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20 of the best daytrips from Sydney

When it comes to venturing beyond the city limits, these are the absolute best daytrips from Sydney.

Sydney’s captivating coastal beauty and vibrant personality have plenty to keep you occupied, but roam a little farther and you’ll quickly discover incredible, easy-to-reach destinations that easily fill a day’s itinerary (or more). From rambling national parks, to pastoral villages, high country, wine country and coastal hamlets, there are diverse adventures to be uncovered just a short radius from the city. Bookmark these 15 best day trips from Sydney for your next spare weekend.

1. Blue Mountains

a cable car at Scenic World, Blue Mountains
Take in epic views from this steep aerial cable car. (Image: Scenic World)

Best for: A Blue Mountains jaunt can be done in a single day or spread over a weekend. From families to couples and solo wanderers, there’s something in the Mountains for everyone

Hit the highway and you’ll be taking in the crisp Blue Mountain air in under an hour, or for a scenic rail journey, take the two-hour-ish ride to Katoomba. Once here, there are ample activities to keep you enthralled, no matter which season you visit. Begin with the big ones, such as ogling the Three Sisters from Echo Point Katoomba. And don’t miss a visit to Scenic World, where you can absorb those lofty vistas from cableway, railway and skyway. Once your feet are firmly back on the ground, use them to follow tracks through the stunning landscape with a hike to heart-lifting Victoria Falls or any of the other walks that fit into your itinerary. You’ll work up an appetite for lunch, so head to the Wayzgoose Diner to replenish calories or enjoy a farm-to-table lunch at Megalong Restaurant at Lot 101.

2. Stanwell Park and Helensburgh

a wallaby in Symbio Wildlife Park, Helensburgh
Spot adorable wallabies at Symbio Wildlife Park. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Adventurers and wildlife lovers will relish this southerly skip out of town.

Set the GPS southwards for this day trip that’s just a little over an hour from Sydney and takes in sweeping ocean vistas and some furry encounters at the tail-end of the Royal National Park (more on that, below). Should your adventurous spirit be in full flight, you may choose to take to the skies with a tandem hang gliding or paragliding experience at Stanwell Tops. But if you’re not so willing to strap into man-made wings and launch off a cliff, enjoy watching others take the plunge from Stanwell Park Beach or Bald Hill Lookout, which is particularly scenic during the summer months. Day-trippers visiting with kids or animal lovers in tow should spend some hours getting acquainted with native and exotic fauna at the wonderful Symbio Wildlife Park. When it’s time to break for lunch, enjoy a delicious sandwich or salad bowl with a crisp, cold glass of wine at LOAF.

3. Royal National Park

coastal views from Stanwell Tops Lookout, Royal National Park
Royal National Park opens to remarkable coastal views. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Grab a group of mates together and spend the day here splashing, walking and picnicking.

The ocean-clinging, heritage-listed Royal National Park is less than an hour from the CBD. Sitting between Sydney and Wollongong, it’s a low-effort excursion out of either city. The 15,000 hectare-plus park was Australia’s first designated national park and thus has been protected since 1879. Criss-crossed with walking tracks and edged by cliffs and sparkling water, it’s a popular outing for Sydneysiders. Come summer, Wattamolla Beach and its adjacent picnic area are densely populated with splashing kids and sun-loving groups stretched out beneath their cabanas, but it’s equally enjoyable for winter bushwalks. Pack a picnic lunch and settle in for a beach session or hit the trails, or from Bundeena, hire a kayak and explore the calm waterways of the Port Hacking River.

4. Kiama

a performer singing in front of an audience during the Kiama Jazz and Blues Festival
Kiama Jazz and Blues Festival is a three-day South Coast signature event packed with music.

Best for: Kiama daytrips are a rite of passage for Sydney families.

A skip and a hop southwards, the seaside town of Kiama is less than a two-hour drive from Sydney. While it’s best-known for its performative blowhole, which impressively propels water up to 30 meters into the air, Kiama has a lot more going for it than dramatic displays of the ocean’s might. The beach is beautiful, the 20-kilometre Kiama Coast Walk is a list-topper for hiking enthusiasts and the town itself is perfect for leisurely pottering thanks to its heritage buildings, charming shops and spots to stop, sit and sip. It’s a perfect summer minibreak that begs an overnight stay, but if you’re looking for an excuse to head south at another time of the year, plan your visit to coincide with the Kiama Jazz and Blues Festival, held every March. Take a seat outside at Diggies for lunch and contemplate your prospects of a sea-change or extended daily commute.

5. Bowral and Mittagong

a scenic view of Southern Highlands
Bowral is the embodiment of Southern Highlands charm. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: These quaint towns offer cosy romantic interludes and also make a great day out for the book club’s annual excursion.

For country roamings, find your way to the Southern Highlands for a tour of adorably pastoral towns that are perfect fodder for autumnal jaunts. Set off for Mittagong, just a little over an hour from Sydney, with the intention of arriving in time for a morning cuppa and something sweet at Gumnut Patisserie. Caffeinated and sweetened, you’ll now possess the required stamina to hit Mittagong’s antique shops, before driving 10 minutes onwards to Bowral. More antiques shopping ensues at Dirty Janes, as does strolling the beautiful Corbett Gardens, which is festooned with cherry and magnolia trees. If cricket is your bag(gy green), head to the Bradman Museum and International Cricket Hall of Fame. Set course for Bendooley Estate for a cellar door tasting of the winery’s top drops followed by a fireside lunch in The Barn before making your leisurely way home.

6. Wollongong

the exterior of Wollongong Art Gallery
Marvel at contemporary and Aboriginal exhibitions in the Wollongong Art Gallery. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Hit up the group chat for a weekend escape by the beach.

Wollongong’s curvaceous and cliff-hugging Sea Cliff Bridge lands a breath-snatching first impression of Sydney’s closest southern city. At just one-and-a-half hours away, Wollongong is all beachy keen and beautiful with a laidback style that encourages a chilled pace all summer. But although the beaches, such as Austinmer and Bellambi and their adjacent ocean pools are hard to leave, there’s plenty more to do away from the shore. For cultural pursuits, check out the Wollongong Art Gallery or find zen in the tranquil grounds of the Nan Tien Temple, the largest Buddhist temple in the Southern Hemisphere. Swap your four wheels for two and discover the bike-friendly city by pedal power with Wollongong Bike Hub, pausing your tour for a bite at Bull and Bear.

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7. Palm Beach to Patonga

boats moored in Brisk Bay near Patonga Beach
Take in views of Brisk Bay near Patonga Beach. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Even the teenagers can’t begrudge a ferry ride and an idyllic seaside hamlet, so get the family out for a bit of fresh air and bush bathing.

Bookmark this day out for a sun-drenched weekend. You’ll begin by heading to Palm Beach, where you can kick things off with a morning coffee at Barefoot Barista, leaving plenty of time to make your way to Palm Beach Wharf to hop on the ferry service to Patonga. On arrival, you might be due a dip by the calm shores of this sweet Hawkesbury inlet. If you’re wearing your Salomons, hit the six-kilometre-return Patonga to Palm Beach walking track, which meanders through the stunning Brisbane Waters National Park, snatching clifftop glimpses of the waters below and passing sandstone caves and native fauna. On your return to Patonga, be sure to have left ample time to relish lunch and a few drinks at The Boathouse Patonga Hotel before catching the return ferry at 5.30pm or, on Fridays and Saturdays, tarry longer and wait for the 8pm departure.

8. Stockton Bight Sand Dunes, Port Stephens

the Stockton Bight Sand Dunes, Port Stephens
Jump on a tour and tackle some of the largest sand dunes in Australia. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Band together with your most thrill-seeking friends for an adrenaline-spiking day out.

Stockton is only 20 minutes or so from Newcastle and two hours from Sydney, but it deserves its own dedicated daytrip given the adventure that awaits you there, so adding a night in Newcastle is a good idea. Set in the Worimi Conservation Lands, which span 42,000 hectares of blackbutt forest and shifting sands, the Stockton Bight Sand Dunes undulate with an otherworldly beauty. At 32-kilometres-long and reaching up to 30 metres high, these are the largest moving coastal dunes in the Southern Hemisphere making them a veritable playground for all manner of sand-based fun. Said fun includes sand-boarding, horse or camel-riding, four-wheel-driving and quad-biking. After a big day on the dunes, revisit the highlights over a pint and replenish energy stores for the drive back to Sydney at the waterside Shoal Bay Country Club.

9. Hunter Valley

the Spicers Vineyards Estate in Pokolbin
The Spicers Vineyards Estate in Pokolbin is set among grape vines. (Image: Destination NSW)

 Best for: A Hunter Valley day out has girls’ trip written all over it. But it also provides ample country ambience to backdrop romantic interludes.

When the vines are calling, you needn’t roam too far from the city. Sydney’s backyard is home to a cute cluster of wine-making towns all huddled conveniently together in the Hunter Valley, just two-or-so hours away. This entirely day-tippable destination is home to some of the country’s best and most historic vineyards and is incredibly picturesque in the cooler months. Research is key here, so spend time mapping out your cellar door route before you go, as sipping them all in a single day is impossible. From Pokolbin to Broke and Rothbury to Singleton, there are more than 150 wineries to discover. If panic starts to set in, opt in for a tour that will provide you with a concise edit of wineries and a driver. Break up the day with what deserves to be a long lunch at the paddock-to-plate inspired Margan Wines and Restaurant in Broke.

10.  Lake Macquarie

the hidden Caves Beach on the Swansea peninsula
Discover the hidden Caves Beach on the Swansea peninsula. (Image: Destination NSW)

 Best for: Find a suitable Airbnb to sleep your closest coupled up mates and hit the lake.

The largest saltwater lake in the southern hemisphere is a nice and lazy, less-than-two-hour drive from Sydney. Huddled around the lake are a cluster of picturesque towns beckoning with their casual-coastal allure that’s ripe for summer weekends. Head to Belmont for waterfront dining, a dip in the Belmont Baths and a discovery of the region’s wetlands with a guided tour by CoastXP. Poke around the famed sea caves at Swansea’s nearby Caves Beach, while golfers and yachties will be keen on Toronto’s golf course and sailing clubs. Hikers can lace up for the coastal walking track in Wallarah National Park or less-dedicated walkers can take the quick, 1.8-kilometre-loop Wangi Walking Track at Wangi Wangi before kicking back at The Yard brewpub for a bite and a beer in Morisset. Or for something dark and mysterious, paddle out on a night tour in a neon-lit kayak.

11.  Oberon, Lithgow and Jenolan Caves

the Jenolan Caves, Blue Mountains
Jenolan Caves is the oldest cave system in the world. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: The above and below ground attractions are great for family adventures.

A cool-climate escape deep in the Blue Mountains, Oberon, Lithgow and their sweet surrounds make an idyllic winter interlude just under three hours from Sydney. The journey may warrant an overnighter, but there’s enough to keep extended day-trippers enthralled up here, from the sprawling Mayfield Gardens with its 15 hectares of themed and meticulously-tended greens and excellent onsite restaurant to the deep-down wonder of Jenolan Caves (currently closed for repairs and restoration, visit website for updates). Either destination will hold your attention for a full day, but these once frontier towns also deserve your visitation for their absorbing history and heritage buildings.

12.  Avoca Beach and Bouddi National Park

scenic coastal views at Bouddi National Park from above
Stop for a swim at one of the deserted beaches. (Image: Destination Central Coast)

 Best for: Enjoying a chilled-out nature escape with your romantic lead.

Clinging to the Central Coast, just a 90-minute drive from Sydney, the ocean-side gem of Avoca Beach is a good starting point for forays into nearby Bouddi National Park, no matter the time of year. Head there for an early morning surf or cleansing swim, then load up on breakfast at Like Minds before embarking on the full eight-kilometre (one way) Bouddi Coastal Walk. If that seems a little ambitious for a laidback daytrip, you can simply tackle as much as feels achievable. The walk starts at Putty Beach and culminates at Macmasters Beach, with Maitland Bay reached at three-kilometres in, making it a reasonable turning point to have you back and tucking into a seafood platter at Avoca Beach House by lunchtime.

13.  Thirroul

a clifftop beer garden at The Scarborough Hotel, Scarborough
Soak up relaxing ocean views from the clifftop beer garden at The Scarborough Hotel. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Pile as many mates in the car as you can for this busy week circuit-breaker.

If you need a city exit strategy that neatly side-steps traffic, hop on the train down to Thirroul in the Illawarra region just 90 minutes south of Sydney. If you’d asked AI to generate a quintessentially Aussie coastal town, you might get a result a bit like Thirroul and its neighbours Austinmer and Wombarra. A sweeping, one-kilometre stretch of sand with a shimmering ocean pool and the oceanfront Beach Pavilion serving breakfast and lunch from 7am, this is everything you want from a seaside foray in high summer. Spend the day flitting from sand to pool to pavilion, or check out Austinmer Beach’s photogenic ocean pool and watch the sun go down from the clifftop beer garden at The Scarborough Hotel.

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14.  Newcastle

a family admiring the planet Earth display inside Newcastle Museum Planetarium
The Newcastle Museum is home to a fascinating planetarium. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: You and your bestie discovering a new city together.

Head north up the M1 for a little over two hours and you’ll find yourself in the old port city of Newcastle. Rivalling Sydney for its ocean-edged beauty, historical centre and neighbourhoods with their own distinct identities, Newcastle is Sydney-lite, except that this northern counterpart definitely has its own thing going on. Get your head around the scope of the city by starting with a wander along The Bathers Way, a six-kilometre waterside stroll from Nobby’s Lighthouse to the Mereweather Baths. Of course, you might want to dip in and out of the waves while you’re at it. If you’ve ended at the latter, duck into the Mereweather Surfhouse for a coffee and a bite as you watch the hypnotic rhythm of the waves. Once you’re oriented, head to Darby Street in Cooks Hill to take in the boutiques and vibe of this creative enclave, then continue your cultural tour with a stop at Newcastle Museum. If it’s time to get back to the water, follow your maps to the Insta-famous Bogey Hole, which was built by convicts way back in 1819.

15.  Hawkesbury

kayaking along Hawkesbury River
Hawkesbury River has a small fleet of single and double kayaks for hire. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: An easy exit strategy from the week’s schedule, head onto the river with your partner in life or crime.

A silvery serpent shouldered by bushland and soaring sandstone escarpments; the Hawkesbury River provides Sydneysiders with a gentle exhale, particularly in the mild seasons of spring and autumn. History huddles along the banks in each riverside town from Windsor to Wiseman’s Ferry with plenty of ways to get out onto the water. Be it river cruising, kayaking, paddleboarding, wading out to pluck an oyster or even floating into the sunset on a houseboat, the softly rippling water beckons. If your day-tripping up this way for a special occasion, you couldn’t get much more celebratory than a long lunch at Berowra Waters Inn, which perches elegantly right on the water.

16.  Ku-Ring-Gai Chase National Park

scenic views across America Bay, Ku-Ring-Gai Chase National Park
The America Bay walking track follows a sandstone ridgeline near the mouth of the Hawkesbury River. (Image: Destination NSW)

 Best for: Easily accessible bush experiences for the whole family.

Encircled by dense forest, you don’t need to venture all that far out of the Sydney CBD for a bush-centric daytrip. Ku-Ring-Gai Chase National Park is just 40-minutes from the city centre, but it feels like you’ve accessed the wilderness. The second-oldest national park in the country, this sprawling 150-square-kilometre reserve has everything from secluded beaches, such as Resolute Beach, to clifftop walks and lush rainforests, making it easy to find an escape no matter the season. Bikers can start at the Hornsby Mountain Bike Trail that caters to all levels over six-kilometres of tracks, while walkers can embark on the 4.4-kilometre looped Aboriginal Heritage Walk that takes in Indigenous rock art sites. If you’d like to sink deeper into the serenity, camp at The Basin campground in Pittwater.

17.  Glenworth Valley

kayaking on Popran Creek, Glenworth Valley
Take in the peaceful view of Glenworth Valley from a kayak. (Image: Destination NSW)

 Best for: Anyone who has energy to burn.

Exit north up the M1 for about 50-odd minutes and you’ll arrive at pretty Glenworth Valley. Set up for outdoor experiences, this bush-hemmed escape is a bit like summer camp for all ages. You can stay onsite or come for the day to revel in hands-on adventure such as kayaking, abseiling, archery, laser skirmish, horse riding and quad biking. If you have pent-up energy you need to expel, then this is where to come. Accommodation options include campsites, glampsites and eco villas, so you can easily match your comfort level. Glenworth Valley also run team-building events for businesses and school holidays and weekend experiences for kids.

18.  Wombeyan Caves

Best for: Anyone who finds underlying geology intriguing and experiencing the formation of the land first-hand.

Go deep at the mysteriously beautiful Wombeyan Karst Conservation Reserve. It’s a little farther afield from Sydney at three-and-a-bit hours, but for an extraordinary underground interlude, it’s well worth the drive. If it’s too much to head back in the same day, you can stay onsite at the Caves Cabins and you might want to, anyway, given all there is to explore in the 430-million-year-old limestone cave system. You can visit Wombeyan at any time of the year, but it’s quite lovely when the air is fresh in autumn. You can take yourself on a self-guided tour of Figtree Cave, however, it’s recommended to book a guide for the Wollondilly, Junction, Kooringa and Mulwaree Caves, so you can really get stuck into learning the differences between stalagmites and stalactites, and hear about the importance of the caves in Indigenous lore. It’s not all that lies beneath, though. You can also view the rock formations from above on the Victoria Arch Walking Track and Forest Creek Walking Track.

19.  Jervis Bay

a couple having a picnic on Blenheim Beach, Jervis Bay
The stunning Blenheim Beach provides a perfect backdrop for a romantic picnic. (Image: Destination NSW)

Best for: Romance, more romance and future dreams.

A little under three hours south of Sydney is the impossibly beautiful Jervis Bay. The closest thing to the Whitsundays in New South Wales, this idyllic Shoalhaven spot is home to two national parks – Jervis Bay National Park and Booderee National Park. You’ll also find Jervis Bay Marine Park here, making it a hotspot for aquatic adventures. White sands, crystalline water and coastal hamlets that are the stuff of sea-change dreams will have you looking up real estate prices within five minutes of arriving. Explore Callala Bay, Huskisson, Hyams Beach and Vincentia on daytrips, but if you’re looking for somewhere special to spend the night, book into bush-luxe lodgings at Paperbark Camp in Woollamia.

20.  Lake Conjola

Best for: Taking the family out of the city to immerse in nature without the crowds.

If you’re looking for a Shoalhaven spot that sits tantalisingly under the radar, point yourself in the direction of Lake Conjola. Still decidedly sleepy even though it is bequeathed with equal attributes to neighbouring pin-up town Jervis Bay, this chilled spot is all about the nostalgia of summer escapes. Here you’ll find a tiny village, reef breaks, Conjola National Park, and the Narrawallee Creek Nature Reserve – all offering plentiful opportunities to interact with nature, dive into shimmering water and generally untether from daily life. Get your bearings by walking the 2-kilometre Burrawang Track from Conjola Beach to Buckleys Point through wetlands and rainforest.

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Lara Picone
Working for many of Australia’s top publications, Lara Picone has had the distinct pleasure of writing, editing and curating content about the finer things in life for more than 15 years. Graduating from Macquarie University with a Bachelor of Arts in Communication, her editorial foundation began at Qantas: The Australian Way magazine, before moving on to learn the fast-paced ropes of a weekly magazine at Sunday Magazine and picking up the art of brand curation at donna hay magazine. Pivoting a near-problematic travel lust into a career move by combining it with storytelling and a curious appetite, her next role was as Deputy Editor of SBS Feast magazine and later Online Editor of SBS Food online. She then stepped into her dream job as Editor of Australian Traveller before becoming Online Editor for both International Traveller and Australian Traveller. Now as a freelancer, Lara always has her passport at-the-ready to take flight on assignment for the Australian Traveller team, as well as for publications such as Qantas Magazine, Escape and The Weekend Australian. As ever, her appetite is the first thing she packs.
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This surprising regional town is making its mark on the culinary world

(Image: Visit Griffith)

    Carla Grossetti Carla Grossetti
    With more than 60 nationalities calling it home and a century of Italian influence shaping its paddocks and plates, Griffith is a regional Australian town with serious culinary cred.

    It might feel surprising to learn that Griffith is one of Australia’s leading food destinations. In-the-know Italians have understood this for generations, drawn to the Riverina region’s fertile soils that reminded them of the terrain they’d left behind more than a century ago. These days, Griffith supplies much of the nation’s pantry: 95 per cent of Australia’s prunes come from the region, it’s the country’s largest citrus-growing area, and it’s a leading producer of almonds and walnuts. Even the pickles in every McDonald’s burger nationwide are produced in Griffith. This is not just a farming town; the Griffith food scene is leading the way.

    Here, culinary confidence is rooted in migration. Italian families began arriving from 1913, with a second wave settling after the Second World War. Today, Griffith has the highest proportion of Italian ancestry of any Local Government Area in Australia. Add to that more than 60 nationalities represented across the community and you have a town where food is driven not by trends, but by tradition. Griffith’s motto, ‘Taste our culture’, isn’t marketing spin; it’s the reality.

    Where the vines tell a story

    A hand pouring wine into a glass, with a table filled with food.
    Uncover the stories behind every glass. (Image: Destination NSW)

    The Riverina has long been dubbed the food bowl of Australia, but it’s also a wine region that remains largely under the radar. What sets Griffith apart is that every one of its wineries is family-owned, many spanning generations.

    Calabria Family Wines is one of the region’s standard-bearers. The Calabria story began in 1945 when Francesco Calabria planted his first vines; today, the family continues to shape the region’s identity while also stewarding the historic McWilliam’s Wines brand. McWilliam’s was the first winery to plant vines in the area, and its barrel-shaped cellar door – complete with a soaring stained-glass window – remains one of the most distinctive in regional NSW.

    Yarran Wines, run by the Brewer family, showcases estate-grown fruit across Mediterranean varietals that thrive in the warm climate. Expect bold reds and textured whites that reflect both heritage and innovation.

    Set inside the old ambulance station, Harvest HQ is owned and operated by the Riverina Winemakers Association and pours a rotating selection of local wines under one roof. It also features spirits from The Aisling Distillery, reinforcing the region’s collaborative approach to craft.

    At the table

    A flat lay of a steak.
    Dine where tradition meets a bold new generation. (Image: Visit Griffith)

    If the vineyards tell one story, the dining rooms tell another. Griffith’s restaurants are where tradition and next-gen confidence meet.

    Zecca Handmade Italian occupies the former Rural Bank building, an imposing Art Deco landmark from the late 1930s. ‘Zecca’ means money print, and the name is a nod to the Zecca di Venezia in Venice. Here, find the Riverina’s only producer of dried artisan pasta and traditional Italian recipes. Importantly, the growers and producers supplying the kitchen are listed on the menu as a transparent expression of the region’s farm-to-table ethos.

    Established in 1977 and still run by the Vico family, La Scala puts authentic Italian cuisine on centre stage. Expect handmade pasta, traditional wood-fired pizzas, slow-cooked sauces and dishes that follow recipes guarded like family heirlooms. For something more contemporary, Bull & Bell in Gem Hotel is a shrine to the Euro-style steakhouse that works closely with local farmers and artisans to showcase Riverina produce.

    And then there are the institutions. Bertoldo’s Pasticceria, now in its third generation, draws locals daily for cannoli, biscotti, crostoli and house-made gelato, alongside classic sausage rolls and potato pies. La Piccola Grosseria feels like stepping into an Italian alimentari, its shelves lined with continental goods that wouldn’t feel out of place in Puglia.

    Meanwhile, Limone celebrates local and seasonal produce across breakfast and lunch menus, enriched by the produce and stories of Piccolo Family Farm. Find pastries and sourdough baked daily, and pop into the onsite retail pantry for products from regional producers – including the Piccolo family’s own wine range, Caro Piccolo.

    From the source

    A plated Aquna Sustainable Murray Cod dish.
    Taste world-renowned Aquna Sustainable Murray Cod, straight from its source. (Image: Visit Griffith)

    Behind every menu is a producer. Aquna Sustainable Murray Cod is perhaps Griffith’s most high-profile export; the brand’s Murray cod and Aquna Gold Murray Cod Caviar have achieved global recognition. In October 2024, Aquna presented its products to King Charles III and Queen Camilla at the NSW Premier’s Community BBQ in Parramatta. Impressed by the producer’s sustainable farming practices, the King requested the cod be sent to Buckingham Palace – not bad for a fish farm in regional NSW.

    Mandolé Orchard champions almonds grown on a family-run farm, transforming them into almond milk and value-added products. At Morella Grove, olives are pressed into premium olive oil and pantry staples that speak to Griffith’s Mediterranean heart. These producers are not peripheral; they are central to the town’s culinary ecosystem. Learn about local sustainable farming practices during a farm tour.

    Mark your calendar

    A woman walking past a food mural, something you can spot during A Taste of Italy Griffith.
    Plan your visit around A Taste of Italy Griffith. (Image: Visit Griffith)

    For a town that helps stock Australia’s supermarkets, Griffith has remained curiously absent from the national dining conversation. That’s beginning to change. If you’ve been searching for a regional food destination with substance, heritage and a clear sense of identity, you’ll find it here in the Riverina, right under your nose.

    Time your visit to the Riverina region to coincide with A Taste of Italy Griffith, held every August. This week-long celebration of Italian heritage and culture offers a wide range of Italian-inspired events and experiences to enjoy. Expect long-table lunches, wine tasting experiences, cooking classes and a Makers in the Piazza market. The headline event is a ticketed long lunch – Festa delle Salsicce (Salami Festival) – where winners of the best salami are announced.

    Start planning your foodie getaway at visitgriffith.com.au.