Macdonnell Ranges

Photo: Hesperian / CC BY-SA 3.0

Stretching for hundreds of kilometres east and west of Alice Springs, the MacDonnell Ranges are a rugged spine of ancient quartzite ridges, deep gorges, and ochre-red cliffs that define the heart of Australia’s Red Centre. This is a place of immense scale and quiet power, where the light shifts from fiery dawn to violet dusk, and the silence is broken only by the call of a zebra finch or the rustle of a spinifex pigeon. The West MacDonnell National Park protects the most accessible and spectacular section, with a sealed road leading to a string of waterholes, chasms, and lookouts that feel like they belong on another planet.

Highlights & What to See

Suggested Time to Spend

To appreciate the West MacDonnell Ranges properly, plan at least a full day – ideally two. A single day allows you to drive the 130 km sealed road from Alice Springs to Glen Helen, stopping at the main gorges and waterholes for short walks and swims. With a second day, you can tackle a longer hike (such as the Ormiston Pound Walk) or venture further west to the less-visited Redbank Gorge or the remote Palm Valley in Finke Gorge National Park. Many travellers combine the ranges with a sunrise or sunset visit to Uluru-Kata Tjuta, but the MacDonnells deserve their own dedicated time.

Nearby Areas Worth Combining

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