Explore Southern Yorke Peninsula

On the foot of Yorke Peninsula, the scenery and landscapes are truly amazing and diverse with a range of experiences for everyone.

With majestic headlands, sweeping beaches and beautiful bays, Dhilba Guuranda-Innes National Park is a wilderness haven with views that leave you breathless.  Camp behind sandhills and listen to the waves crash on beaches, visit the ruins of historic Inneston village or hike through coastal Mallee keeping an eye out for emus, kangaroos, 90 species of birds and Southern Right Whales cruising by in winter.

Photographers will love exploring the region with opportunities for that perfect image in a range of locations, including the Yorke Peninsula Salt Lake Trail, or sunrises and sunsets over both gulfs.  If you'd like to learn tips from the experts, join a photography tour with Warooka's Ballara Retreat.

Rent your own secluded island just off Edithburgh with a holiday on Troubridge Island. Have the island all to yourself…apart from 1,000 little penguins, 30,000 migratory shore birds and maybe a few playful dolphins that share this conservation park! The lighthouse keepers cottage accommodates up to 10 people and stands next to the only pre-fabricated cast iron lighthouse in South Australia built in 1856 (now retired).

Explore the mega murals on the Southern Yorke Peninsula Mural Trail, a self-drive tour from Port Vincent to Yorketown, visiting 5 large scale artworks along the way.


Towns in the Southern Yorke Peninsula

Find out more about each town including things to do, where to stay & what's on...

Coobowie/Guubawi
Corny Point/Nhildidji
Curramulka/Garrdimalga
Edithburgh/Baramaradi
Foul Bay
Hardwicke Bay
Inneston
Marion Bay/Gaggadawi
Minlaton/Minladan
Point Turton
Port Julia
Port Rickaby
Port Vincent
Stansbury
Stenhouse Bay
Warooka/Wiruga
Wool Bay
Yorketown/Garrdinya
Find out more about each town including things to do, where to stay & what's on...

The Yorke Peninsula is the traditional lands of the Narungga (Nharangga) people, who have lived on, and cared for, this country since the beginning of time. We work, live and travel on Nharannga Banggara [Country], and we take time away from those pursuits to acknowledge and pay our deep respects to the Nharangga Elders of the past and present. 

Today, it is essential that we continue to care for and protect our spectacular natural environment. Tread lightly and leave no trace. Learn more about responsible and respectful travel on Yorke Peninsula.