The long lazy stretch of summer holidays beckons Down Under, and, given its size, Australia offers a vast variety of holiday choices. But are there experiences and destinations where you can really escape the crowds and feel like you have the entire place to yourself?

Lonely Planet's Chris Zeiher picks the best places as featured in Offbeat and Lonely Planet's Ultimate Australia Travel List.

Silo Art Trail Sees Grain Storage Buildings Used As Artists' Canvasses Through Wimmera Mallee
Epic concrete canvas of the Silo Art Trail in West Wimmera-Mallee © Quinn Rooney / Getty

Silo Art Trail, West Wimmera, Victoria

Best for: Instagram-worthy shots
The disused grain silos punctuating Victoria's expansive Wimmera-Mallee plains have found new life as epic concrete canvases for street artists such as Rone and Adnate. The 200km+ Silo Art Trail is Australia's largest outdoor gallery, where talented artists have transformed giant concrete cylinders into moving, jaw-dropping works of art.

Each piece is inspired by or echoes the town or local history in which it's located, from sweeping depictions of Indigenous elders to gorgeous native birdlife. Be sure to detour to Murtoa's Stick Shed, Australia's only remaining grain stick shed boasting over 560 unmilled timber poles that keep the structure aloft and catch a sunset at Lake Tyrrell, where the night sky is reflected in the shallow waters of Victoria's largest inland salt lake.

Colours Of Karratha
25 of the islands of the Dampier Archipelago are nature reserves © Getty Images/500px

Dampier Archipelago, Western Australia

Best for: Getting off-grid with a digital detox
Off the coast of northwestern Australia, the 42-island Dampier Archipelago would be world-famous if it was not so remote. The piercing blue of sea and sky provide a stirring backdrop to islands littered with rocky outcrops, white sand beaches and mangrove forests. Twenty-five islands have been declared nature reserves and shelter rock wallabies, northern quolls and countless shorebirds.

Offshore, the coral reefs sponge gardens and underwater seagrass plains provide habitat for turtles, dugongs, dolphins and over 650 species of the dish. Tour operators in Dampier and Karratha can organize excursions to the islands.

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Venturing off the beaten path at Arthur River in northwest Tasmania © Mandy Creighton/Shutterstock

North West Tasmania

Best for: Stunning, accessible coastal hikes
Dotted with quirky towns, gorgeous stretches of beaches and pristine forest, North West Tasmania is criminally overlooked by travelers who, on arrival, immediately head south. Those venturing west along the coastal road have a plethora of off-the-beaten-path places to explore. From the stunning white sand beaches of Boat Harbour, a coastal community with a chilled vibe, to the gorgeously preserved township of Stanley, which is dominated by the geological feature known as "the Nut." The Rocky Cape National Park offers a variety of day walks or coastal jaunts that the entire family can enjoy.

Epic hikes in Australia and New Zealand

Rock Formations By Sea Against Sky
Stokes Bay, access via narrow caves and prepare to be wowed © Getty Images/EyeEm

Stokes Bay, Kangaroo Island, South Australia

Best for: beach lovers seeking that special place
There's something very special about Stokes Bay, a hidden beach on the Northern coast of picturesque Kangaroo Island. Partly it's the fact it's only accessible via a labyrinth of narrow caves. Partly it's the sheltered nature of the beach that allows swimmers a chance to frolic in the gorgeous turquoise waters. Partly it's the idling kangaroos that will make your company while lounging on the beach. But mostly, it's because the effort to get here pays off in spades. This really is Australia's best-kept beach secret.
While visiting the island, make sure you pop into the award-winning distillery KI Spirits for a tipple or venture down to Seal Bay Conservation Park for an observational beach tour of Australian Sea Lion colonies.

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500px Photo ID: 93046461 - I swam from the beach with my snorkel and camera and this was the first guy to greet me
A sea turtle off the coast of Palm Island on the Great Barrier Reef © Anthony Britten/ 500px

Palm Island, Great Barrier Reef, Queensland


Best for: Conservation-conscious divers and snorkelers
Palm Island isn't your typical Great Barrier Reef hideaway. There are no luxe resorts, no hip restaurants or bars. Palm Island is often described as the island tourism forgot. Or it was until it was earmarked for the installment of the Museum of Underwater Art (MOUA) in 2022.

Designed to inspire ocean conservation, the series of spectacular underwater sculptures invites snorkelers and divers to experience the Great Barrier Marine Park - which Palm Island forms part of - in a new way. A local Indigenous guides training program launched in 2021 also means that you can be guided by a knowledgeable Traditional Custodian of this rustic escape. If you want to avoid a resort-style holiday, this is the place to come.

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The Fremantle Prison extensive tunnel tour - there will be screams © Fleur Bainger/Lonely Planet

Fremantle Prison, Western Australia

Best for: Families with teens seeking adventure
Want to impress the kids this Summer holidays with something super adventurous? Well, the Fremantle Prison tunnel tour is just the ticket. After slipping into some "Breaking Bad" style overalls and donning a hard hat, you'll use a locking ladder system to descend 20+ meters into the tunnels below. It's here that prisoners carved out an elaborate network of tunnels. Visitors get to explore the dry tunnels on foot before boarding two-person punts to explore the submerged passageways only accessible via boat. And when the lights go out…there will be screams. It's amazing.

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