The best Indigenous experiences to have in Australia

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Discover inspiring Indigenous experiences to transform your knowledge of ancient cultures handed through millennia and still thriving today.

Djiriba Waagura

Hear some of the stories about the ancient landscape around the Shoalhaven area of the South Coast of NSW on a Djiriba Waagura tour with co-founder Matt Simms, a Wandi Wandian man. Visit significant Indigenous sites, such as caves and ancient fish traps, learn how to recognise bush tucker and medicine and wander through vastly different tracts of bushland, from a sandstone ecosystem to a she-oak forest, which Matt likens to the “spear section at Bunnings".

Djiriba Waagura co-founder Matt Simms, a Wandi Wandian man. (Image: Shoalhaven Tourism)
Go on a Djiriba Waagura tour with Wandi Wandian man Matt Simms. (Image: Shoalhaven Tourism)

Illi-Langi/The Rocks Aboriginal Dreaming Tour

A leisurely walk around The Rocks with Aunty Margret Campbell of Dreamtime Southern X offers insights into Aboriginal people’s saltwater heritage and spiritual connection with Sydney Harbour and the adjoining waterways and foreshores. Illi-Langi means ‘homeland’ and Margret demonstrates how to experience contemporary Aboriginal society within the heart of a modern-day megalopolis during The Rocks Aboriginal Dreaming Tour, which showcases the city’s ancient heritage and 29 clan groups that belong to this area.

Margret Campbell standing in front of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. (Image: Destination NSW and Margret Campbell)
Learn about Aboriginal people’s saltwater heritage. (Image: Destination NSW and Margret Campbell)

Dabungool Cultural Experiences

The best way to explore the Indigenous history of Kepa Kurl/Esperance on WA’s south coast is with Annie Dabb, who started sharing Noongar culture in 2021. Annie leads the walks on Country around the ancestral lands of her grandfather, Dabungool, for whom she named her company. Kepa Kurl means ‘where the waters lie like a boomerang’ and Annie’s narrative draws on Indigenous knowledge as she guides visitors through the Noongar seasons and tells Dreamtime stories of how the land was forged.

Strait Experiences

Co-founder of Strait Experiences Fraser Nai, a Traditional Owner on Masig Island, has launched Strait Day in order to connect visitors with local Islander guides who are passionate about their Country. The tour includes a scenic flight over the Torres Strait, a tour of Ngurapai/Horn Island and Waibene/Thursday Island, an Islander-style banquet and a cultural performance.

Kids dancing at Strait Day. (Image: @phlipvids)
Strait Day tour includes a scenic flight over the Torres Strait. (Image: @phlipvids)

Wunyami Cultural Walking Tour

The Wunyami Cultural Walking Tour offers an Indigenous-led walk around Wunyami/Green Island, an ancient coral cay with a compelling cultural history. Learn about how Wunyami, which means ‘place of secret/sacred spirits’, is connected to ancestral beings in this immersive experience that will bring you closer to the traditions that lie within the Sea Country of the Guru-Gulu Gungganji and Gimuy Yidinji tribes.

The Wunyami Cultural Walking Tour offers an Indigenous-led walk around Wunyami/Green Island in Tropical North Queensland.
Wunyami Cultural Walking Tour offers an Indigenous-led walk around Wunyami/Green Island in Tropical North Queensland.

Buy art from Australia’s best Indigenous artists, NT

Darwin Aboriginal Arts Fair (DAAF)

Taking place on Larrakia Country at the Darwin Convention Centre, the annual Darwin Aboriginal Arts Fair (DAAF) is held in August and has become one of the largest gatherings of established and emerging Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists in the country.

This year’s program will include the inaugural National Indigenous Fashion Awards, a celebration of creativity and innovation in fashion and fabric design by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander designers and artists.

Emma Singer in the studio at Mimili Maku Arts in front of two major works. (Image: Meg Hansen and Mimili Maku Arts)
Emma Singer is one of the artists at DAAF. (Image: Meg Hansen and Mimili Maku Arts)

Desert Mob

Desert Mob takes place during September and October at the Araluen Arts Centre in Alice Springs and features works of art from the 35 Desart-member art centre from the desert regions and communities of the Northern Territory, South Australia and Western Australia. The event schedule includes artist talks, a day-long symposium, and an ethical art marketplace offering up affordable artworks.

Maruku

Maruku is owned and operated by Anangu, and with 900 artists from 20 remote communities across the Central and Western deserts involved, visitors to Uluru can take part in dot painting workshops, join private art tours around the giant red rock mass and learn about the art of wood carving (punu).

Injalak Arts

Located in West Arnhem Land, Injalak Arts is an Aboriginal-owned art centre that promotes the works of artists from Gunbalanya and surrounding outstations. Works include paintings, carvings and barks, and the centre is also the starting-off point for tours to nearby Injalak Hill to view its ancient rock art. Permits are needed to enter Arnhem Land and should be organised in advance.

Jilamara

Owned and operated by Tiwi artists from the Milikapiti community on Melville Island in the Timor Sea, visitors can tour Jilamara, and experience the serenity of the island and its landscape. Permits are required to visit the Tiwi Islands and can be organised through the Tiwi Land Council.

Buy art from Australia's best Indigenous artists (Credit Tourism NT,Jilmara arts and craft association)
Buy art from Australia’s best Indigenous artists. (Credit Tourism NT, Jilamara arts and craft association)

Trace an ancient songline on the Dampier Peninsula, WA

Acacias flower, raucous red-winged parrots breed and flocks of cockatoos feed on the bush onions during the dry Barrgana season on Western Australia’s Dampier Peninsula. Kangaroos are well-fed and fat, lizards hibernate underground and a sea mist moves inland on cool nights.

This is prime walking season for the Lurujarri Dreaming Trail, which travels north of Broome along the coast of the Dampier Peninsula just a few times per year between June and August.

A nine-day walk with Goolarabooloo traditional owners following a songline, is an exercise not in ‘arriving’ anywhere, but in experiencing what it is to live on Country. You’ll cook on fires, wash in the sea and use the same camping spots that have been used for thousands of years in a true example of sustainable living. You might even find yourself seeking out timber for impromptu carving workshops – and making anything from karli (boomerangs), coolamon (water bowls) or cumbuk (clapping sticks).

The Lurujarri Heritage Trail has been running for 32 years and was established by the author Paddy Roe to encourage the members of his Goolarabooloo community to start walking on Country again, to renew and stay connected to their roots and traditional skills by tracing this songline; think of it as an oral heritage map – something that keeps the body of cultural knowledge known as Bugarregarre, the Dreaming, alive. Right from the start, Roe sought to share this ancient culture with outsiders and in 1991 he was awarded an Order of Australia Medal for his facilitation of cross-cultural understanding.

Trace an ancient songline on the Dampier Peninsula
Travel north of Broome along the coast of the Dampier Peninsula on the Lurujarri Dreaming Trail.

Join a women’s only tour in Arnhem Land, NT

The Yolngu people of Arnhem Land, located in the Top End of the Northern Territory, have a profound attachment to the land that has housed and nourished them for millennia. Indeed, they describe it as their mother. This relationship is at the centre of a visit to this area, and none more so than Lirrwi Tourism’s women’s only Gay’Wu dilly bag tour.

Conducted entirely by Yolngu women, the tour gives an insight into the strictly defined rituals and practices that women undertake within the society and gives insight into the bush, the universe, the sky and the ancestors.

It also allows for a deeper connection with and appreciation of the environment, something that is definitely not culturally exclusive. During this five-day small-group tour, women and girls will learn about everything from bush medicine and weaving to kinship and astrology, and experience traditions like a crying ceremony and gathering mud crabs, and always finishes with a visit to the Buku-Larrnggay art centre in Yirrkala, considered one of the best in the country.

Join the Lirrwi Tourism women’s only Gay’Wu dilly bag tour.
Join the Lirrwi Tourism women’s only Gay’Wu dilly bag tour.

Need tips, more detail or itinerary ideas tailored to you? Ask AT.

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Do Geraldton’s Yamaji Drive Trail, WA

The seaside city of Geraldton on Western Australia’s Coral Coast supports a proud Indigenous culture and the Yamaji Drive Trail is a testament to this. Looping together 14 sites of significance to local Aboriginal communities, the 195-kilometre trail takes in natural beauty, art and history and can be driven in one to two days at leisure, beginning at Champion Bay (Jambinu).

From the historic town of Greenough, amble along the Greenough River Nature Walk Trail and visit freshwater Bootenal Spring, believed to be the site of confrontations between local Aboriginal people and early settlers. Then head east to Ellendale Pool, a waterhole and campground that makes for a dreamy swimming and overnight spot; encased by giant gums and a rocky gorge, the site is watched over by Bimarra the Serpent.

Continue east to the wildflower town of Mullewa and the red-dirt landscapes of the lower Murchison; the tour ends at Butterabby Graves site, a place of conflict between First Nations people and pastoralists. Visit Geraldton Visitor Centre to pick up a trail map.

Do Geraldton's Yamaiji Drive Trail
The Yamaji Drive Trail loops together 14 sites of significance to local Aboriginal communities.

Explore the Flinders Ranges from a traditional perspective, SA

In 2016, the Flinders Ranges National Park was officially renamed Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park to incorporate the traditional name, meaning ‘meeting place’, of its star attraction, Wilpena Pound. And with the only accommodation within the park, Wilpena Pound Resort, under the aegis of the traditional Adnyamathanha owners, you’re all but guaranteed an authentic immersion here.

Take part in any number of its Aboriginal Cultural Tours, from a Yura Udnyu stroll to Old Wilpena Station to a guided cultural walk to Sacred Canyon to see ancient rock engravings. And take a self-guided scenic drive to Arkaroo Rock – a particularly important Aboriginal art site in the Flinders Ranges featuring ochre and charcoal images depicting the creation of Wilpena Pound.

AWilpena Pound Flinders Range
Feel the essence of the Outback as you drive through the culturally significant site of Ikara/Wilpena Pound. (Credit: Australian Tourism Commission)

Some 200 kilometres north-east of here lies Vulkathunha-Gammon Ranges National Park. The spectacular terrain of this Northern Flinders Ranges park is crowned by a vast salt lake, Lake Frome – or Munda – which plays an important role in the lives of the Adnyamathanha people.

Hiking trails will take you deep into the heart of the rugged landscape, but your best bet is to sign up for a journey with Indigenous-owned and operated Iga Warta, which has a range of tours and activities that shine a light on Adnyamathanha culture and the rules for living from the Muda (Dreaming).

St Mary Peak, the highest summit in the Flinders Ranges, is central to the Adnyamathanha creation story, as Uluru is to Anangu. And while its circuit trail is part of the popular Wilpena Pound circuit, its traditional owners prefer that visitors don’t climb the summit and advise stopping at Tanderra Saddle.

Explore the Flinders Ranges from a traditional perspective
Explore the Flinders Ranges from a traditional perspective.

Catch an Indigenous festival

Australia has a raft of remarkable events that aim to share and preserve Aboriginal culture. The following festivals provide the chance to not only learn more about it but fully immerse yourself in it, too.

Barunga Festival

Eighty kilometres south-east of Katherine, the small Aboriginal community of Barunga plays host to a 4000-strong crowd for the Barunga Festival, a celebration of Indigenous music, sport, cultural activities and traditional arts. Visitors can learn to cook damper, make didgeridoos and spears, and learn about bush medicine. There’s also an art shed exhibiting work by local artists, and traditional music and dance performances throughout the weekend.

See Barunga Festival in June.
See Barunga Festival in June.

Garma

A four-day gathering that aims to address and improve social equity for Indigenous people, Garma is arguably the most significant cultural event in Australia. Held at a remote ceremonial meeting ground in north-east Arnhem Land, it attracts around 2500 political and business leaders from across the globe. Guests learn about Aboriginal Australia and the rich Arnhem Land Yolngu culture through talks, dance, arts and song, and camp under the stars.

Gumatj women dancing at Garma Festival
Gumatj women dancing at Garma Festival. (Image: Elise Hassey)

Laura Dance Festival

Since the 1980s the Aboriginal people of Cape York have celebrated their culture through song and dance at the Laura Dance Festival. Held every two years, the much-anticipated festival draws in thousands of visitors to watch local dance groups from 20 communities vying for the winner’s shield.

Catch an Indigenous festival (Credit Elise Hassey)
Catch an Indigenous festival, including the Laura Dance Festival. (Image: Elise Hassey)

Winds of Zenadth Cultural Festival

Held biannually, the Winds of Zenadth Cultural Festival sees the communities of the Torres Strait Islands descend on Thursday Island for a celebration of their diverse cultures. Over four days this small isle is buzzing with activities, from boat races to storytelling and a showcase of local island cuisine.

The Karijini Experience

What really sets The Karijini Experience event apart is its location in the remote and simply breathtaking Karijini National Park. The four-day program features around 50 events such as meditation and yoga in the ancient rugged landscape, guided cultural walks, film screenings under the stars, bush tucker high tea and more.

Boomerang Festival

Part of Byron Bay’s long-running Bluesfest, Boomerang Festival is a showcase of local and regional Indigenous music, with artists coming from all over the country, the Torres Strait Islands and even Papua New Guinea. Festival-goers can partake in musical workshops, watch dance rituals and join thought-provoking cultural exchanges.

Yalukut Weelam Ngargee

Yalukut Weelam Ngargee is one of Melbourne’s largest cultural festivals. The busy one-day schedule features different spaces to watch cultural performances and cooking demonstrations of native foods, and to partake in craft workshops such as basket weaving and face painting. You can also browse the food and market stalls.

Join a rock art tour in Quinkan Country, Qld

Jarramali Rock Art Tours might have only been operating for three years but the ground it covers, the Quinkan rock art sites found in the sandstone escarpments outside of Laura in Tropical North Queensland, is eternal.

Depart from Cairns or Port Douglas in a 4WD or fly in via a scenic helicopter ride from Cairns or Laura. Choose between a day trip or a one- or two-night experience, camping in what the family-owned operator describes as ‘five-billion-star accommodation’.

With a Kuku Yalanji traditional owner as your guide, you’ll learn about nature, heritage and spirituality and emerge with a true understanding of where you’ve been. Jarramali Rock Art Tours was established by Johnny Murison, who is a descendant of a Kuku-mini woman named Rosie Maytown Palmer.

Rosie became part of the Stolen Generations when she was snatched from her mother’s arms at five years old. Part of the reason Murison started his tours was because he wants people to “walk into our past, recognise, acknowledge, respect and feel the pain my old people went through. Then perhaps we can walk together into a brighter reconciled future," he explains.

Join a rock art tour in Quinkan County (Credit Tourism Tropical North Queensland)
Join Jarramali Rock Art Tours in Quinkan County. (Credit Tourism Tropical North Queensland)

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Find Tasmania’s (not so) hidden Indigenous culture, Tas

On the west coast of Tasmania, you might come across depressions that were once Aboriginal huts: large beehive-shaped structures of wood and bark that would accommodate up to 14 people. This is just one fascinating example of the Indigenous culture that is hidden in plain sight in a state where a pervasive myth throughout much of the 20th century did its best to erase it. Today, the word palawa refers to Tasmanian Aboriginal people as a whole, but encompasses the many different groups from all around Tasmania. Here are ways you can experience this culture through both a contemporary and historical lens today.

On tour

The wukalina walk was Tasmania’s first Indigenous-owned and operated tourism venture. A four-day walk in the state’s north-east, around the spectacular landscapes of the larapuna/Bay of Fires and wukalina/Mt William areas.

Local and family-owned Kooparoona Niara Tours runs bespoke day trips through the Meander Valley near Launceston that combine visits to Aboriginal cultural sites and a view of contemporary Indigenous culture with a taste of the region’s standout produce.

Tasmania’s wukalina Walk
Tasmania’s wukalina Walk is a chance to engage with palawa culture. (Photo: Tayla Gentle)

At museums and galleries

The always-engaging Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery (TMAG) is a good introduction to Tasmanian Aboriginal culture, heritage and current perspectives. Not far from TMAG, Art Mob is a gallery that specialises in Tasmanian Aboriginal art with a number of rare pieces as well as prints and paintings by well-known Tasmanian Aboriginal artists.

In your hotel

Check into MACQ 01 –  on the traditional lands of the Mouhenneener people – for an immersive portal into Tasmania’s Indigenous history. This slickly designed hotel on Hobart’s waterfront is a storytelling hotel that brings together the tales of real-life characters who have played a role in Tasmania’s past, palawa inspirations among them.

Aerial shot of Macq01 Hotel views
Macq01 is set on Hobart’s bustling Salamanca Wharf.

In the wild

The Takayna/Tarkine region of Tasmania’s north-west takes its name from the ancient culture of the Tarkiner people, who once occupied the coastal region near Sandy Cape. The coastal area of this rainforest wilderness area is strewn with artefacts that make this coastline one of the richest human archaeological zones on the planet. Follow the Tarkine Drive, packed with walking tracks, lookouts, cultural sites and picnic spots, or join a six-day walk of the Tarkine Coast with Tarkine Trails.

Find Tasmania's (not so) hidden Indigenous culture (Credit Rob Burnett)
Find Tasmania’s (not so) hidden Indigenous culture. (Credit Rob Burnett)

Have an urban Indigenous experience

You don’t have to go all the way to the outback to encounter Indigenous culture; our cities and urban areas can trace long and proud Aboriginal histories that are recounted and celebrated in a range of tours, walks and experiences.

Melbourne

Browse the exhibitions and collections at Koorie Heritage Trust before setting off on the two-hour Scar Tree Walk, which links the modern city to the ancient Aboriginal past that took place here.

View the First Peoples exhibition at Bunjilaka Aboriginal Cultural Centre, take a walk through the Indigenous garden and don’t miss the daily eel feeding.

Part of the land of the Kulin Nation, go on an Aboriginal Heritage Walk of the Royal Botanic Gardens with an Aboriginal guide to learn about the traditions and stories of the local Boonwurrung and Woiwurrung people.

Koorie Heritage Trust
Learn something new as a family at the Koorie Heritage Trust.

Sydney

The Blue Mountains Walkabout all-day tour follows traditional songlines, walking through lush bushland, taking in rock art and ceremonial sites and learning about bush tucker, Dreamtime stories and bark painting.

Yerrabingin is an Indigenous rooftop farm in the heart of the inner-city suburb of Eveleigh, experiences include tours and talks and cocktail-making using native plants.

Join a 3.5-hour Guringai Aboriginal Tour of Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park, learning the history of the Garigal people of the Guringai nation; opt for the barbie lunch of kangaroo, emu, fish and damper.

Brisbane

Learn Indigenous history at a Riverlife Mirrabooka experience through the music, dance and stories of the Yuggera Aboriginal dancers.

Perth

Djurandi Dreaming is a 45-minute Dreaming in the Quay walking tour with a local Nyungar guide around the bright, shiny Elizabeth Quay development explores the near and ancient history of the people of the Swan River.

Adelaide

Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute is Australia’s oldest Aboriginal-owned and managed multi-arts centre that holds exhibitions, performances and art fairs exploring the modern and traditional Indigenous culture.

Have an urban Indigenous experiences. (Credit South Australian Tourism Commission)
Have an urban Indigenous experience. (Credit: South Australian Tourism Commission)

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Carla Grossetti
Carla Grossetti has written across print and digital for Australian Traveller and International Traveller for more than a decade and has spent more than two decades finding excuses to eat well and travel far. A prestigious News Corp cadetship launched her career at The Cairns Post, before a stint at The Canberra Times and The Sydney Morning Herald gave way to extended wanders through Canada, the US, Mexico, Central America, Asia and Europe. Carla was chief sub editor at delicious and has contributed to Good Food, Travel & Luxury, Explore Travel, Escape. While living in London, Carla was on staff at Condé Nast Traveller and The Sunday Times Travel desk and was part of the pioneering digital team at The Guardian UK.
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Why this luxurious Broome resort is the ultimate stay

    Angela Saurine Angela Saurine
    With its prime position on one of Australia’s most iconic beaches, lush tropical surrounds and exceptional dining, wellness and leisure experiences, Cable Beach Club Resort & Spa is the perfect base for exploring the spectacular Kimberley region.

    For many travellers, Broome is the gateway to the wild grandeur of the Kimberley – a launch point for epic 4WD journeys along the legendary Gibb River Road, rugged outback tours and expedition cruises tracing the remote coastline. Whether you’re arriving dust-covered from the red dirt or preparing to venture deep into the region’s untamed landscapes, Cable Beach Club Resort & Spa offers the perfect place to begin or end the adventure. The only fully integrated resort in Broome, the property unfolds along meandering pathways that wind through lush tropical gardens, past tranquil lily ponds and hand-carved timber sculptures that subtly guide guests towards reception.

    Location

    camel ride along cable beach broome
    Let friendly staff help you book a camel ride on Cable Beach. (Credit: Tourism WA/ Matt Deakin)

    Cable Beach Club Resort & Spa lies just steps from the famed Cable Beach, where the silhouettes of camels crossing the shoreline at sunset have become one of Australia’s most enduring tourism images. The only beachfront resort in Broome, it’s also just a few minutes’ drive to the centre of town, where guests can wander through Chinatown and peruse its pearl stores and galleries or catch a movie beneath the stars at the heritage-listed Sun Pictures.

    The friendly team at the resort’s tour desk can also help tailor your stay, whether that’s an iconic camel ride along the beach, a visit to Willie Creek Pearl Farm to discover how the gems are harvested or a guided tour to see the ancient dinosaur footprints revealed among the rust-red rocks of Gantheaume Point at low tide.

    Style and character

    Cable Beach Club Resort broome lobby
    Walk into an eclectic blend of influences and eras.

    Few resorts capture the essence of their surroundings quite like Cable Beach Club Resort & Spa. First opened in 1988, the resort is a celebration of Broome’s rich multicultural past, from its Japanese pearl divers to Chinese merchants. The result is an eclectic blend of influences and eras. The resort features wide timber verandahs, corrugated iron walls and tin roofs designed to temper the tropical climate. To keep it breezy, Broome’s signature lattice (a distinct painted timber lattice detailing iconic to the tropical architecture of the Kimberley region) has been used across the resort with two functions – allowing a breeze through while maintaining privacy.

    Scattered throughout the manicured gardens is an impressive collection of rare Asian and international artefacts. Chinese bluestone lions stand sentinel at the entrance, while terracotta warrior horses, vermillion Japanese torii gates and traditional Shishi (lion-dog) statues lend an air of quiet grandeur. Fragrant with frangipani blossoms and shaded by century-old boab and mango trees, the grounds are also a haven for native wildlife. Birds provide a constant soundtrack, while wallabies and tiny lizards rustle through the foliage.

    Rooms

    Cable Beach Club Resort broome Price Jones Suite
    Sleep in comfort and style.

    The extensive accommodation options span studios, bungalows, club apartments, villas and suites. Family bungalows draw inspiration from the grand homes of Broome’s pearl masters, translating that heritage into generous layouts, high ceilings and verandahs that open to the gardens. Studios and villas are perfect for couples and solo stays, pairing soft coastal tones with private balconies or courtyards. While club apartments and suites are designed for longer stays, offering multiple bedrooms, kitchen facilities and seamless indoor-outdoor living.

    Food and drink

    kichi kichi at Cable Beach Club Resort broome
    Tuck into an Asian fusion menu at Kichi Kichi.

    The dining scene at Cable Beach Club Resort & Spa reflects Broome’s position at the crossroads of the Indian Ocean and Asia, where coastal produce meets a tapestry of multicultural influences.

    Contemporary Asian fusion dishes – from crisp fried pork belly and roast Peking duck breast to Burmese lamb curry – deliver bold, vibrant flavours at Kichi Kichi. While the handmade tortellini filled with pearl meat and prawn served at atmospheric Italian restaurant, Cichetti, is the kind of dish that you will remember long after the final bite. Elsewhere on the menu, find effortless flair across dishes like Wedge Island octopus, market fish crudo and silky goat’s milk panna cotta.

    As the sun begins to dip below the horizon, Sunset Bar & Grill becomes the place to be. Here, guests gather over freshly shucked oysters, cured meat platters and buckets of sweet Exmouth prawns. Or, for a quieter evening in, guests can retreat to the comfort of their room and order from Cable Eats, the resort’s in-room dining service.

    Pools

    Cable Beach Club Resort broome ocean pool
    Relax by the adults-only Ocean Pool.

    Two distinct pool settings invite guests to shape their day exactly as they please. Drift into the calm of the adults-only Ocean Pool, where attentive service delivers dishes such as grilled prawn skewers and salt-and-pepper calamari straight to your cabana or sunbed well into the afternoon.

    The mood at the family-friendly Kimberley Pool – framed by a cascading waterfall, the heart of the resort’s recreational precinct – is decidedly more playful. Here, younger guests are catered for with a dedicated kids’ menu of familiar favourites including chicken nuggets, fish and chips and ham-and-cheese toasties, while parents can graze on more refined poolside fare, such as fried squid, soba noodle salad and gourmet burgers.

    Chahoya Spa & Salon

    Cable Beach Club Resort broome Chahoya Spa
    Book a treatment at Chahoya Spa.

    Chahoya Spa brings a refined sense of indulgence inspired by its Japanese name, meaning “pamper”, with signature treatments including the Kimberley Dreamtime ritual and Chahoya Pearl Massage designed to soothe tired bodies and quiet busy minds. There is also an on-site salon providing personalised cuts, colour services and restorative hair care, ensuring guests leave feeling polished and renewed.

    Other facilities

    yoga class in the buddha sanctuary at Cable Beach Club Resort broome
    Join a yoga class at the Buddha Sanctuary.

    Wellness continues at the Buddha Sanctuary, a serene open-air pavilion just beyond the main resort grounds, where yoga classes are held six days a week amid ornamental gardens and a striking 3.5-metre hand-carved crystal Buddha statue. Beyond the sanctuary, the resort caters to every pace of stay, with a children’s playground, mini golf, tennis courts and a fully-equipped gym. Guests can also browse the resort’s boutique gift shop, home to Allure South Sea Pearls – the brand behind Broome’s first dedicated pearl boutique in Chinatown.

    Book the ultimate Broome getaway at cablebeachclub.com.