Torquay to Apollo Bay road trip: Best stops, distance & time

Torquay to Apollo Bay road trip: Best stops, distance & time

The best stops on a Torquay to Apollo Bay road trip along the Great Ocean Road include Anglesea, Lorne and Kennett River. By car, the distance from Torquay to Apollo Bay is 93km, with a driving time of around 1h41m.

The Torquay to Apollo Bay drive covers the first half of Victoria’s Great Ocean Road. Apollo Bay is the last town before the Great Ocean Road heads inland.

Torquay offers skydives and surfing lessons. For Torquay accommodation, look here.

For Apollo Bay accommodation, hunt for good deals here.

Pick the right Great Ocean Road tour from Melbourne

This guide is aimed at travellers who are self-driving, and want to plot out the best stops on a Torquay to Apollo Bay road trip itinerary. Click through on the links for more detailed information on the towns and attractions.

Torquay to Apollo Bay distance and driving time

By car along sealed roads, the distance from Torquay to Apollo Bay via the Great Ocean Road is 93km. You can expect a driving time of around one hours and 41 minutes.

The best stops on the way from Torquay to Apollo Bay include Anglesea, Lorne and Kennett River.

Things to do in Torquay include the Australian National Surfing Museumsurfing lessons, and aerobatic flights at Tiger Moth World.

Your Torquay checklist

Torquay to Apollo Bay road trip: Torquay to Anglesea

The drive from Torquay to Lorne is the first leg of Victoria’s Great Ocean Road. The official start of Australia’s most famous driving route is just south of Torquay.

Several of the Great Ocean Road’s highlights line up along this stretch of the journey, so plan your stops and you can make a day of it.

The Torquay to Lorne drive starts by skirting the Lorne-Queenscliff Coastal Reserve at Jan Juc before heading to Bells Beach. Perhaps the most famous surf beach in Australia, Bells was the fictional setting for the final scenes of Point Break. You need experience to attempt to surf the breaks at Bells Beach, but non-surfers can watch the action from the clifftop lookouts.

Bells Beach on the Great Ocean Road in Victoria.
Bells Beach on the Great Ocean Road in Victoria. Photo courtesy of Visit Victoria.

Before you come into Anglesea, you might want to make a stop at Point Addis Beach in the Point Addis National Marine Park. There are some great coastal lookouts at Point Addis – keep an eye open for whales in winter. The marine park is also renowned for good snorkelling and diving.

Otherwise, keep going until you reach the Great Ocean Road Chocolaterie in Bellbrae.

Chocolate-tasting complete, you can move on towards Anglesea, which has lots of accommodation options, including the Anglesea Caravan Park. The Anglesea Golf Course is notorious for kangaroos on the fairways, and Anglesea Beach is relatively safe for swimming. It is protected from the swell somewhat by Point Roadknight.

Where to stay in Anglesea

The best Anglesea accommodation choices are:

7 fantastic Great Ocean Road experiences
1. Crowd-beating reverse direction tour. 2. Surfing lessons in Anglesea. 3. Split Point Lighthouse climb. 4. Shockwave Zip-Coaster. 5. Guided wildlife walk. 6. Budj Bim National Park tour. 7. Great Ocean Road by motorbike.

Anglesea to Lorne

On the way from Anglesea to Lorne, there are several good photo stops. Keep your camera ready for the Loveridge Lookout, Soapy Rock, Guvvos Beach and Urquhart Bluff.

The next town along the Great Ocean Road is Aireys Inlet. Highlights here include the Split Point Lighthouse – aka the Round The Twist Lighthouse – plus Aireys PubBlazing Saddles also offers horse-riding tours.

Fairhaven Beach, which stretches from neighbouring Fairhaven towards Moggs Creek, is a lovely spot, too.

From here, the Great Ocean Road runs along the coastline to the Memorial Arch. The information signs here tell of how the Great Ocean Road was built as a war memorial by returned soldiers. It is seriously twisty in places, and the lookouts at Devil’s Elbow and Cathedral Rock are testament to that.

Soon afterwards, the Great Ocean Road comes into Lorne, arguably the single most appealing town on the whole drive.

3 great experiences to try in Lorne

Lorne Beach is the obvious focal point, but the restaurant scene is buzzy with the likes of Ipsos Lorne and Movida Lorne. Live Wire Park provides the adrenalin rushes, and Teddy’s Lookout the classic Great Ocean Road Views.

Best places to stay in Lorne

The top Lorne accommodation options are:

Click through to the next section: Lorne to Skenes Creek.