Photo: Lip Kee / CC BY-SA 2.0
About 75 kilometres south of Alice Springs, Rainbow Valley is a stunning natural sandstone amphitheatre that blazes with colour at sunrise and sunset. The multi-hued cliffs – banded in ochre, orange, red and purple – are the result of iron-rich sediments deposited over millions of years. This is classic Central Australian outback, with a peaceful bush campground and walking trails that let you soak up the ancient landscape without the crowds of more famous parks.
Highlights & What to See
- Sunset Viewing: The cliffs catch the low-angle light, turning the entire valley into a fiery palette. The designated sunset viewing area is just a short walk from the car park.
- Rainbow Valley Walk (1.5 km loop): This easy trail leads you right to the base of the cliffs, where you can touch the layered sandstone and spot small caves and waterholes.
- Claypan Walk (2 km): A longer route that takes you across the dry claypan to a raised lookout with panoramic views of the valley and the surrounding spinifex plains.
- Birdwatching: After rains, the claypan fills with water, attracting flocks of zebra finches, budgerigars and other desert birds.
- Stargazing: Far from any light pollution, the night sky here is breathtaking – the Milky Way stretches from horizon to horizon.
Suggested Time to Spend
Most visitors come for the late afternoon and sunset, which is the highlight. If you're camping, you can explore the walks in the cool of the morning and evening. A single overnight stay is ideal – arrive mid-afternoon, do the short walks, watch sunset, then enjoy the stars. If you're not camping, a two-hour stop around sunset is enough for a quick walk and photos.
Nearby Areas Worth Combining
- Chambers Pillar Historical Reserve – A dramatic sandstone pillar rising 40 metres from the plain, about 40 km south-east of Rainbow Valley.
- Ewaninga Rock Carvings Conservation Reserve – Ancient Aboriginal petroglyphs carved into soft sandstone, 35 km south of Alice Springs.
- Alice Springs – The regional hub, with the Royal Flying Doctor Service, the School of the Air and the Desert Park.
- West MacDonnell Ranges – Gorges, waterholes and hiking trails stretching west from Alice Springs, including Simpsons Gap and Ormiston Gorge.
- Henbury Meteorites Conservation Reserve – Twelve craters formed by a meteorite shower 4,700 years ago, about 130 km south of Alice Springs.
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
- Chambers Pillar Historical Reserve — No machine-readable author provided. Casliber assumed (based on copyright claims). / Public domain
- Ewaninga Rock Carvings Conservation Reserve — Sardaka / CC BY-SA 4.0
- Alice Springs — Bahnfrend / CC BY-SA 4.0
- West MacDonnell Ranges — Hesperian / CC BY-SA 3.0
- Henbury Meteorites Conservation Reserve — W & S Roddom / CC BY 2.0