Australia | Winter Months

Sunrise at 7:00 AM, sunset at 4:45 PM. You lose about 4 hours of daylight compared to December. If you are a photographer or hiker, your window is tight.

Flights and hotels on the east coast (Sydney, Brisbane) drop by nearly 40%. You will have Bondi Beach to yourself (well, relative to January). You can actually get a table at a restaurant without booking three weeks in advance. australia winter months

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) – Highly underrated, but not for everyone. Sunrise at 7:00 AM, sunset at 4:45 PM

The Snowy Mountains (Thredbo/Perisher) are not the Alps, but they are fun. It’s expensive, and the snow can be slushy, but where else can you ski in the morning and drink wine in a valley that looks like Tuscany in the afternoon? Flights and hotels on the east coast (Sydney,

Australians do winter well. Think open fireplaces in pubs, dark beer festivals, and the best soup of your life in a Melbourne laneway. Plus, the sun sets at 5:00 PM, which is the perfect excuse to go to a jazz bar. The Bad (The reality check) 1. Southern Cities are Cold & Wet Do not come to Sydney or Melbourne in July expecting California weather. Sydney gets rain; Melbourne gets bitter wind and hail. Houses have terrible insulation, so 10°C (50°F) inside your Airbnb feels like 0°C. You will wear a coat indoors.

You might get a stunning, moody, dramatic ocean view. Or you might get sideways rain and zero visibility. Winter is the stormiest season in the south.

You cannot visit Darwin or Kakadu in summer (it’s too hot and wet). Winter is the dry season up north. Humidity drops, temps sit at a glorious 31°C (88°F), and the waterfalls are still flowing. If you want tropical weather without melting, June–August is the only time to go.