Camerons Corner

Photo: denisbin / CC BY-ND 2.0

In the far north-west of New South Wales, where three states – NSW, Queensland and South Australia – converge, Camerons Corner is a remote, sunbaked landmark that embodies the spirit of the Australian outback. This dusty junction, marked by a quirky surveyor’s post and a cluster of weathered signs, is less a town and more a threshold to vast, empty landscapes. Reaching it is an adventure in itself: a long, straight drive across the red plains of the Corner Country, where the sky seems to swallow the horizon and the only company is the occasional wedge-tailed eagle. For self-drive travellers with a sturdy 4WD and a sense of wanderlust, Camerons Corner is the ultimate end-of-the-road destination, offering a raw, unfiltered encounter with the continent’s interior.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

Most travellers treat Camerons Corner as a day-trip destination from a base like Tibooburra (about 2.5 hours south) or Innamincka in South Australia (3 hours north). Plan to arrive mid-morning, spend an hour or so at the store and the Corner post, and then explore a short drive into Sturt National Park. If you’re camping, you can easily stretch this to an overnight stay at one of the park’s basic campgrounds, which allows for sunset photography and an early-morning walk. Given the remoteness, budget a full day for the round trip from the nearest fuel stop.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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