Cairns to Camooweal road trip: Best stops, distance & drive time

Cairns to Camooweal road trip: Best stops, distance & drive time

The best stops on a Cairns to Camooweal road trip include the Undara Lava Tubes, Normanton and Boodjamulla National Park. By car, the distance from Cairns to Camooweal is 1,266km, with a driving time of around 14h17m.

A Cairns to Camooweal road trip is a serious undertaking from the Queensland coast towards the Northern Territory border. The drive will usually form part of a longer road trip. The routes from Cairns to Alice Springs and Cairns to Uluru pass through this way.

Cairns in Queensland brings holding koalas at the Cairns Zoom and Wildlife Domesnorkelling tours to Green Island and rainforest bungy jumps. To choose from a wide range of memorable Cairns tours and experiences, look here. To pick the Cairns accommodation best suited to you, book here.

Save time queuing – Book these Cairns attractions in advance

While there are long stretches of nothing between them, there are fair few attractions worth breaking the journey for. Use this guide to help you plan your perfect Cairns to Camooweal road trip itinerary.

Cairns to Camooweal distance and driving time

By car, the distance from Cairns to Camooweal is 1,266km. That makes for a driving time of around 14 hours and 17 minutes.

If you have three days in Cairns, do a Great Barrier Reef trip, a Kuranda scenic train and cable car combo and a Mossman Gorge plus Cape Tribulation World Heritage rainforest day trip.  

Trip-booster! 8 great day trips from Cairns to power-up your holiday

The first section of the Cairns to Camooweal drive, through the Atherton Tableland, is arguably the most fun.

The quickest route leaves Cairns to the south, passing near Isabella Falls, and branching off the Bruce Highway at Gordonvale, just before reaching Walshs Pyramid and Behana Gorge.

Cairns to Camooweal drive: Gordonvale to Malanda

The climb into the Tableland is along the often-winding Gillies Range Road. This passes through Little Mulgrave National Park, with several decent lookouts – such as Robson’s Lookout and Frog Rock – along the way.

The road later passes Lake Barrine and Lake Eacham – the volcanically-formed lakes in Crater Lakes National Park. Both have walking trails worth investigating.

The Gillies Range Road continues to Yungaburra, home of the Yungaburra Markets, platypus-viewing platform and enormous Curtain Fig Tree.

You’ll need to head down Lake Barrine Road towards Malanda, however. Here you can go for a crocodile-free swim in the pool below Malanda Falls.

Malanda Falls in the Atherton Tableland, Queensland
Malanda Falls in the Atherton Tableland, Queensland. Photo by Tourism and Events Queensland.

Click through for the next section: Malanda to Ravenshoe.