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Sydney to Mudgee: The best 7-day road trip itinerary

Spend a long weekend in wine country in the Mudgee Region where food, wine, arts, culture, sports, leisure and nature intersect.

The name Mudgee is derived from the Wiradjuri term, Moothi, which means ‘nest in the hills’. And the Mudgee Region has certainly become a great place to cocoon. Watch through the window on the 268-kilometre drive from Sydney to Mudgee, and you will observe the landscape being pulled together in thousands of colourful threads until you arrive in Mudgee.

Australia has more than 60 wine regions to choose from, and Mudgee is up there with the best of them. Encompassing the towns of Mudgee, Gulgong, Kandos and Rylstone (plus a few small villages in between), a trip to the Mudgee Region in Central NSW is one for wine-lovers of all stripes (from newbies to hard-core oenophiles) who are looking to find a new varietal.

But there are also many more reasons to explore beyond the 35-odd family-run boutique vineyards, which are surrounded by cinematic landscapes and dotted with sophisticated restaurants and cafes to refuel along the way. In addition to the historic villages and world-class wineries, you can add a distillery and brewery to your itinerary and time your trip to coincide with one of the Mudgee Region’s annual events or festivals.

The fact there are no traffic lights in Mudgee’s town centre and the surrounding townships of Gulgong, Kandos and Rylstone also speaks volumes about the pace of life in the region. Here’s how to maximise your time in Mudgee.

Day One: Sydney to Rylstone

two motorbikes Drive To Rylstone
Drive three hours from Sydney. (Image: Destination NSW)

The Rylstone Kandos Region is an outpost of cool country charm located just three hours’ drive from Sydney. You can visit a winery, learn about the area’s ancient and modern history, experience country charm, sample local produce and enjoy everything from bushwalking to birdwatching against a backdrop comprising Wollemi National Park and the Capertee Valley.

Explore the Dunns/ Ganguddy Swamp

Explore the Dunns/ Ganguddy Swamp
Discover the peaceful Dunns/ Ganguddy Swamp.

Start your seven-day journey with a visit to this peaceful body of water. Despite its name, Dunns Swamp, or Ganguddy as it is known to the Dabee people of the Wiradjuri nation, is not a swamp at all, but rather a peaceful waterway formed after the building of Kandos weir in the 1920s.

Located along a squiggle of the Cudgegong River that wends its way through Wollemi National Park for about five kilometres, slip out onto the surface on a guided tour with Southern Cross Kayaking. The beauty of the waterway is only part of the appeal. Apart from the soaring sandstone escarpments and rugged geological features, the eco-conscious tour demonstrates the Dabee People’s connection to the land as it glides past Aboriginal rock art and sites of significance to the Traditional Owners of the land.

While here, you can also cast a line out, boat about, follow bush trails in search of native flora and fauna and set up camp for the night, should the seductive serenity prove too hard to leave.

Taste French-quality wine at De Beaurepaire Wines

de Beaurepaire Wines tasting room
Step into the Frenchy-chic De Beaurepaire Wines. (Image: Kassia byrnes)

Nowhere in Australia does wine like De Beaurepaire Wines in Rylstone, led by winemaker Richard De Beaurepaire. Richard helped pioneer an entirely new wine sub-region when he and wife Janet bought the property in 1998 after an extensive search for the type of limestone soil that lends its flavour to the famous wines of France.

Thanks to a narrow band of limestone where the property sits (and Richard’s focus on centuries-old methods of winemaking that build on his French heritage), the single-estate vineyard creates wines that are similar to those produced in Beaune, in Burgundy, where members of the De Beaurepaire family have lived for more than 1000 years.

Find the yum in yum cha

Patrons enjoying food and drink at 29 Nine 99 Yum Cha and Tea House in Rylstone, east of Mudgee.
Treat yourself to lunch at 29Nine99 Yum Cha. (Image: Destination NSW)

Owner and chef Na Lan has been doling out dumplings and delicious yum cha in the Central West since 2008. Lunchtime can be extremely busy at 29 Nine 99, and the crowd is a mix of local families and day-trippers drawn to the fun décor and nostalgia of eating yum cha.

While the dining room is very small, there’s more seating outside. Pace yourself as the plump pork buns and dumplings packed with pork and prawns live up to the hype. In addition to enjoying yum cha, a must while in the Mudgee Region, you can purchase everything from tea to teapots and clothing, all adorned with Chinese motifs and rose-gold accents. Na Lan grew up in Xian, in the Shaanxi province, and named the eatery after the date she married her Australian husband, Reg (September 29, 1999).

Stay at a Quaker-style barn

The Barn Red Room Naked Lady Wines
Book a stay at Quaker-style Barn. (Image: Airbnb)

Naked Lady Wines is potentially clothing optional, but only if you’re in the privacy of your bedroom at The Barn Red Room, which is located above the Naked Lady Wines Cellar Door. It’s the simplicity of a stay at this vineyard that makes the experience so special. There are two bedrooms with en-suites located at Naked Lady Wines, which offers gourmands the opportunity to get to know the wines and the winemaker in this down-to-earth district.

Arrange for a home-cooked dinner to be delivered to the mezzanine level of the barn where you can enjoy views out to Wollemi National Park. Ganguddy-Dunns Swamp, about 30 minutes away, is home to a population of platypus, which you might spot the next morning if you’re lucky.

Day Two: Rylstone and Kandos

Order a full-cooked breakfast to be delivered to your door at the vineyard, and then make the most of what’s on your doorstep in the Mudgee Region by turning your gaze to the pretty villages of Rylstone and Kandos for some retail therapy.

Enjoy some retail therapy

streetscape in rylstone
Peruse the local shops. (Image: Destination NSW)

The heritage village of Rylstone is located on the western edge of the Blue Mountains, and is the gateway to the World-Heritage-listed Wollemi National Park. The village has many fine examples of early colonial architecture and has become as well known for its shopping as its vineyards and artisan producers.

Visit Folkologie, known for its repurposed furniture and Australian-inspired homewares, the Convent Chapel and Wool Shop for your next hand-knitted beanie crafted by local creatives and Sisters Bazaar for a curation of eclectic gifts.

Trek the Ferntree Gully

Sun setting over the Cudgegong River in Wollemi National Park
Explore the corners of Wollemi National Park. (Image: Destination NSW)

Stop eating. Start hiking. Everyone – from birdwatchers to botanists and bushwalkers – descends on Ferntree Gully, which is a lesson in contrasts thanks to its multitude of microclimates. From groves of gums to tree ferns and carpets of crayon-green moss, Ferntree Gully has a kind of shifting luminescence dependent on the light.

Access Ferntree Gully off the Bylong Valley Way, 17 kilometres north of Rylstone on the fringes of Wollemi National Park. The Ferntree Gully is only about 2.5 kilometres, but there are a few steep sections and some stairs.

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

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Stop for award-winning olive oil

Rylstone Olive Press
Stop for a tasting at Rylstone Olive Press. (Image: Destination NSW)

If you’ve ever believed olive oil all tastes the same, you’ve never done a tasting at Rylstone Olive Press. Stop in to try the award-winning range of extra virgin olive oil (truly, there are so many awards, it’s hard to keep track) and discover a new passion. With everything made right on site, under the guidance of Jayne Bentivoglio, it doesn’t get fresher. Go behind the scenes and see the process from picking to press to mixing new blends.

Hang up your boots

You are spoilt for choice when it comes to finding unique places to stay in the Mudgee Region. But for convenience’s sake, cocoon yourself for a second night at the Quakers Barn at Naked Lady Wines so you can enjoy a tutored tasting and not have to draw straws to see who will be the designated driver.

Day Three: Mudgee

Get on your bike

aerial of mudgee town centre
Explore Mudgee on two wheels. (Image: Destination NSW)

You will see and do more in Mudgee when you don a helmet and e-bike with EzyRide Mudgee for a jaunt around the picturesque village. Download the Cycle Mudgee Region guide and take the Winery Ride route that starts and ends at the Clock Tower.

Choose the Rocky Waterhole Road and bike along the Cudgegong River where the sunshine dances off the steely waterway and plays off the buttery light of the countryside. Wheel freely around groaning gums and rolling countryside before making your way back to Mudgee proper.

Explore the Puttu Bucca Wetlands

a Citrine Wagtail
Spot a citrine wagtail. (Image: Santanu Sen)

Despite being a manmade wetland, the Pucca Bucca Wetlands now function as a permanent oxbow lake (billabong). Bring your binoculars and try and clock some of the bird species found in the biodiverse wetlands, such as the freckled duck, Australian wood duck, plumed whistling duck and brown quail.

The Citrine wagtail has also put Mudgee on the map for twitchers, who descended in droves in September 2014 when the rare yellow bird was spotted (the third-ever recording on Australian soil).

Munch on brunch at a Mudgee cafe

Mudgee Corner Store
Head to the Mudgee Corner Store for breads and pastries.

Go for breakfast with all the frills at Mudgee Corner Store where the locals will clock you as an out-of-towner in an instant. The cafe, one of the most popular in Mudgee, is generally on the radar of most visitors, and with good reason.

Head to the Itty Bitty Bread Shop for incredible breads and pastries and to the Mudgee Corner Store for coffee and a mix of burgers, pies, and bacon and egg rolls. BYO eco bag so you can stock up on local artisan provisions for your picnic, such as Farmer Brown pasture-raised eggs, High Valley Feta, Hello Lovelies Cordial and coffee from Fish River Roasters.

Bunker down in a wooden bolthole at Strikes Mudgee

interior of cabin at Strikes Mudgee
Soak in the clean, crisp country air. (Image: Destination NSW)

Clean, crisp country air is not the only thing going for Strikes Mudgee. Here, you will be given a front-row seat at dawn and dusk each day to a landscape made even more enchanting by the presence of the property’s resident kangaroos, who make cameos at dawn and dusk each day.

The remote timber cabin is cleverly designed with each window offering a different perspective over the surrounding countryside, lacquered in an emerald green gloss.

Day Four: Mudgee

Enjoy breakfast at Strikes with a pre-ordered hamper of local from olive.a.twist such as jalapeno and cheese twists, brioche doughnuts, all baked at the Itty Bread Shop behind the Mudgee Corner Store.

Tour the local arts scene

Mudgee Arts Precinct
See world-reknowned art without the crowds. (Image: Destination NSW)

Where can you come face-to-face with world-famous art, usually without another soul around, while you soak it in? The Mudgee Arts Precinct. Thanks to a loan program with the National Gallery of Art, a rotation of some of the most incredible and famous artworks are displayed in this intimate gallery. Think Andy Warhol’s soup cans and Roy Lichtenstein’s iconic pop art.

Get more local art flavours along the sculpture walk in Lawson Park. As well as the picturesque park surrouns, stroll by works from Mid-Western Regional Council’s public art collection.

Mudgee CBD Walk

man on bike in front of historic building in mudgee
See the historic buildings of Mudgee. (Image: Destination NSW)

The Mudgee CBD Walk is only about 2.8 kilometres long and a great way to appreciate the Federation architecture that lends the country town so much of its charm.

Wander past the Town Hall Building, and Lonergan’s Store, which first opened in 1870, The Mudgee Guardian newspaper building, the Regent Picture Theatre and Anglican Parish Church of Saint John the Baptist, and Cobb & Co Boutique Hotel, to name a few.

Pick up some provisions so you can self-cater for the next few days. While you’re in Mudgee, take the time to duck into a few thrift stores in search of retro cardigans.

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Stay at Evamor Valley

Evamor Valley eco tents
Relax into nature, with all your creature comforts.

Check into Evamor Valley (it’s a two-night minimum stay) located on this properly spectacular property with views over the dam and surrounding bushland. The glamping-style tents (one of a handful of glamping operators in Mudgee) have an earthy palette that reflects the muted colours the Mudgee Region is known for. Light the fire pit for the perfect romantic getaway. And check out the Farm Walks Tour calendar to see when the next tour will be.

Day Five: Back on your bike to see more of Mudgee

Need a little exercise after all that indulgence? The hills around Mudgee are filled with lovely trails, given the place is the third-largest grape-producing region in NSW. So you’ll never tire of the agrarian arcadia while on two tyres.

Give Brett from Ezyride Mudgee a call and ask him to drop your bikes at Evamor Valley and help plan an itinerary that takes in some of the family-owned cellar doors, as well as a local distillery and brewery or two. If you like what you taste while at a cellar door, make a purchase and Brett will pick up your orders from each estate. Now that’s service.

Visit Lowe Family Wine Co.

Lowe Family Wine Co in Mudgee, NSW
Lowe Family Wine Co is one of Mudgee’s top cellar doors. (Image: Destination NSW)

Be warned: if Lowe Family Wine Co. is one of the first on your list of places to cycle to for a swirl and a sip you could easily flop and drop here and stay for the day.

It’s like an advertisement for country life with handsome couples strolling hand in hand, a rustic barn bathed in light where you can enjoy a tasting and charcuterie plate as well as the celebrated Zin House restaurant, one of the many bucolic boltholes on the family property. The rustic feel here stretches out onto a tiered terrace with views overlooking the vineyard.

Try the Warakirri Dining Experience

Warakirri Dining Experience by indigiearth in mudgee
Taste native bush tucker and botanicals across five courses.

Get a taste of the local Indigenous culture during a Warakirri Dining Experience, which is proving to be a big draw to visitors in Mudgee. Besides a ‘Welcome to Country’ owner Sharon Winsor, a Ngemba Weilwan woman from western NSW, connects visitors to her culture using dishes built around ingredients that she has harvested in the wild.

There are items for sale in the shop next door that include bags, jewellery, and premium native foods and condiments. The bush tucker dining degustation includes seafood, kangaroo, rainforest fruits and beverages infused with native ingredients.

Day Six: Get a culture fix in Mudgee

Gulgong Holtermann Museum
Discover the history og
Gulgong. (Image: Destination NSW)

Check out the Gulgong Holtermann Museum to learn all about this historic town that was founded during the 1870s gold rush era. Wander the cobblestone streets to get to the state heritage-listed town buildings that house the UNESCO-listed Holtermann collection of photographs. Make a note for the calendar: the Henry Lawson Festival is held every June long weekend.

Have a pub lunch at the Prince of Wales Hotel

shop at roth's wines mudgee
Sit down at Australia’s oldest wine bar. (Image: Kassia Byrnes)

The oldest wine bar in the country, Roth’s Wine Bar hits all the right notes for an incredible local wine menu, perfect bites to share and local stories full of flavour.

Robert Roth originally opened the space as a general store, serving a sneaky tipple to thirsty farmers on occasion before licensing the premises as a wine bar in 1923. Today, local characters keep their weekly bookings to drink, dine and dance (there is live music on Fridays).

There are now over 100 premium Roth wines on offer, along with an increasing number of local drops. Don’t be shy to order a cocktail or two, either – friendly bar staff will pour them with expertise and local liquor. Aside from wine, cocktails and craft beers, the bar serves a perfect selection of bites, like a wood-fired pizza menu and share plates like lemon pepper squid.

Stay at the romantic Evanslea

couple picnicking in the gardens at Evanslea
Explore the beautiful grounds of Evanslea before bedtime. (Image: Destination NSW)

The historical Evanslea House dates back to the 1860s, with four rooms in the main house and several cottages around the property maintiaining the quaint feels and adding the romance. Cool off in the pool, take a walk around the gardens or settle in by the private fireplace.

Day Seven: Return home

store inside mudgee visitor centre
Stock up on local goods inside the visitor’s centre. (Image: Destination NSW)

Time to pack up and skedaddle. If the markets aren’t on, drop into the Mudgee Visitors Centre, which is stocked with wine and cheese to pick up some gourmet souvenirs.

Enjoy the drive

driving from mudgee
Take the scenic drive home. (Image: Destination NSW)

Follow the highway to the Mudgee region as it curves away from Sydney via the Blue Mountains and Lithgow for about three-and-a-half hours. From Newcastle, you can take the Bylong Valley Way for the four-hour drive via Denman and Sandy Hollow. It’s also a four-hour drive from Wollongong along the Great Western Highway, and a five-hour journey from Canberra.

Original article written by Carla Grossetti, with updates by Kassia Byrnes.
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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This stretch of Sydney beaches topped the annual Best Australian Beaches list

    Carla Grossetti Carla Grossetti
    Bate Bay’s sweep of beaches has been crowned Australia’s best for 2026, placing Sutherland Shire in the spotlight as a top coastal destination just south of Sydney’s CBD.

    The beaches fringing Bate Bay – Cronulla, North Cronulla, Wanda, Elouera and Greenhills – have topped Tourism Australia’s 2026 list of best Australian beaches (as curated by Beach Ambassador Brad Farmer). For locals, it’s less revelation, more recognition.

    The mood shifts from the moment you step off the T4 train service from Central to Cronulla and catch a glimpse of the ocean. At dawn, the Esplanade is already buzzing with regulars, and by mid-morning, parents have staked out a toasty spot on Cronulla Beach where excited toddlers clamber over rocks, and the Jellybean swim squad at Oak Park have donned their bright pink caps while singing Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’.

    By the afternoon, towels are being collected from across the sand as visitors wander back to Cronulla in loose formation.

    North Cronulla beach
    Dive into the world’s best beaches.

    That’s the thing about Bate Bay beaches. This isn’t a story about a single beach. This long, uninterrupted sweep of sand and sea, where you can walk for kilometres without breaking stride, is not just enjoyed over summer; it’s a year-round destination. Here, Cronulla’s buzz gives way to Wanda’s wild edges, before stretching out to the quieter reaches of Greenhills.

    But while Bate Bay’s beaches may have taken top honours in the 2026 Best Australian Beaches list, they’re only part of the drawcard. Sutherland Shire stacks up as a full-spectrum coastal escape, where good food, national park adventures and on-the-water experiences sit within easy reach of the shoreline. Whether you’re planning a long weekend or stretching out a stay, here’s how to make the most of Cronulla beyond the sand, sea and surf.

    Beyond the beaches

    Dining

    the dining room at Pippis Cronulla
    Enjoy a sundowner by the sea at Pippis Cronulla.

    The Sutherland Shire dining scene delivers from early morning to late at night with a mix of vibrant cafes, bars and pubs. Start your day at Grind Espresso, where the coffee comes strong and fast. From there, drift towards HAM for pastries, best eaten buttery warm.   

    By midday, locals linger across sun-lit tables. Loaf and Next Door appeal to the surfers who come in for snacks after chasing waves. Blackwood’s Pantry and The Press are also popular for breakfast and lunch, while Pilgrim’s continues to hold a special place in the hearts of vegans.

    Newer arrivals signal where Cronulla is heading: Homer Rogue Taverna is being hailed as one of the best restaurants in Cronulla, with the confidence that comes from understanding what locals want. Ask a local to reveal their favourite restaurant for a special occasion, and it’ll likely be Pino’s Vino e Cucina al Mare, Yalla Sawa or Alphabet Street. Summer Salt, Sealevel, Benny’s, Bobbys and Pippis are a few of the best waterfront restaurants in the Shire.

    Finally, when most places are winding down, Duke’s Providore shifts gears to become Duke’s After Hours – a low-lit romantic spot perfect for a date night. Parc Pavilion, Northies Cronulla and bars The Blind Bear, Las Chicas and Low & Lofty’s are also part of Cronulla’s identity.

    Visit Bundeena

    Bundeena Ferry Wharf
    Catch a ferry to Bundeena.

    A short ferry ride from Cronulla, Bundeena offers a counterpoint to Cronulla’s mighty surf beaches. If Cronulla is the Shire’s social heart, Bundeena – or Bundenesia, as it’s affectionately known – is the place to go to exhale and unwind.

    Hop on the ferry from Cronulla, and within 30 minutes, you’ll be inhaling the eucalyptus-scented air. Check the creative pulse of the local community by timing your visit with the Bundeena Maianbar Art Trail on the first Sunday of every month.

    One of the best things to do in Bundeena is paddle into Cabbage Tree Basin with Bundeena Kayaks. Follow the five-kilometre Jibbon Beach Loop Track that leads past quiet coves to ancient Indigenous rock art, or simply find a stretch of pearl-white sand to relax on.

    Pristine walking trails

    Royal National Park Cape Baily Walking Track
    Cool off with a coastal stroll.

    Beyond the coastline, Sutherland Shire offers myriad ways to shift gears. Royal National Park – the oldest national park in Australia – sits just minutes from the surf. Clifftop walks trace the edge of the continent, the rugged bushland is threaded with creeks and hidden waterfalls, and a network of tracks rewards those willing to go a little further.

    Take the Coast Track, where the land drops cleanly into the ocean over sheer cliffs that have been stacked together like giant Jenga. Or veer inland, where pockets of forest cool the air and filter the light. It’s a reminder of how close nature sits to the bustle of suburbs in the Sutherland Shire.

    Enjoy whale watching

    humpback whale sighting noosa experiences
    Spot whales from May to October. (Credit: The Edit Suite)

    Twist your binoculars until the ocean is in focus, stretched like a creased blue sheet all around.  Come May, the East Coast becomes the humpback highway. Thousands of whales migrate along this stretch of coastline each year, their movements tracked by keen eyes from vantage points like the Cape Solander platform in Kamay Botany Bay National Park, one of the best places for whale watching in Australia. There’s something quietly thrilling about seeing that first telltale spout or the arc of a breaching body against the vastness of the sea. From June to October, whale-watching cruises depart from Cronulla, offering a closer look at the migration.

    Awards come and go. But places like Cronulla endure because they belong as much to the visitors as they do the early-morning swimmers, walkers and surfers.

    Plan your escape at visitsutherlandshire.com.au.