4x4 trip through the Kimberley with a rooftop tent
FR

Translated into English.

Original post
DA
Hi there, I'm planning a 4x4 road trip from Darwin to Broome with a rooftop tent in July 2026. I'd like to know if I need to book overnight stops in advance or if I can just wing it and stop wherever I feel like it? Some evenings, we'd like to stop and make use of campsite facilities (restaurant, shop, showers, toilets). What do you recommend? Do I need a permit?

My rough itinerary looks like this: Darwin - Kakadu Kakadu - Nitmiluk Nitmiluk - Kununurra Kununurra - Purnululu Purnululu - El Questro El Questro - Mt Elizabeth - Bell Gorge - Broome

Do you have any tips or great deals to share?

Thanks
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Hi David,

You’ll be there in the low tourist season: some accommodations will be closed, but you’ll have plenty of space in the others. Have you heard of what they call free camps? These are free spots to spend the night, sometimes equipped with a secure area for a campfire and a table. There are maps and apps to help you locate them. Unlike campgrounds, they don’t have any amenities. Will you have a fridge to store food for several days?

Plan a little extra time before returning the car in Broome—it’d be a shame not to go play in the incredible sandpit that is Eighty Mile Beach.
DA Davidbruno ·
Thanks so much, Jean-Luc, for your quick reply! 🙂

I thought July was actually a great season for the North—the "dry" season. After Broome, we’re taking a bus to Exmouth in the far northwest, where most accommodations are already fully booked because it’s peak whale shark season and also school holidays for locals. It seems like Australians from the south (where it’s winter) come up north to catch some warmth during the dry season, which is perfect for 4x4 explorations...

Would you happen to know a website where we can find free camps and campgrounds?

Have a great day!

David
VO Voyajou Globetrotter ·
Hi David, The original question was about the Kimberley, not a whale watching spot. I was also thinking about international tourism and, finally, the flexibility that a camper 4x4 offers. In Western Australia, the population density is around 1 person per km², and Australians have a strong outdoor culture: you can set up for the night wherever you want as long as you follow basic rules—no one will come and move you on.

Some evenings we’d like to stop and take advantage of certain camps’ infrastructure (restaurant, shop, showers, toilets).

In Australia, in remote areas, you’ll find all that at service stations.

Exmouth in the far northwest where most accommodations are already fully booked because it’s peak whale shark season and also school holidays for locals.

Out of curiosity, I looked: if I felt like going whale watching and spending a week in a solid accommodation in Exmouth in August, September, or October, there are about forty establishments available on Booking. Maybe because winter holidays last two weeks, but what about around mid-July?

Would you have a site where I can find free camps and campgrounds?

When I travel in a camper 4x4—not just in Australia—I never know in the morning where I’ll spend the night, and when I feel like some comfort, it’ll happen, even if not tomorrow, then later. I don’t have a specific site or app to recommend, but you’ll find plenty online.

Have a great trip! 🙂

Oh, near Exmouth, in March—night on the beach.

Similar discussions

You might also like