Tharwa

Photo: Bidgee / CC BY-SA 3.0 au

Tharwa is a tiny, historic village hugging the Murrumbidgee River at the southern edge of the Australian Capital Territory. It feels a world away from Canberra’s civic grid, with a sleepy rural charm defined by the iconic Tharwa Bridge – Australia’s oldest surviving Allan truss bridge – and the gateway it provides to Namadgi National Park. This is a place to slow down, breathe eucalypt-scented air, and tap into the region’s pioneering past.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

Most visitors experience Tharwa in a half-day, combining a coffee stop with a short walk in Namadgi National Park. If you’re keen to hike deeper into the park (e.g., the 3-hour return Yankee Hat walk), allow a full day. Overnight stays are limited to a few self-contained cottages and the nearby Cuppacumbalong homestead; this is a place better woven into a day trip from Canberra (30 minutes north) or as a quiet detour on a drive through the Monaro region.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.

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