Coast and K'gari, then push north to the Southern Great Barrier Reef, the Whitsundays at Airlie Beach, and Townsville. The grand finale is Tropical North Queensland around Cairns and the Daintree, where rainforest meets reef. Inland, Carnarvon Gorge and the outback routes reward those with time. Most trips follow the reef and the dry season north, then turn for home before the wet.

How do I get around Queensland in a caravan or motorhome?

Queensland touring runs on the Bruce Highway, the sealed coastal spine from Brisbane to Cairns, with the Pacific Motorway serving the Gold Coast and the Warrego and Capricorn Highways heading inland to the outback. The coastal network is well suited to caravans and motorhomes, with regular fuel, supermarkets and LPG in the towns. Inland and on the islands, distances grow and services thin out, so carry extra fuel and water and check whether tracks are sealed before you commit a big rig. Brisbane, Townsville and Cairns airports serve fly-and-rent trips.

What is the highest-rated RV park in Queensland?

The highest-rated is Cows Nest Caravan Park with a rating of 4.3/5 stars.