Naracoorte Caves

Photo: Scott Davis / CC BY-SA 3.0

Deep beneath the rolling green hills of South Australia’s Limestone Coast, the Naracoorte Caves form one of the world’s most significant fossil sites, a UNESCO World Heritage area that reads like a frozen history of Australian megafauna. Step into a vast underground labyrinth of decorated chambers, where the air is cool and damp, and the silence is broken only by the drip of water shaping stalactites over millennia. For international travellers, this is a rare chance to combine world-class speleology with a genuine outback-road-trip feel — the drive from Adelaide or Melbourne is part of the adventure, through wine regions and coastal national parks.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

To do the caves justice, allocate a full day — arrive by 9am to book your preferred tours (the Fossil Cave and Stick-Tomato Cave tours fill fast). You’ll need 2–3 hours for the Wonambi Fossil Centre and a guided cave tour, plus another hour for the Bat Centre if you’re visiting in summer. If you’re on a tight schedule, a half-day can cover Alexandra Cave and the Fossil Centre, but you’ll miss the deeper caving experiences. For self-drivers, the caves sit conveniently between Coonawarra wine region and the Coorong National Park, so you could easily stop for a morning here en route to Melbourne or Adelaide.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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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