Top 10 Beaches in Tasmania
Tasmania has so many wonderful, unspoilt beaches. Enjoy miles of soft white sand to walk on and dazzling turquoise water to swim in. Here are our Favourite Top 10 Beaches in Tasmania.
It stretches 50 kilometres from Binalong Bay to Eddystone Point and is famous for its orange lichen-covered granite boulders, powder-white sandy beaches and stunning turquoise water.
The crystal clear blue waters and white sandy beaches of Wineglass Bay are fantastic sights and are one of the most photographed places in Tasmania. Wineglass Bay is considered one of the top ten beaches in the world.
This beach is not as famous as Wineglass Bay but is equally stunning. You may find you have it all to yourself. There is a bench at the bottom of the steps to enjoy the views, or you can swim in the lovely blue water.
A stunning unspoilt beach on the north coast of Tasmania. It is famous for its fine white sands, which have been weathered from the quartzite rocks, and its stunning aqua water.
Adventure Bay is a large eastern-facing bay on Bruny Island. The Adventure Bay Beach is a very popular spot for swimming, walking and simply relaxing as it is one of the most sheltered beaches on the island.
Cockle Creek is as far south as you can drive in Australia. This remote stretch of white sandy beach is stunning; the forest extends to the sand along the beautiful waters of Recherche Bay.
The Friendly Beaches Reserve is a 140-hectare coastal nature reserve with a long expanse of beautiful sandy beaches on the Freycinet Peninsula on Tasmania's East Coast. It also has many coastal birds and wildlife to observe.
Adams Beach, also known as Lades Beach, is the longest of the Bridport Beaches. It is open to the Bass Strait and is popular with swimmers and body surfers. You can wander to the Little Forester River for 1.7 km along the beautiful sandy beach.
Neck Beach is a sweeping 10-kilometre crescent of magnificent white sand and pounding waves; it is one of the more exposed sections of the coastline on Bruny Island. The Neck is an essential habitat for short-tailed shearwaters and little penguins.
Bakers Beach is a stunning beach in the Narawntapu National Park in Tasmania. It is 6.9 kilometres long and begins at Griffiths Point in the west and continues to Little Badger Head.