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Paradise found: The best luxury Australian beach hotels

For a slice of Australian paradise, visit these diverse luxury beach hotels, which include sand-swept beach houses, resorts marooned on tropical islands and design-savvy boltholes.

Your dream beach holiday inevitably involves dazzling white sands, swaying palm trees, and aquamarine waters stretching as far as the eye can see. And you’ll find all three – and more – in Australia. Its 34,000 kilometers of coastline has all beachy bases covered, whether that’s curvaceous coves, sandy shores that squeak underfoot, world-beating surf, or desert islands (complete with Champagne-stocked fridges and yacht service, of course).

Chosen by Quintessentially Travel’s Head of Travel for Australia and Asia–Pacific, Dave Thompson, this is an insider’s guide to Australia’s best beach hotels. Paradise, found.

Australian beach hotels

Southern Ocean Lodge

Kangaroo Island, South Australia

You’ve probably heard of Kangaroo Island for one of two reasons: its high density of wildlife or the tragic wildfires that swept through it in 2019. During the latter, Southern Ocean Lodge was burnt to the ground, but it reopened in 2023 as a near-replica of the original – limestone walls, Tasmanian timber and all.

It only has suites, and 25 of them at that, and there’s an excellent spa offering facials, massages and full-body scrubs using the island’s supply of eucalyptus, lavender and Ligurian honey.

Dave’s tip: Known as Australia’s Galapagos, Kangaroo Island is home to a diverse selection of wildlife. Book a barbecue lunch at a private bush camp to encounter koalas, kangaroos and sea lions en route.

Australian beach hotels

Lizard Island Resort

Queensland

Dyiigurra – or Lizard Island – is Australia’s northernmost island, marooned approximately 240 kilometers north of Cairns and swathed in the Great Barrier Reef’s outer rings. Its newest accommodation, The House at Lizard, is a three-bedroom, secluded escape clinging to a private peninsula.

Thoughtfully designed by leading Australian architects, the timber-and-glass property promises ultimate privacy; restaurants are swapped for private chefs, personal sommeliers replace bars, and a Riviera yacht is ready to tour you around the nearby reef.

Dave’s tip: If you want a view to remember, hike in the footsteps of Captain Cook to the island’s highest point and ponder your route through the maze of coral reefs.

luxury hotels

Halcyon House

Cabarita Beach, New South Wales

This soulful bungalow started life as a somewhat seedy motel but has been regenerated into a boutique bolthole by interior designer Anna Spiro. The blue and white bedrooms are exuberantly decorated (check out the geometric sofas and florid wallpapers), and mismatched artworks and hand-collected antiques add an eccentric feel.

Fancy swapping sleepy Cabarita Beach for lively Byron Bay? Borrow one of the hotel’s Audis and zoom 20 minutes up the coast.

Dave’s tip: Stop for a gin and tonic at the Halycon House bar: there are over 120 varieties of Australian-made gins, making it the most extensive selection in the country.

Australian luxury resorts

Cable Beach Club & Resort

Broome, Western Australia

Despite being The Outback’s beach town, Broome Central is five kilometers inland. That means that the closest you’ll get to the orange-and-aqua coastline is at this resort, designed and funded by British art mogul Lord Alistair McAlpine.

Inside, colonial-style buildings are filled with artworks and sculptures from McAlpine’s world travels, and bedrooms are all dark woods and shuttered doors – the best suites have berry-red terraces. Wallabies hopping across the lawn is a daily occurrence, and nearby camel tours mean it’s not unusual to see them swaggering past the windows, either.

Dave’s tip: Between March and October, look across the exposed flats of nearby Roebuck Bay. On a full moon, a natural phenomenon called Staircase to the Moon lights up the sea.

beach resorts

Qualia

Hamilton Island, Queensland

This island resort is the poster child of luxury beach holidays. Secluded on the unspoiled tip of Hamilton Island, every aspect has been designed to blend with nature, whether that’s the sea breeze harnessed in the place of air conditioning or foldaway walls to bring the scenery closer.

An elegant resort-wear dress code adds to a sense of elevated escapism, as do luxurious spa treatments and two excellent restaurants. Choose a Windward Suite for expansive views of the neighboring Whitsunday Islands, best soaked in from your private plunge pool.

Dave’s tip: Make the most of the resort’s proximity to world-famous Whitehaven Beach by requesting a gourmet picnic on the sands.

beach hotels

28 Degrees

Byron Bay, New South Wales

28 Degrees is as Byron Bay as it gets: white wood walls, all-organic products and produce and strings of shells in place of do not disturb signs. It’s small and intimate, with just four rooms that feature framed beach photographs and private plunge pools, and TVs have been swapped for a curated book selection to help guests switch off – although Byron Bay’s buzzing, boho center is just a few minutes away.

Dave’s tip: We love the Lighthouse Room; it has an antique, claw-footed bath, and you can glimpse the emblematic Byron Bay lighthouse from the circular window.

luxury hotels

QT Bondi

Sydney, New South Wales

Australia’s most famous beach is reason enough to head to Bondi; however, this lovely hotel adds further allure. It looks and feels very much like a slick city property, yet the salt-tinged breeze wafting from your in-room balcony hints otherwise.

Style-wise, it fits in with Bondi’s fashionista crowd; splashes of color are omnipresent – including a collage-style photo wall in the lobby – and minibars are filled with flip-flops and packs of cards alongside regular refreshments.

Dave’s tip: While you’re in Bondi, take a trip to the iconic Icebergs swimming pool – surely one of the world’s most stunning outdoor pools.

This story was first published by Quintessentially and is republished with kind permission. For more information, please go to Quintessentially.com or email [email protected]

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