Photo: qwesy qwesy / CC BY 3.0
Coober Pedy is unlike anywhere else on Earth. This remote outback town in South Australia is famous for its opal mines and its unique underground homes, dug into the scorched red earth to escape the blistering heat. Here, life happens beneath the surface: you can sleep in a cave hotel, worship in an underground church, and even play a round of golf with a black ball at dusk. The landscape is a surreal, moon-like expanse of mullock heaps and dusty tracks, where the real treasure lies beneath your feet. For travellers seeking an authentic, offbeat Australian experience, Coober Pedy is unforgettable.
Highlights & What to See
- Underground Homes (Dugouts): Visit a local dugout to see how residents live year-round in cool, carved-out caves. Many are now hotels, museums, and galleries.
- Opal Mines & Fossicking: Tour a working opal mine, try your luck at noodling (searching the mullock heaps), and shop for dazzling opals at the many showrooms.
- The Serbian Orthodox Church (St. Elijah’s): A stunning underground church carved from a single opal field, with a beautiful iconostasis and a sense of deep peace.
- Faye’s Underground Home: One of the oldest and most authentic dugouts, offering a glimpse into pioneering underground life in the 1960s.
- The Breakaways: A spectacular mesa-and-gibber plain about 30 km north, with colourful flat-topped hills that seem to shift hue at sunset. It’s also the backdrop for films like Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome.
- Dog Fence & Dingo Fence: Stretch your legs at the world’s longest fence, a 5,600 km barrier built to keep dingoes out of southeastern Australia.
Suggested Time to Spend
Coober Pedy is compact but its attractions are spread out. Allocate at least two full days to see the main underground sights, explore the Breakaways, and go opal fossicking. If you’re on a self-drive itinerary between Adelaide and Uluru, a two-night stop is ideal. The town is also a popular detour along the Oodnadatta Track; budget an extra day if you plan to four-wheel-drive the surrounding outback routes.
Nearby Areas Worth Combining
- Oodnadatta Track: A classic outback 4WD route that links Coober Pedy with Marree, passing the historic rail siding at William Creek and the vast Lake Eyre salt flats.
- Lake Eyre (Kati Thanda): Australia’s largest salt lake, often dry but spectacular when flooded. Scenic flights from Coober Pedy offer breathtaking views of the white expanse.
- Woomera: A former rocket-testing range with a fascinating museum of space and defence history, about 180 km south.
- Flinders Ranges: Head south-east for dramatic ancient ranges, gorges, and the iconic Wilpena Pound. A 5–6 hour drive from Coober Pedy.
- Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park: Continue north to the Red Centre – a 7-hour drive to Yulara, making Coober Pedy a logical halfway stop on the classic Adelaide-to-Uluru road trip.
Please check official sources for current details.
Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.
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Image credits
- Flinders Ranges — Matthew Summerton / CC BY-SA 3.0