The best 3-day Uluṟu itinerary for an unforgettable trip

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It’s been called the spiritual heart of Australia and a journey here has the potential to reshape everything you think you know about the country you call home.

In theory, an Uluru itinerary that spans three days seems like sufficient time to see a giant rock in the Red Centre of Australia. But in fact the awe that an immersive trip to Uluru and the surrounding landscape inspires offers just a tiny taste of the profound gains experienced on a trip to the Red Centre. With that in mind, I give you my very top tips for extracting as much of the magic of Uluru in three days as possible with the following itinerary.

Day one

Sydney to Uluru

My first glimpse of Uluru is out of my plane window, during the 3.5-hour flight from Sydney. Seeing the iconic monolith from above, sprawled out like a slumbering giant, takes my breath away. Both Uluru and the equally fascinating form of Kata Tjuta/Mt Olga literally loom large over the landscape.

The first thing I learn about Uluru is that it’s a chameleon. Over the course of the day its colour changes often; less to blend in, more to stand out. Over the coming days, Uluru spins the colour wheel from a lush lavender hue, to deep shades of red, orange, brown and violet, with those changing hues intensifying my wonder of the natural world.

Check in to Desert Gardens Hotel

I’m spending the next two nights at Desert Gardens Hotel – which means I get to soak up the views of Uluru direct from my own private balcony.

There are several accommodation options near Uluru, but the beauty of staying at Voyages Ayers Rock Resort is that it offers a collection of accommodation to suit a variety of budgets and styles of travel including Emu Walk Apartments, Lost Camel Hotel, Sails in the Desert, Ayers Rock Campground, Outback Pioneer Hotel & Lodge, Longitude 131, and the Desert Gardens Hotel.

Desert Gardens Hotel in Uluru
The Desert Gardens Hotel is one in a collection of accommodation options at Voyages Ayers Rock Resort. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

The resort acts as a mini town with a petrol station, supermarket, post office, specialty shops, several restaurants, a swimming pool, tennis and volleyball courts, and the star of the resort, the new Gallery of Central Australia (GOCA) – more on that later.

The pool at Desert Gardens Hotel at Uluru
Take advantage of the pool at Voyages Ayers Rock Resort. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

Dine under the stars at Tali Wiru

What I quickly learn from my first foray into this far-flung corner of the Northern Territory is that experiences here are all timed around dawn and dusk. I get my first taste of this as I join 20 strangers for a short drive down a dirt road towards Uluru. We stop short of the monolith, pile off the bus and follow the faint sound of a didgeridoo up an ochre-coloured sand dune.

We’re here for an award-winning dune-top dining experience known as Tali Wiru (one of several standout dining experiences to try near Uluru) – meaning ‘beautiful dune’ in the local Anangu language Pitjantjatjara. Now in its 10th year, the experience includes a four-course degustation paired with premium Australian wines. The menu is created and served by an Indigenous team who expertly weave native ingredients into each dish – think desert lime, saltbush and quandong.

Tali Wiru cooking ingredients
The talented team at Tali Wiru take us through the native ingredients used to prepare our meal. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

At the very top of the dunes, I gain an entirely different perspective of Uluru. It’s now tinted a deep shade of purple. As I sip on sparkling wine and bite into a gin-compressed cucumber sprinkled with crunchy green ants and celery salt, I spy the distant domes of Kata Tjuta and watch as the sun sets for the day.

Gin-compressed cucumber sprinkled with crunchy green ants and celery salt
Gin-compressed cucumber sprinkled with crunchy green ants and celery salt are on the menu at Tali Wiru. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

The open-air restaurant’s dining area is set with wooden tables and chairs, lit by egg-shaped lanterns – and, by the time our mains are served, also a broad brush stroke of the Milky Way. A freestanding fireplace is on standby for cooler evenings.

The outdoor dining area at Tali Wiru
The exquisite open-air restaurant is lit with lanterns and the clear night sky once the sun sets. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

On the menu this evening is Port Lincoln kingfish sashimi with pickled muntries, torched scampi, quandong coulis and native warrigal greens. I choose the wagyu beef fillet with aged king brown mushrooms for my main followed by the desert lime brûlée with wattleseed meringue for dessert.

Tali Wiru chef plates up entree for guests
Each course is a delicious exploration of the flavours of Indigenous Australia. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

As we sit in the stillness of the desert at night, we’re treated to a stargazing talk then guided back down the dune to sit beside the firepit, sip hot chocolate and listen to a final talk before we board the bus back to the resort for bed.

The details

The Tali Wiru experience includes return hotel transfers, a didgeridoo performance, sparkling wine and canapés, a four-course dinner paired with premium Australian wines, and an Indigenous guide on hand to share culture, history, and spirituality. All up, this immersive and profoundly moving experience is $385 per person.

Top tip: Don’t wear white pants or white shoes. The red sand likes to come home with you.

Day two

Uluru Highlights Tour with SEIT Outback Australia

I rise before dawn to make my way to the hotel lobby for a three-hour guided tour of Uluru with SEIT Outback Australia. The vast form of Uluru is just starting to reveal itself when our bus pulls into the carpark.

Uluru Highlights tour with SEIT Outback Australia
Uluru Highlights tour with SEIT Outback Australia shows off the monolith in the pre-dawn light. (Image: Katie Carlin)

Our guides get to work setting up an outback picnic breakfast complete with fruit platters, banana bread, muesli, and yoghurt. While slowly sipping my coffee, I watch in awe as Uluru reveals today’s dress code: a deep brown ochre.

Breakfast at Uluru for sunrise with SEIT Outback Australia
Part of the sunrise breakfast spread. (Image: Katie Carlin)

The next part of the tour is within Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park – the Kuniya Walk around the base of Uluru. Ken, our Indigenous guide, generously shares one of Uluru’s most dramatic Creation stories, the deadly battle between Kunia (the python woman) and Liru (the poisonous brown snake man). It’s a story that is still playing out on the surface of Uluru today; told through the markings etched into its curves and crevices over time, formed in its shape and in the rock art that adorns the caves.

The Kuniya Walk around the base of Uluru with SEIT Outback Australia
The start of the Kuniya Walk around the base of Uluru with SEIT Outback Australia. (Image: Katie Carlin)

A hush falls over the group as the trees thin to reveal the Kapi (water) Mutijulu waterhole. It is here, Ken tells us, that the spirit of Minyma Kuniya combined with her nephew’s spirit and together they became Wanampi (water snake). The dark grey water pools beneath the smoothed red edges of Uluru that tower above us; it’s known to transform into a waterfall after rain. But today it is still. And calm. It’s a scene so tranquil and textured it resembles an oil painting.

The Kapi (water) Mutijulu waterhole at Uluru
The Kapi (water) Mutijulu waterhole is an awe-inspiring place to pause at Uluru. (Image: Katie Carlin)

When Ken was small, he used to join his father on the tours he led. It’s a tradition he is intent on continuing with his two-year-old daughter Shalene who he holds as he speaks. Despite the pain of the past, Ken says his generation is waking up to the importance of teaching each other and others their culture.

Ken and Shalene at Uluru
Our guide Ken with his two-year-old daughter Shalene. (Image: Katie Carlin)

Back on the bus, the tour continues after a short drive to the other side of Uluru where we learn the story of the Mala people along the Mala Walk to Kantju Gorge.

The details

The three-hour Uluru Highlights tour with SEIT includes a guide, sunrise at Uluru, an outback picnic breakfast and pick up and return from Ayers Rock Resort. Prices start from $138 per adult, $110 per child, $60 per infant for car seat hire.

This is just one of many ways you can experience Uluru up close. You can also cycle or walk its perimeter, admire it from above on a scenic flight, or join a Segway tour. You can find our top picks in our previous article on the best things to do at Uluru.

Tip: The flies are minimal during the autumn and winter months at Uluru, but I recommend packing a fly net to cover your face. These can be purchased in the hotel lobby.

Gallery of Central Australia

The Gallery of Central Australia (GoCA) exclusively displays more than 350 artworks by emerging and established Central Australian Indigenous artists. By collaborating with the art centres across the Northern Territory, South Australia and Western Australia, the gallery is working to provide a space for Indigenous communities to share their stories and culture (Tjukurpa) through art.

Inside the Gallery of Central Australia
The Gallery of Central Australia exists to support the Indigenous artists of the Central Desert region of Australia. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

It’s an exciting recent addition to Voyages Ayers Rock Resort. One that has been four years in the making for Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia; fuelled by passion and a vision to see artists living on Country directly supported through the sale of their works.

Imitjala Curley - Walytjitjata: Ngayuku ngunytjuku ngura
An artwork by Imitjala Curley called Walytjitjata: Ngayuku ngunytjuku ngura.

I see the vibrant storytelling of Indigenous artists come alive as I walk around the inaugural exhibition. The current collection includes works of art on canvas as well as a series of Punu (traditional Anangu wood carvings), sculptures, and pieces designed and crafted in local Indigenous communities. All these works are available for purchase and provide direct economic support for the artists.

The details

GoCA is located adjacent to Desert Gardens Hotel. It is open seven days a week from 9am to 5pm and presents a daily tour at 10.30am to visitors. There is no admission fee.

Tip: Check GoCA’s website to time your visit with its Artist In Residence program to experience the unique opportunity to observe an artist at work and learn about their processes and the significance of their work.

The artist in residence program at Gallery of Central Australia
The artist in residence program allows you to witness the artist at work. (Image: Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia)

Day three

Field of Light Sunrise Tour with AAT Kings

The silence is palpable when we arrive at the dune-top lookout. The stars are quickly scrubbed clean from the night sky by the first hint of morning light. The heaving shape of Uluru appears on the horizon and a field of flower-like lights cover the ground beneath it like a blanket.

Field of Lights at sunrise at Uluru
See Bruce Munro’s Field of Light on a tour with AAT Kings. (Image: Katie Carlin)

Witnessing the internationally acclaimed artist Bruce Munro’s Field of Light at sunrise is the equivalent of stumbling upon a fairy garden as a child – it seems magical, mysterious and its existence completely impossible. Yet, I’m walking along a sandy-red trail that weaves its way past 50,000 frosted glass bulbs set atop delicate stems, each aglow in shades of violet, red, blue, and white. It’s an affecting sight.

Close up of Field of Lights at Uluru
The vibrant colours of the Field of Lights contrast the remote desert setting. (Image: Katie Carlin)

The immersive installation, inspired by Munro’s trip to Uluru three decades ago, is his largest to date. Seeing it up close, admiring the contrast of this work of art planted in such a remote desert area with Uluru in the distance, is an affecting sight.

Field of Lights at Sunrise at Uluru
The Field of Lights begin to disappear as the sun rises for the day. (Image: Katie Carlin)

The details

The AAT Kings sunrise tour includes return hotel transfers, a knowledgeable tour guide to answer questions and a warming cup or tea, coffee, or hot chocolate from the lookout after you complete the trail at your own pace. Prices start from $75 per adult and $40 per child.

Tip: Once the sun is up and the Field of Light dims for the day, you can get a photo from the dunes with yourself and Uluru in the background. Book in advance to avoid missing out on this incredible experience.

Uluru from the dune-top lookout at the Field of Lights
The view of Uluru from the dune-top lookout at the Field of Lights. (Image: Katie Carlin

Uluru to Sydney

Back at the resort, and still on a high from the Field of Light tour, I head to Mangata Bistro & Bar for a buffet breakfast and morning coffee. There isn’t a lot of time before my return flight to Sydney but if you have the time, I recommend a swim in the resort pool or walk to the Town Square for some last-minute shopping for a souvenir or purchase an artwork from GoCA to take home. Not only will it be a constant reminder of your time here, but you’ll be supporting the beautiful work of Australia’s talented artists of Central Australia to ensure their voices are heard.

The writer travelled as a guest of Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia.

Katie Carlin
Katie Carlin is Australian Traveller's Head of Content and when she’s not travelling or behind her computer, she’s hosting a dinner party (likely cooking an Alison Roman recipe), at brunch, working on extending her running k’s, or has her nose buried in a book. She joined Australian Traveller in 2018 and is responsible for leading the editorial team across print, digital, social, email and native content. Her job is to make sure we create content that connects readers to incredible experiences in Australia and beyond. In addition to sharing her expertise on travel through industry speaking engagements, Katie appears onToday, A Current Affair and various radio segments. With a BA in Communications majoring in Journalism and a career that has spanned roles at Fairfax Media and Are Media writing for titles such as The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, and various lifestyle brands, she brings a wealth of experience to her role. Her most impactful trip to date has been swimming with whale sharks on Ningaloo Reef. For her next trip she is longing to experience the romance of train travel – hopefully on The Ghan or Indian Pacific.
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8 Northern Territory secrets the locals don’t want you to know

Summer transforms the Northern Territory into a lush paradise of colour and life, as a visit during the ‘low-season’ reveals secrets the locals willingly share.

Waterlilies bloom, floodplains are alive with birdlife, waterfalls are gushing, and everywhere the green is dazzling. Summer in the Top End and the Red Centre is a kaleidoscope of unexpected wonders that delight and surprise visitors. Of course, the locals know only too well that the Northern Territory low season is often the best time to see and experience this amazing part of Australia.

Here are some of the reasons why savvy travellers – avoiding the crowds – are discovering a new dimension to the Territory. Remember that you’ll need a Parks Pass to visit national parks.

1. Take a dip in the Florence Falls waterhole

Wander through savanna woodland and monsoon forest to discover the perfect place to cool off – the waterhole at the base of spectacular Florence Falls in the magnificent Litchfield National Park , just 90 minutes’ drive from Darwin. The falls flow year-round but are most spectacular during the summer. Camping is available nearby but bookings are essential and must be made online before you visit.

Surrounded by lush forest, a woman cools off in Florence Falls, just one of many incredible things to do in the Northern Territory.
Cool off beneath the cascading waters of Florence Falls. (Image: Joshua Griffin)

2. Wind down at Buley Rock Hole

Another popular local swimming spot in Litchfield National Park is Buley Rock Hole , open year-round. This is a great place to wind down after exploring everything the park has to offer, including towering termite mounds. Wade through the rock pools, soak up the scenic bush or just lie back and relax as the cool water rolls over you.

Buley Rockhole, Litchfield National Park
Let the cool water wash over you. (Image: Tourism Australia)

3. Tour the Tiwi Islands

The Tiwi Islands , a scenic 80km flight from Darwin across the narrow Clarence and Dundas Straits, reveal a different side to the Territory, with their own distinctive culture. Take a day tour with Tiwi by Design to visit Bathurst Island and learn about creation stories, the Mission days, World War II history and the islanders’ obsession with AFL!

Take a ‘behind-the-scenes’ tour of Tiwi Design’s screen-printing workshop and pick up a great souvenir in the form of art. Choose from contemporary or traditional Tiwi designs and a wide range of work including carvings, paintings, pottery, printmaking, bark paintings and tunga (bark baskets).

A creative moment shared inside Tiwi Design’s screen-printing space.
Take a peek inside Tiwi Design’s screen-printing studio. (Image: Tourism NT)

4. Dine in Darwin

Foodies are spoilt for choice in multi-cultural Darwin. Try Sri Lankan flavours at Ella by Minoli, where Masterchef contestant Minoli De Silva creates delectable dishes, or head to Charlie’s of Darwin for gin-tasting, cocktails and more. Bowls of fragrant laksa, excellent coffee, fresh vegetables and authentic crafts are all part of a weekend visit to Darwin’s Parap Markets , Rapid Creek Markets and the Nightcliff Markets .

Prefer to catch your own dinner? Book a Top End fishing charter to bag a barramundi – and from October register for the annual Million Dollar Fish competition. Hooking one of the tagged barra released each year in waterways across the Territory could win you up to $1 million.

A bowl of Laksa.
Eat your way through multicultural Darwin. (Image: Tourism NT)

5. Up close with Uluṟu

The magnificent monolith Uluṟu is even more magical when the summer rains fall. When it rains on The Rock, the locals come out to watch – consider yourself lucky if that happens when you visit. Waterfalls cascading off the sides of Uluṟu is a sight that relatively few tourists see.

There’s so much to do at Uluṟu, from guided walks to learn the stories of the Aṉangu people and the ancient landscape they live in to scenic flights for a bird’s-eye view or a leisurely walk around the base of Uluṟu. Book ahead to spend the evening wandering through the Field of Light installation by Bruce Munro.

A closer look at Uluru and uncover its ancient stories, sacred sites, and striking natural beauty – one of the most iconic things to do in the Northern Territory.
Discover the details that make Uluṟu truly sacred. (Image: Tourism NT)

6. Drive the Red Centre Way

From Alice Springs, take an epic road trip along the Red Centre Way, taking in Uluru and Watarrka National Park, home to the magnificent Kings Canyon. Allow at least a week to drive through the red heart of Australia by 4WD, a little longer on the sealed road by 2WD vehicle, travelling through ochre deserts, palm-lined valleys and dramatic gorges. Stop off at waterholes for a refreshing dip along the way.

Kings Canyon offers hiking options for all levels of fitness, from the three-hour Rim Walk atop soaring sandstone walls to the gentler Kings Creek Walk. Either way, you’ll have breathtaking views.

SEIT Outback Australia is a small group touring specialist offering exciting, adventurous, exclusive and specialised iconic, pioneering and cultural touring in the Red Centre of Australia, giving you the time to learn, absorb and relax in the heart of Australia.<br /><br />This innovative tour company focuses on providing clients with the ultimate interpretive touring experiences with a range of products and customised touring itineraries for small groups and bespoke private charters.<br /><br />The company bases its philosophies from the key words of Spirit, Emotion, Intellect and Task (SEIT).
Drive through Australia’s heart. (Image: Outback Australia Tours)

7. Take a walk at Kata Tjuṯa

Head out early to tackle the Valley of the Winds Walk at Kata Tjuṯa . This natural wonder, also known as The Olgas, is a labyrinth of soaring ochre domes that glow golden at sunrise and sunset (the walk may be closed during the middle of the day as temperatures rise).

Walking trails range from easy to longer, more difficult tracks. At the Kata Tjuṯa dune viewing area, take in the panoramic view of the domes. The longest of the trails is the Valley of the Winds Walk, a 7.4km circuit that winds between the domes and through creek beds. It’s moderately difficult and steep in places, but offers stunning views – and occasional encounters with kangaroos.

The Valley of the Winds Walk at Kata Tjuta is one of the most awe-inspiring things to do in the Northern Territory, especially at sunrise when the domes glow golden.
Step into the golden light of Kata Tjuṯa. (Image: Tourism NT)

8. Explore Tjoritja/West MacDonnell Ranges

Tjoritja/West MacDonnell National Park lies 135km west of Alice Springs, with many fascinating natural features to beguile visitors. The ‘West Macs’ formations include chasms, gorges and waterholes – take your swimsuit for a dip at Ormiston Gorge waterhole, open year-round. The Ormiston Pound Walk is a three to four-hour circuit that leaves from the visitor centre and loops back along the gorge via the main waterhole. Other places of interest in the park include Simpsons Gap , Standley Chasm , Ellery Creek Big Hole and Glen Helen .

Soaking in the serenity of Ormiston Gorge, these two travellers enjoy one of the most scenic things to do in the Northern Territory.
Take the plunge at Ormiston Gorge waterhole. (Image: Joshua Griffin Litchfield)

Start planning the NT road trip of a lifetime at northernterritory.com