An unforgettable road trip loop from Darwin to Katherine

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See three of Australia’s best national parks by following this stunning Top End outback itinerary from Darwin.

The Top End is every adventurous traveller’s notion of outback Australia: big skies, bold landscapes, termite mounds, ancient rock art and the thrill of crocodiles. Everyone should see Kakadu at least once in their lives, but Litchfield and Nitmiluk national parks are wonderful, too. Hit the road, red dust swirling behind you, and you won’t be disappointed.

Rock Art, Ubirr, Kakadu
See superb rock art at Ubirr. (Image: Tourism NT/Helen Orr)

Our driving loop from Darwin covers about 1100 kilometres, not counting detours off the main route. We recommend a minimum of seven days. You don’t have to be Crocodile Dundee to tackle it. In fact, all the highlights are accessible on surfaced roads (although some might close in the wet season). And you don’t have to pitch a tent if that’s not for you. You can hire a campervan in Darwin, or book accommodation along the way. So what are you waiting for? Keep an eye on bouncing wildlife, check your petrol gauge, and get going.

Ubirr sunset, Northern Territory
Witness a breathtaking sunset at Ubirr. (Image: Tourism NT/Jonathon Clayton)

Darwin to Kakadu: the outback adventure begins

Only a half-hour drive from Darwin, the urban sprawl dwindles and red earth takes over. Turn off at Humpty Doo onto the Arnhem Highway and you’ll begin to feel the outback’s immensity. Pause at Fogg Dam Conservation Area for a short walk among abundant birds, and perhaps your first glimpse of a crocodile snout. Stop at the Purple Mango Cafe & Brewery in Marrakai for tasty wood-fired pizzas and a locally brewed beer in a cosy bush setting.

 Purple Mango Cafe & Brewery, Northern Territory
Stop at the Purple Mango Cafe & Brewery in Marrakai for tasty wood-fired pizza. (Image: Tourism NT/Nick Pincott)

Consider leaving the highway in the Mary River region, where paperbark woodland, wetlands and carpets of water lilies collide to provide spectacular home to more than 200 bird species in vast flocks. Various companies offer wetland cruises and barramundi fishing charters. Our top tip? A sunset excursion by airboat. Sea eagles perch on dead trees, brolgas dance, kingfishers spark and the evening explodes in orange.

Airboat Tour Wetlands, Northern Territory
A sunset excursion by airboat is a must-do activity. (Image: Tourism NT/Shaana McNaught)

Kakadu’s service centre, Jabiru, is 250 kilometres from Darwin. Bowali Visitor Centre provides insight into the national park’s history. Nearly all of Kakadu’s main sights are accessible along tarred roads, but do check conditions if you’re tackling 4WD tracks. Campgrounds range from reasonable to rugged bushland, or you can opt for accommodation such as Mercure Kakadu Crocodile Hotel, Anbinik Kakadu Resort or Cooinda Lodge Kakadu.

Mercure Crocodile Hotel in Kakadu
The famous Mercure Crocodile Hotel in Kakadu.

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Kakadu National Park: outback icon

Count on several days to appreciate the national park. Kakadu features stacked rock, escarpments, waterfalls, glassy billabongs, abundant wildlife and superb rock art. On your first day, head to Ubirr’s rock shelters, emblazoned with paintings of kangaroos and fish. Views of Kakadu’s floodplains from the escarpment are magnificent at sunset.

Ubirr sunset, Northern Territory
Views of Kakadu’s floodplains from the escarpment are magnificent at sunset. (Image: Tourism NT/Geoffrey Reid)

The adventurous could drive onwards into Arnhem Land in the dry season, but you’ll need serious 4WD skills and a Northern Land Council permit to explore one of Australia’s most remote frontiers. Otherwise, head southwest from Jabiru on the sealed Kakadu Highway for similar landscapes and cultural connections.

Maguk waterfall, Kakadu
The Maguk waterfall flies under the Kakadu radar, but has brilliant waterholes cupped in red rock. (Image: Tourism NT/Shaana McNaught)

Burrungkuy (or Nourlangie) has an extensive gallery of rock art. Another must-do in Kakadu is a Yellow Water cruise, which is most impressive at dawn and dusk. You’re bound to see crocodiles, and the birdlife is magnificent.

Yellow Water cruise, Northern Territory
Another must-do is a Yellow Water cruise, which is most impressive at dawn and dusk. (Image: Tourism NT/James Fisher)

Our top tip next morning would be Maguk Waterfall , though it’s only accessible with a 4WD. (The road is unsealed so check the conditions before setting out.) The waterfall flies under the Kakadu radar, but has brilliant waterholes cupped in red rock. You will also need to set off early to complete the 7.5-kilometre-return walk to Motor Car Falls, a picturesque plunge pool surrounded by tropical forest.

Motor Car Falls, Northern Territory
Motor Car Falls is a picturesque plunge pool surrounded by tropical forest. (Image: Tourism NT/Jarrad Seng)

Kakadu to Katherine: land of grand canyons

The entire drive from Jabiru back onto the Stuart Highway takes a little more than two hours. That brings you to Pine Creek, where you can stretch your legs by looking around the former gold-rush town, old telegraph station and Railway Museum. Katherine, only an hour’s drive further south, marks your furthest point from Darwin.

Edith Falls, Northern Territory
Edith Falls is a significant cultural site of the Jawoyn people Nitmiluk National Park’s edge, and a lovely spot for a swim or hike.

First, turn off the highway for paperbark-fringed Leliyn (Edith Falls), a significant cultural site of the Jawoyn people Nitmiluk National Park ’s edge, and a lovely spot for a swim or hike. Our suggestion here is the nine-kilometre return hike to Sweetwater Pool, where you can enjoy a more remote, secluded dip.

Rocky Top Pool, Edith Falls, Northern Territory
Enjoy a more remote swim at the Rocky Top Pool of Edith Falls. (Image: Tourism NT/Katie Goldie)

Katherine itself has a good range of accommodation if you aren’t camping. Otherwise, the big attraction is just 20 minutes from town and has campgrounds and bush camping where you can watch wallabies and bowerbirds hop. Nitmiluk (Katherine) Gorge, also part of Nitmiluk National Park, is actually a series of 13 gorges framed in great crumbling red cliffs, and is best admired from a kayak or sightseeing boat – though a helicopter ride is fabulous, too.

Nitmiluk National Park, Northern Territory
Spend the day exploring Nitmiluk National Park, paddling through the gorges.

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Katherine to Darwin: last leg to Litchfield

From Katherine back to Darwin it’s 317 kilometres, but you won’t want to rush it. Take a break at the town of Adelaide River and hop aboard a jumping-crocodile cruise. The sound of massive jaws snapping on chunks of buffalo will have you leaping out of your chair, too. Then check out the town’s Second World War cemetery and Railway Heritage Precinct.

Nitmiluk (Katherine) Gorge, Northern Territory
Nitmiluk (Katherine) Gorge, a landscape of otherworldly beauty.

Another great stop on the Stuart Highway just before Darwin is Berry Springs Nature Park , where the cooling blue-green woodland pools call out for a swim. Nearby Territory Wildlife Park gets you close to the critters you spotted more distantly in the wild. It’s also your chance to see nocturnal animals such as ghost bats and quolls.

Berry Springs Nature Park, Northern Territory
Berry Springs Nature Park, where the cooling blue-green woodland pools call out for a swim. (Image: Tourism NT)

Before you get that far, though, you must absolutely detour at Batchelor to Litchfield National Park. Although it’s near enough to Darwin to be reachable on a day trip, hurrying through would be a big mistake. This place is magical and, once day visitors have departed, its silence and beauty are haunting. Litchfield’s red termite mounds are magnificent when they glow at sunset, and the stars are staggering at night.

Wangi Falls Litchfield
Visit Wangi Falls in Litchfield National Park.

Landscapes range from monsoon rainforest to sandstone escarpment. Litchfield is, however, best known for its waterfalls, a superb sight during the wet season, and one of the few places in the region open year-round for swimming. Double-barrelled Wangi Falls has easy access but, if you have a 4WD, our top tip is to get off the more beaten track to Tjaynera Falls or Surprise Creek Falls, and into another brilliant corner of the Top End.

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Discovering East Arnhem: Australia’s most unique and rewarding corner

    Joanne Millares Joanne Millares

    Hard to reach and harder to forget, East Arnhem offers something rare in modern travel: the chance to slow down and experience Country on its own terms.

    The sky feels bigger in East Arnhem . It stretches wide and uninterrupted above rouged earth, stringybark woodland and beaches so empty they seem to belong to another era. The coastline curves for kilometres without a footprint and the horizon runs on forever.

    For comedian Lou Wall, the scale of the place was the first thing that hit them.

    “The sheer openness,” they say. “The sky feels infinite and the land stretches out endlessly. It’s pretty breathtaking visually.”

    But the physical landscape is only part of the story. The real reward isn’t only the scenery but the shift in perspective the journey brings. Visitors stop trying to tick off the destination and a real engagement takes over.

    “It made me never want to travel again,” Wall jokes. “In that I never wanted to leave East Arnhem.”

    Getting there

    Aerial shot of East Arnhem’s coastline as cars trace the curve of the shore.
    Sail along the remote coastline on an expedition cruise.

    Reaching East Arnhem is part of the adventure. Travellers typically fly into Gove Airport near Nhulunbuy via Darwin or Cairns, or arrive by expedition cruise along the remote coastline. Others make the journey overland along rutted dirt roads that cut through East Arnhem’s small pockets of monsoon forest.

    However you arrive, there’s a distinct feeling of crossing into somewhere different. Permits are required to visit the region, reflecting the fact that this is Yolŋu land where communities and traditional owners maintain deep cultural connections to Country.

    The extra planning becomes part of the experience. By the time visitors arrive, they understand they’re entering a place not just of respect, but also patience and curiosity.

    At one with nature

    East Arnhem’s  landscapes leave a strong imprint. For Wall, one place in particular still lingers in their memory: Ngalarrkpuy , also known as Lonely Beach, near Bawaka Homeland.

    “I genuinely felt like I was living inside an Instagram filter,” they say. “One of the most stunning feats of nature I’ve ever seen. The water was so clear I swear I could see even the fish smiling.”

    Across the region, natural experiences unfold at a slower pace. Fishing, beachcombing and island hopping reveal the rhythm of the coastline. The tides shape daily life and the vastness of the landscape makes even simple moments feel downright cinematic.

    For visitors with limited time, Wall says the Bawaka Homeland experience is unmissable.

    “I just left and I’m already planning when I can get back there.”

    The sense of remoteness is part of the appeal. In a country where many beaches are crowded and well-trodden, East Arnhem’s coastline still feels wonderfully wild.

    Immersing in local culture

    A visitor spends a meaningful moment alongside Yolŋu guides, gaining insight into their deep cultural knowledge and connection to the land.
    Experience authentic moments with the locals.

    Culture is woven through every experience in East Arnhem. Visitors have the opportunity to spend time on Country with Yolŋu guides and knowledge holders who share stories and traditions that have been passed down for generations.

    For Wall, one of the most powerful moments came during a conversation with a Yolŋu elder.

    “I got to meet a traditional elder, Mayalil, in Nhulunbuy,” they say. “Listening to her talk about her home made the land feel alive in ways I couldn’t have imagined.”

    The region is also home to internationally recognised Aboriginal art centres where artists shape works deeply connected to land and family knowledge.

    Music carries the same cultural energy. East Arnhem has produced globally recognised artists such as King Stingray and Baker Boy, blending Yolŋu language, storytelling and contemporary sound.

    Wall experienced this musical spirit first-hand.

    “A jam session around the fire was it for me,” they say. “Letting the deep joy and history of their music wash over me…  and meeting a few of the King Stingray musicians was unreal.”

    These moments of human connection often become the most memorable part of a visit.

    Spotting local wildlife

    An aerial view of the beach shows tiny figures lined up across the white sand, moving as if in a rhythmic dance.
    Step into a world where nature reigns.

    The wildlife of East Arnhem adds another layer to the experience. The region is home to an extraordinary range of animals, from waterbirds and turtles to dugongs, dolphins and the formidable saltwater crocodile.

    Wall admits they didn’t actually spot a croc during their visit.

    “Devastatingly, I didn’t see one,” they laugh. “But with all the stories from the locals I definitely gained a healthy respect for caution.”

    Some of the most memorable wildlife encounters can be surprisingly small., At Banubanu Beach Retreat on Bremer Island, Wall remembers walking along the beach one morning and watching it come alive.

    “As you walk through the sand you see hundreds of crabs scurrying into their holes as you pass by,” they say. “Such a small thing, but it was completely magical.”

    Moments like this reveal the quieter rhythms of East Arnhem, where even the smallest creatures seem to play a part in the landscape.

    Visitors who make the journey soon learn the most important travel tip of all.

    “Go in open-minded with a sense of curiosity,” Wall says. “Be prepared to ditch your plans. The land and the locals will guide you on an adventure no spreadsheets could ever compete with.”

    And most importantly, they add, don’t rush.

    “The land and people deserve your time and attention. You’ll be all the better for slowing down.”

    For more information on visiting East Arnhem, head to eastarnhem.com.au .