Top 5 Places To Camp In Australia
Australia does camping properly. You don’t just pitch a tent, you land somewhere that feels bigger than you for a while. The places you remember are rarely the easiest to get to, but they’re always the ones that reset your head the most.
Here are five of the best spots in the country that keep ending up on repeat trips.
1. Wilsons Promontory, Victoria
Granite peaks, white sand and water clear enough to see your feet even on cloudy days. The Prom feels wild without being remote and every campsite ends up a short walk from a view that looks like it belongs on the other side of the world. Sunrise at Mount Oberon and an afternoon swim at Norman Beach is about as balanced a day as you can have.
Why it sticks with you: You feel far away without actually being far away.
2. Cape Range National Park, Western Australia
Red dirt meeting turquoise water along the Ningaloo Coast. You wake up, unzip the tent and the ocean is right there. Snorkelling before breakfast becomes normal and the night sky looks unreal without any light around for hours.
Why it sticks with you: The simplicity. Swim, eat, sit, repeat.
3. Freycinet Peninsula, Tasmania
Cool air, quiet mornings and long coastal walks. Camping near Wineglass Bay forces you to slow down because everything takes a bit more effort to reach, which makes it better once you do. Evenings feel calm in a way cities never manage.
Why it sticks with you: You notice everything when life isn’t rushed.
4. Lucky Bay, Western Australia
Soft sand, gentle water and kangaroos wandering past the tents like they live there because they do. You end up spending most of the day barefoot and most of the night outside looking up. It feels unreal but also strangely normal once you’re there.
Why it sticks with you: The kind of place that resets your perspective fast.
5. Kings Canyon, Northern Territory
Not a beach, not a forest, just massive quiet landscape and heat during the day followed by cool desert nights. Walking the rim early morning gives you that same clear head you get after a surf, just without water involved.
Why it sticks with you: You realise how small worries actually are.
Why This Matters To Us
Every one of these places has the same effect. You slow down. You think clearer. You come home calmer than when you left.
That’s exactly what inspired our nature influenced rings. Not to look outdoorsy, but to hold onto the mindset those environments give you. Coastlines, tides, rock formations and open space shaped the textures and details so the feeling stays with you once you’re back in traffic and routine.
You can’t live in those places every day. But you can carry a reminder of them.
Something small that keeps a bit of the outdoors with you long after the trip ends.








