25.03.2009
100 Best Towns in Australia
From wine-growing hubs to beachside hideaways and remote outback communities, Australian Traveller has searched high and low to determine which are Australia’s Best Towns. But before you get to the list, here’s how we made our decisions . . .
Click the links below to check out each 100 Best Towns entry:
About the 100 Best Towns in Australia
Here at Australian Traveller, we’re very lucky to be able to get out and see much of the country. But everywhere we’re asked the same question: what is our favourite town? Everyone here has a different opinion. So, for our fourth birthday, and the fourth of our popular “100 Things” editions, we set out to answer that much-debated question. Which is the Best Town in Australia? And boy, did we open up a can of worms.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. How else can you explain the mullet, the Hypercolour T-shirt or the Kia Sportage? For some people, the perfect town is a largely untouched seaside hamlet. For others it’s anywhere with a quintessential outback pub full of hard-living characters. So we decided to simplify things a bit. We created a shortlist of around 300 towns we liked, all with a population of less than 45,000 – some with fewer than 50. We then created a Judging Panel of 12 people who’d been there and seen almost all of Australia. We made sure they represented different tastes; we had fashionistas, grumpy old men, sports nuts, tourism industry experts, travel writers, and even some well-travelled normal people. That would keep the research experts happy.
But then we had to ask the right question of our panellists. So we made it very simple and open. “Regardless of where the town is located, would you recommend a good friend drive an hour out of their way specifically to visit this town?” They then gave each town a rating, and added a few suggestions of their own. After a lot of to-ing and fro-ing, we totalled the votes and came up with a list.
Then we poured ourselves a stiff drink. A strange thing had happened. Places that polarised opinion didn’t do as well as places that had mass appeal across all demographics – Byron Bay, for example, had as many fans as detractors – but by the end we had an amazing list. That’s right. The best town in Australia is not Beechworth, Margaret River or Strahan. It’s Yamba. That’s right, Yamba. And we are willing to make a small wager that you didn’t think the best town in Australia was Yamba. Or that the second best was Esperance.
But once we poured ourselves a few more stiff drinks, it started to make sense. Esperance is utterly beguiling. It is a magnificent place. And so is Yamba. And that’s the key. These top towns often have highly commercialised neighbours, much in the public eye. But they also have that “X" factor. They are unique, they are still beautiful, but they are often hidden gems.
So the question has been answered. We asked our experts to recommend to their friend the top places to take some time out on their next trip. And Australian Traveller is the travellers’ friend.
As always, we recognise that a project of this nature is open to debate, and we welcome it. So if your favourite town isn’t here, whether you’re from Bathurst, Bowen or Busselton, let us know via
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and tell us where we got it wrong. We’d love to hear from you.
The Australian Traveller Team
Click HERE to view our Judging Panel.



Comments
Kim Masas
http://www.australiaexcusiones.com
I'm both surprised by some of the entries and also wowed by others.
(Dunkeld? Really... just because of a pub? Hmmm...)
Anyway, I found this list because I came to the internet looking for inspiration/guidance to find the right place for me to move to.
Summary - Born in western suburbs Melbourne, moved to country Vic, spend years in rural towns.
Moved to central Victoria rural city, then went to Sydney for over a decade.
Came back to Victoria and "ironically" found myself living in the western suburbs of Melbourne...
Here's the thing:
I want to move out of city life.
I don't want to be so completely isolated and totally without mod cons.
BUT I am not a shopaholic (and the internet solves any urges for me anyway).
I need a place that is not overly commercialised for tourism, and is not built around stuff like Car Shows, Rodeos, sport or fishing.
Ideally I'd like a town near a water source - inlet, beach, lake, etc.
The catch is, I also need to find a source of income in the town. I am a pretty capable female, currently work a very labour intensive garden role. Have a range of experience (and some out of date qualifications in nursing and the food industry).
I am willing to work, but for health reasons I have to modify what I can do against my need for income - a bit of a dilemma and part of the reason I need to get out of city life (stress reduction a primary need...)
I want to live in a pretty cottage, with a garden that I can work in to grow my own produce. I want to feel safe, free from hoons and the overdose of crime and murder that is happening in and around the western suburbs (two people have been murdered randomly in the last 12 months very close to where I worked and to where I live... unsettling.)
Ok - that's enough from me - I would love to hear from any readers who live in idyllic locales that could entice me to move...
I am seeking to move in 2012... sooner than later...
Oh and if the house had a swimming pool I wouldn't be disappointed ;-)
However some of the towns in Tasmania are very debatable i know Tassie very well and one town in particular i would have thought would have been if not no.1 but above at least 5 of the 7 picked from Tasmania and that would be St.Helens "BY FAR".... i guess thats my opinion though and the 6 other people in the room with me!!!
As for Deloraine "what were they thinking" we down south have another name for that town and it aint Deloraine!
Love your work though can't wait to see the next top 100 list of towns when you do a re-vote!!
It is the nicest area on the West Coast in our opinion and leaves Coral Bay and Broome for dead.
The scenery and places to go like Steep Point and Cape Peron are marvelous
Kalbarri is also worth a place. Lovely little town, going ahead,
with marvelous gorges.
We will never go back to Broome. Bad service in shops, overcrowded expensive caravan parks.
Cable beach is ok but there are hundreds of just as nice or nicer beaches on the coast
Bunbury and Bussleton are also nice with lots of places to go.
Thats our thoughts anyway
An interesting aside: the magazine said the United States hadn't paid the $400 "littering" fine for Skylab falling down here. They have in fact recently paid up: $400 precisely. Considering Skylab fell 30 years ago, the interest on top of that $400 must be phenomenal!
Sorry, forgot to mention the excellent sporting facilities, the cafe society and the friendly people. And, at this time of the year the autumn hues are spectacular. If I could post a picture or two I would.
Armidale is culturally rich, it has the best music teachers and choirs in the regions methinks. All the groups like Musica Viva, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, jazz greats, Eisteddfods etc come here, You won't get that in Yamba.
There are waterfalls, walks, the University of New England with all the activities that generates, the art museum, cathedrals and heritage buildings not to mention the parks and gardens.
Let us not forget the wonderful schools, both private and public. Those in the know send their kids here for that very reason.
As for putting Tamworth before us, that is unbelievable. Tamworth is quite unattractive, with just the main street to recommend it - terribly hot in summer,, and is no more than an outstation, as far as I am concerned. It does have a well run Country & Western festival, but apart from that and the odd health specialist, there is no reason one would visit.
Have any of your panel been to Armidale I wonder?
I will stick with the Sunshine Coast Qld & travel from there.
Brian the traveller.
Will be sure to use this list as a guide for future roadtrips to cover those places we haven't been yet.
p.s. I'm buying this month's copy for overseas friends
Just one thing - Tilba Tilba means 'many waters' not windy windy - when a name is repeated it generally means many and as there are many lakes, rivers, creeks, estuaries etc it is a very appropriate name.
I live in Alice Springs, and for years I have been nagged by family and friends to move - to the Central Coast NSW, to Melbourne, to Sydney to Hervey Bay QLD.
After 30 years of living here I recently retired in February 2009, and now own my own house, have future job security if I want it, beautiful scenery and beautiful people.
Australia, the bush, is 5 mins from my door step, yet I have a CBD and industrial area that offers me everything I could want, bar some specialty shops.
The town is a leader in Solar Energy technology (see Alice Solar City website) and I hope this year to have some PV panels installed on my house.
The people are friendly and laid back, the hospital and health system as good as any in Australia. Alice Springs Hospital is a teaching hospital for Flinders University.
Alice Springs has always punched above its weight for a small town, servicing as far west as the WA border, south to the SA border and as north as Tennant Creek (570 km).
Every few years we are host to the Masters Games - the first such Masters Games to be held in Australia. We manage to provide facilities for a huge variety of sports, and thousands arrive for this event.
I can't imagine living anywhere else, and in times of economic decline, since I retired 4 weeks ago I have been offered 5 different jobs! People who can't find work here aren't really trying.
It's a top place - in fact the whole of the Territory is.
Desertchild