Perth & Margaret River: Complete Australia Travel Guide 2026
Western Australia is Australia’s biggest state and its best-kept secret — a vast, sun-drenched region of white-sand beaches, world-class wine regions, and ancient landscapes. Perth, the most isolated capital city on Earth, has a laid-back energy that Sydney and Melbourne can’t match. Just a short drive south, the Margaret River region delivers award-winning wines, towering forests, and pristine surf breaks. And yes — you can take a selfie with a smiling quokka on Rottnest Island. Welcome to the west, where the pace is slower and the adventures are bigger.
Getting Around Perth & WA
Western Australia is enormous — roughly the size of Western Europe. Getting around requires planning, and a car is essential for most worthwhile trips outside the city. Perth itself is well-served by public transport, but independence comes with four wheels.
Best ways to get around:
- CAT buses (Perth): Free Central Area Transit buses run in three colour-coded routes (Red, Blue, Yellow) covering all major CBD attractions, the Swan River, and Northbridge. Completely free, runs every 5–10 minutes.
- Transperth trains: The Mandurah line reaches some of the southern beaches. The Fremantle line is essential for Fremantle day trips.
- Car rental: Essential for the Margaret River region, Pinnacles Desert, and Wave Rock. Compact car from A$40–60 per day. Book before arrival for the best rates.
- RAC buses: Regional bus services connect Perth to Margaret River (3.5 hours, A$50–60 one-way) and other regional centres.
Driving distances: WA is NOT a place to underestimate distances. Perth to Margaret River is 280 km (3 hours). Perth to Wave Rock is 360 km (4 hours). Always check fuel stops — some stretches have nothing for 200 km.
Daily Budget Breakdown
Perth is comparable to Brisbane in cost, but remote WA destinations add transport costs. Here’s a realistic daily budget in Australian dollars (A$1 ≈ US$0.67):
Per person per day:
- Budget Traveller: A$65–95 (US$44–64)
- Mid-Range: A$120–180 (US$80–120)
- Comfort: A$230–360 (US$154–241)
Sample Costs:
- Perth hostel dorm: A$30–45 per night
- Rottnest Island ferry return: A$75–85
- Margaret River wine tasting (several cellar doors): Free–A$15
- Fish and chips in Fremantle: A$10–14
- Fuel per 100 km: A$15–20
Top Attractions in Perth & Margaret River
1. Rottnest Island & the Quokkas
Rottnest Island — known as “Rotto” to locals — is a car-free paradise of 63 pristine beaches and crystal-clear bays. But the real stars are the quokkas: small, smiley marsupials that have become social media sensations. These fearless little creatures roam freely across the island and are famous for their seemingly smiling faces. The ferry ride from Perth is a scenic highlight in itself.
Location: 19 km off the coast of Perth. Ferries depart from Fremantle (30 min), the Barrack Street Jetty (90 min), and Hillarys Boat Harbour (50 min).
Budget Tip: The ferry is the biggest expense (A$75–85 return). Bring all food and water with you — island cafés are expensive. Hire a bike (A$40 for the day) to explore the island.
Highlights:
- Quokka selfies — find a quokka, use “selfie mode” on your phone, and capture the famous smiling photo
- Bike around the island — 22 km of sealed roads with stunning coastal views at every turn
- The Basin — perfect calm swimming bay with white sand and turquoise water
- West End — wild surf coast with dramatic cliffs and sea lion spotting
- Oliver Hill Battery — WWII gun emplacements with underground tunnels (guided tour A$20)
2. Kings Park & Botanic Garden
Kings Park is one of the world’s largest and most beautiful inner-city parks — 400 hectares of bushland, manicured gardens, and stunning views over the Swan River and Perth skyline. It’s bigger than New York’s Central Park and offers free barbecues, walking trails, a treetop walkway, and the Western Australian Botanic Garden, which showcases the state’s incredible floral diversity.
Location: Fraser Avenue, West Perth — a 10-minute walk from the CBD or take the free Red CAT bus.
History: The park was officially opened in 1895 and contains one of the most significant bushland remnants in any Australian city. The land has cultural significance for the local Whadjuk Noongar people.
Highlights:
- DNA Tower — 15-metre spiral staircase offering panoramic views (free, great photo spot)
- Lotterywest Federation Walkway — a 620-metre elevated walkway through the treetop canopy
- State War Memorial — commemorative monument with stunning Swan River views
- Free guided walking tours (daily at 10am from the information kiosk)
- Sunset at the Balcony — a natural amphitheatre that’s the city’s best free sunset spot
3. Fremantle Markets & Fremantle
Fremantle (“Freo”) is Perth’s historic port city — a beautifully preserved 19th-century port with a bohemian vibe, world-class cafés, and the legendary Fremantle Markets. The markets have been operating since 1897 in a stunning Victorian building, offering artisan goods, fresh produce, street food, and live music. The whole town has a relaxed, creative energy that’s uniquely Western Australian.
Location: 20 km south-west of Perth. 30-minute train from Perth Station on the Fremantle line (A$5–6).
History: Fremantle was established in 1829 as the port for the Swan River Colony. Many of the Victorian and Georgian buildings are beautifully preserved, making it one of Australia’s best historic precincts.
Highlights:
- Fremantle Markets (Fri–Sun) — over 150 stalls with crafts, food, fashion, and music
- Fremantle Prison — UNESCO World Heritage-listed convict prison (tours A$22)
- Cappuccino Strip — South Terrace lined with alfresco cafés and restaurants
- WA Maritime Museum — featuring the America’s Cup-winning yacht (A$15)
- Bathers Beach — a sheltered white-sand beach right in town with a popular beer garden
4. Margaret River Wine Region
Margaret River produces just 3% of Australia’s wine but 20% of its premium wine — and it’s world-famous for cabernet sauvignon, chardonnay, and sauvignon blanc/semillon blends. The region is equally famous for its stunning coastline, world-class surf breaks, and ancient forests. With over 200 cellar doors, it’s a paradise for wine lovers, foodies, and nature enthusiasts.
Location: 280 km south of Perth (3 hours’ drive). The drive is part of the experience — through jarrah forests and rolling hills.
Budget Tip: Most cellar doors offer free tastings. A handful charge A$5–10, which is waived if you buy a bottle. Share a tasting between two people and split the wine purchases.
Highlights:
- Cellar door tastings at Vasse Felix, Leeuwin Estate, Cullen Wines, and Voyager Estate
- Margaret River Farmers Market (Saturday morning) — local produce, cheese, bread, and crafts
- Surfing at Surfers Point and Gas Bay — consistent right-hand breaks for all levels
- Boranup Karri Forest — towering karri trees creating a cathedral-like forest walk
- Cape to Cape walking track — 135 km of stunning coastal trail linking Cape Naturaliste and Cape Leeuwin
5. Swan Valley
Swan Valley is Western Australia’s oldest wine region (established 1829) and just 25 minutes from the Perth CBD. It’s compact, easy to explore, and perfect for a day trip without the 3-hour drive south. Alongside excellent wines, the valley is famous for its craft breweries, distilleries, chocolate factories, and produce stores.
Location: 25 km north-east of Perth. Follow the Great Northern Highway through Midland to the Swan Valley Tourist Drive.
Budget Tip: The Swan Valley is perfect for bike touring — hire a bike and follow the Swan Valley Cycle Route. Or join a budget tour bus from Perth for around A$65 including lunch and several tastings.
Highlights:
- Sandalford Wines — historic estate with cellar door and restaurant
- Mandoon Estate — brewery, winery, and restaurant in one beautiful setting
- The House of Honey — mead tasting, honey ice cream, and beekeeping demonstrations
- Whistler’s Chocolate Company — free chocolate tasting and factory viewing window
- Morish Nuts — samples of gourmet roasted nuts and nut butters
6. Cottesloe Beach
Cottesloe Beach is Perth’s most iconic beach — a sweep of white sand backed by Norfolk Island pines and grassy parkland, with the famous Indiana Teahouse perched at the northern end. The water is calm and clear, perfect for swimming, and the sunsets are legendary. Cottesloe is the beach where Perth comes to relax, and it’s one of the most beautiful urban beaches in Australia.
Location: Cottesloe, 15 km west of Perth CBD. Cottesloe train station is a 10-minute walk from the beach.
Highlights:
- Wide, white-sand beach with calm, protected swimming — perfect for families
- Sunset over the Indian Ocean — one of the best free shows in Perth
- Cottesloe Marine Terrace — cafés, restaurants, and ice cream shops along the beachfront
- Sculpture by the Sea (March) — outdoor exhibition with 70+ sculptures along the beach and foreshore
- Norfolk pines provide natural shade spots for picnics
7. Pinnacles Desert Day Trip
The Pinnacles Desert in Nambung National Park is one of Australia’s most surreal landscapes — thousands of ancient limestone pillars rising from golden sand dunes, creating an otherworldly scene that feels like a different planet. The pillars range from small stumps to towering 3.5-metre spires, scattered across a vast 190-hectare desert. It’s a 4-hour round trip from Perth but absolutely unforgettable.
Location: 220 km north of Perth (2.5 hours’ drive) in Nambung National Park, Cervantes.
Budget Tip: Entry to Nambung National Park is A$15 per vehicle (valid for the day). The Pinnacles Discovery Centre (A$4) explains the geology but isn’t essential — you can enjoy the desert without it.
Highlights:
- Thousands of limestone pillars scattered across golden desert dunes
- 1.5 km driving loop through the pinnacles — stop and walk among them as you go
- Stunning golden-hour light — best photographed at sunrise or sunset
- Pinnacles Desert Lookout — elevated viewing platform for panoramic photos
- Nearby Lake Thetis — see living stromatolites, the oldest lifeforms on Earth (3.5 billion years old)
8. Wave Rock
Wave Rock is a spectacular natural rock formation that looks like a giant ocean wave about to crash — a 15-metre-high, 110-metre-long granite cliff shaped by weathering over 2.7 billion years. Located in Hyden, deep in the WA wheatbelt, it’s a long but rewarding day trip from Perth. The colours of the rock change throughout the day, with striking vertical stripes of red, brown, yellow, and grey.
Location: Hyden, 360 km east of Perth (4 hours’ drive). The road is sealed all the way.
Budget Tip: The parking fee is A$12 per vehicle. The site is self-guided with informative signs — no tour guide needed. Combine with nearby Hippo’s Yawn (another rock formation) and Mulka’s Cave for a full day of natural wonders.
Highlights:
- Massive wave-like granite formation — one of Australia’s most photographed natural landmarks
- Striking vertical stripes caused by mineral deposits over millennia
- Hippo’s Yawn — a cave-shaped formation nearby with Aboriginal art
- Wildflower displays in spring (August–October) — the wheatbelt blooms spectacularly
- Peaceful and uncrowded — far fewer visitors than the Pinnacles
WA Driving Guide
Driving in Western Australia is an adventure in itself. The distances are vast, the landscapes are ever-changing, and the roads are generally excellent. Here’s what you need to know:
- Distances are real: Perth to Exmouth (Ningaloo Reef) is 1,250 km — that’s a full 12-hour drive. Perth to Broome is 2,200 km (24 hours). You can’t rush WA.
- Fuel stops: In remote areas, fill up whenever you see a station. Some stretches (like the Nullarbor) have 200+ km between fuel stops. Prices increase the further from Perth you get.
- Road trains: Outback roads (especially the Great Northern Highway) are used by triple-trailer road trains. When overtaking one, allow plenty of space and ensure the road is clear for at least 2 km ahead.
- Sealed vs unsealed: Most major tourist routes in the south-west are fully sealed. Check road conditions before heading to remote areas (Main Roads WA website).
- Mobile coverage: Telstra has the best coverage in regional WA. Expect no signal in many areas — download maps offline and carry a physical map as backup.
- Wildlife: Kangaroos are most active at dawn and dusk. Avoid driving at night on country roads — roo strikes are common and dangerous. If you hit one (it happens), don’t approach the animal.
Pro Tips for Perth & WA
- Best time to visit Perth: October–April for warm beach weather. December–February (summer) is hot (30–40°C) but dry. Winter (Jun–Aug) is mild (10–18°C) with occasional rain — perfect for wine regions.
- Time zone: WA is 2 hours behind the eastern states (AEST) and doesn’t observe daylight saving. Plan calls and flights accordingly.
- Where to stay in Perth: Northbridge (nightlife, food), Fremantle (character), or the CBD (convenience). For budget travellers, hostels in Northbridge offer the best value at A$30–45 per night.
- Rottnest Island tip: Book ferry and accommodation well in advance — especially during school holidays and summer. The island gets booked out weeks ahead.
- Margaret River on a budget: Stay at the Margaret River Backpackers or camp at the Margaret River Tourist Park (A$25–40 per night). Self-catering is key — the supermarkets in Margaret River town are reasonably priced.
- Ningaloo Reef (for extended trips): If you have time, drive 12 hours north to Exmouth and snorkel with whale sharks (March–August). It’s the Great Barrier Reef without the crowds and prices.
Disclaimer: Prices and timings are indicative as of 2026 and may change. Always check official websites for current ticket prices, opening hours, and transport schedules. This guide is for general reference only.


