Victoria: Small State, Enormous Variety
Victoria is the most densely populated state in Australia, which means two things for van lifers: excellent facilities and infrastructure everywhere, and you need to look harder to find genuine solitude. The rewards for looking are significant.
Great Ocean Road Region
Cape Otway Campsite
Koalas. Everywhere. The Cape Otway area has one of the densest koala populations in Australia β drive the Lighthouse Road slowly and you will spot them in the roadside eucalypts. The Great Ocean Road Holiday Park at Apollo Bay has camping with good facilities at a reasonable price. The surrounding Otway Ranges State Forest has numerous free dispersed camping areas for those with 4WD.
Blanket Bay, Otway National Park
One of the most beautiful coastal camping spots in Victoria. A sheltered cove flanked by cliffs with a river running into it. Parks Victoria campsite with toilets and cold showers. Extremely popular β book months ahead for summer weekends.
Cost: $40-50 AUD per site | Booking: parks.vic.gov.au
The Twelve Apostles Area
Do not stay in the Port Campbell tourist park ($50+ per night for a basic site). Instead, drive 20km east to Peterborough and camp at the Curdies River campsite β basic, free, right on a river, and 10 minutes from the Apostles via the coastal road.
High Country
Alpine National Park
In summer, the alpine high country is one of the most beautiful landscapes in Australia β wildflowers, clear rivers, and sub-alpine snowgum woodland. In winter it is a different challenge (snow, limited access, cold).
The Howitt Plains campsite near Mount Howitt is accessible by 4WD in summer and offers extraordinary views. Free camping, no facilities β carry everything in and out.
Howqua Valley
The Howqua River runs through a narrow valley north of Mansfield with excellent fly fishing and several free camping areas managed by Parks Victoria. The riverside camps in spring and autumn are genuinely lovely.
Mount Buffalo National Park
The plateau above Mount Buffalo has camping at Lake Catani (Parks Victoria, $40/site) with walking tracks, swimming, and views that justify the price. The drive up the mountain is spectacular in any season.
The Murray and Riverland
Barmah National Park
The largest river red gum forest in the world sits along the Murray in northern Victoria. The Barmah camping area (free) is right in the heart of it. In spring, the forest floods and the bird life becomes extraordinary. Bring a canoe if you can.
Gunbower National Park
Another Murray floodplain forest with free camping at Torrumbarry Weir and several other spots. Good fishing, excellent birdwatching, and the kind of quiet you cannot find closer to Melbourne.
Gippsland
Wilsons Promontory National Park
The Prom is the southernmost point of mainland Australia and one of Victoria's most loved national parks. Camping at Tidal River (the main camp) is well-serviced but expensive and books out a year ahead in summer. Backcountry sites require walking in β Telegraph Saddle to Roaring Meg is a spectacular overnight walk.
Croajingolong National Park
The coast east of Lakes Entrance through to the NSW border is part of a UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve. The camping at Thurra River (4WD access) and Point Hicks is remote and extraordinary. This is genuinely one of Victoria's great secrets.
Cost: $14-20 AUD per site
Victoria Practical Info
- Booking: Parks Victoria sites book via parks.vic.gov.au β summer and long weekends book out months ahead
- Fire restrictions: Victoria has total fire ban days throughout summer β check the CFA website daily in fire season (October-April)
- Best season: March-May (autumn) and September-November (spring) avoid summer crowds and winter cold