Discover the most magical spots to pitch your tent or park your rig on your next Royal National Park adventure.
Cliffs, beaches, and rainforest make Australia’s oldest national park one of its most popular.
If you were to design your ultimate outdoor playground, you’d likely come up with Royal. Flush with the southern suburbs of Sydney, Royal features more than 100 kilometres of walking trails that snake from exposed sandstone headlands and Aboriginal engravings to the low-tide Figure 8 Pools. The Coast Track, a spectacular two-day, 26-kilometre walking track, runs north-south through the park. Most visitors are day trippers doing only short bushwalks, so you can easily escape the crowds at either of the park's two hike-in camping areas. Don't miss the remarkable Wedding Cake Rock.
Royal is busiest over spring and summer, with wildflowers colouring the heathlands in October and November (look out for towering red gymea lilies) and swimmers and surfers flocking to the beaches and waves on hot summer days. Consider visiting in autumn (April or May), for cooler walking weather, and in winter (June through August) to see the ocean at its most powerful and watch humpback and southern right whales migrating up and down NSW's South Coast. Both camping areas remain open throughout the year, and because Sydneysiders see Royal as their backyard getaway, the picnic areas and northern walks can get busy any time.
Just an hour outside Sydney in the Royal National Park, Garie Beach is a semi-protected cove. Great for picnicking and exploring the sandy shores, this is one of the few patrolled beaches in the park.