Photo: Stonestreet's Coaches - The Extra Mile / CC BY-ND 2.0
In the fierce red heart of Australia, Outback Opal Tours offers a rare glimpse into the subterranean world of opal mining. This isn't a polished museum experience — it's a raw, dusty journey into working mines and ghost towns where fortune seekers once dug for treasure. You'll feel the heat, taste the grit, and hear the stories of the hardy souls who call this lunar-like landscape home. It's a quintessential outback encounter that blends history, geology, and a touch of adventure.
Highlights & What to See
- Underground Mine Tours: Don a hard hat and descend into historic shafts to see opal-bearing seams and learn the painstaking craft of opal cutting.
- Fossicking for Your Own Opal: Try your luck with a bucket of 'dirt' — you might find a tiny gem to take home, a thrill that beats any souvenir shop.
- Coober Pedy & White Cliffs: These iconic opal towns are living museums, with underground homes, churches, and even a golf course played with glowing balls at night.
- Sunset at the Breakaways: A short drive from Coober Pedy, this kaleidoscopic landscape of mesas and painted deserts is unforgettable at golden hour.
- Dog Fence & Dingo Fence: The world's longest fence, stretching thousands of kilometres, is a stark monument to human versus nature.
Suggested Time to Spend
Most travellers base themselves in Coober Pedy for two to three days. A half-day guided tour covers two or three mines and a visit to a noodling (fossicking) site. Add an extra day to explore the Breakaways and the underground Serbian Orthodox Church. If you're driving from Adelaide or Alice Springs, factor in a full day of travel each way — the outback demands respect for distance.
Nearby Areas Worth Combining
- Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park: The iconic red monolith is a five-hour drive south-west — combine it for a quintessential outback loop.
- Alice Springs & the West MacDonnell Ranges: A six-hour drive north, offering gorges, waterholes, and Aboriginal art sites.
- Lake Eyre: Australia's largest salt lake, often dry but spectacular after rare rains, is accessible via scenic flights from Coober Pedy.
- Oodnadatta Track: A historic outback route passing old railway sidings and thermal springs — perfect for 4WD enthusiasts.
- Flinders Ranges: About 5 hours south, this ancient mountain range offers dramatic gorges and wildlife like yellow-footed rock-wallabies.
Please check official sources for current details.
Note: opening hours, prices and booking requirements change often — please check official sources for current details.
Explore more
Image credits
- Coober Pedy — qwesy qwesy / CC BY 3.0
- Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park — Tourism NT / Attribution
- Alice Springs — Bahnfrend / CC BY-SA 4.0
- West MacDonnell Ranges — Hesperian / CC BY-SA 3.0
- Lake Eyre — Goddard Space Flight Center’s Landsat Team and the Australian ground receiving station teams. / Public domain
- Oodnadatta Track — Kevin Rheese / CC BY 2.0
- Flinders Ranges — Matthew Summerton / CC BY-SA 3.0