Gold Coast, Cairns & Sydney
Australia’s east coast is the classic family holiday route for a reason. It packs an absurd amount of variety into a manageable distance – golden beaches and theme parks on the Gold Coast, the Great Barrier Reef and ancient Daintree Rainforest in Tropical North Queensland, then the harbour city buzz of Sydney with the Blue Mountains on its doorstep. Three completely different worlds, one coastline.
This 13-day itinerary covers the lot. It starts with a self-drive stint on the Gold Coast (three nights, rental car included), flies the family to Cairns for five nights of reef, rainforest and Kuranda village, then finishes with four nights in Sydney taking in harbour cruises, the Opera House, Bondi Beach, and a day trip into the mountains. The pace is deliberately varied – structured touring days sit alongside free days where families can follow their own rhythm. Designed for travel agents building Fully Independent Traveller (FIT) family packages where the itinerary needs to work for both adults and children without anyone getting bored or exhausted.

COMPLETE ITINERARY
Your East Coast Family Holiday – Day by Day
Arrive Gold Coast & Pick Up Rental Car
The family arrives at Gold Coast Airport and picks up their rental car – the easiest way to get around down here. Surfers Paradise is the base for three nights, and it’s exactly as lively as it sounds. The Voco Hotel on the Gold Coast provides accommodation in two rooms, which gives families the space they need without being spread across different floors or buildings.
Surfers Paradise itself is a hive of activity. Dining options range from casual beachfront fish and chips to proper restaurants, and the beach is right there. Kids tend to gravitate towards the sand within about five minutes of arriving. The Gold Coast Hinterland is also within easy reach by car for families wanting something greener and quieter.
Trade tip: The self-drive component on the Gold Coast works well for families because it gives them complete flexibility with theme park visits and beach time. Having two rooms at the Voco is a detail worth highlighting to agents – families travelling internationally really value that separation.

Free Day – Theme Parks & Beaches
Today is deliberately left open. The Gold Coast has more family attractions than most places know what to do with – Wet’n’Wild, Warner Bros Movie World, Sea World, and Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary are all within easy driving distance. Or the family can simply spend the day on some of the best beaches in Australia. No structured touring, no transfers to catch.
Included in this itinerary is a three-day Village Roadshow pass providing entry to Warner Bros Movie World, Sea World, and Wet’n’Wild. That covers this day and the next, with flexibility to use the pass in whatever order suits the family.
Trade tip: The three-day theme park pass is genuine value and a strong inclusion to highlight. Families with younger children tend to prefer Sea World and Currumbin, while older kids gravitate towards Movie World’s roller coasters and Wet’n’Wild. The pass removes the pressure of trying to cram everything into one day.

Morning Crab Cruise & Gold Coast Exploring
The morning starts with something a bit different. The family joins a Crab Trip cruise – a two-hour guided experience on the Broadwater that includes crab catching demonstrations, crab tasting, fish feeding, and a beach landing on Wave Break Island for pumping yabbies and shell collecting. Kids love it. It’s genuinely hands-on in a way that theme parks aren’t. Departs daily at 9:00am with return hotel transfers included. Allow about three hours all up.
The rest of the day is free. The Gold Coast Hinterland is worth exploring if the family fancies a change of scenery – Tamborine Mountain and Springbrook National Park are both within an hour’s drive. Or there’s more beach time, more theme parks, the Star Casino precinct for the adults, and restaurants everywhere.
Trade tip: The crab cruise is a uniquely Australian experience and a nice contrast to the theme park days. It gives families a taste of the local marine environment without needing to commit to a full day. The afternoon left free is intentional – by day three on the Gold Coast, families have usually found their favourite spot and want to revisit it.

Gold Coast to Cairns – Tropical North Queensland
The rental car gets dropped at Coolangatta Airport for the flight to Cairns. On arrival, a private transfer takes the family to the Pullman International Hotel in the heart of Cairns CBD. The rest of the day is free to explore.
The Pullman is a 5-star property with 16 floors, tropical pools, and Coco’s Restaurant serving local seafood. It’s well positioned – close to the Cairns Esplanade, the lagoon pool (free and great for kids), and right near the departure point for daily reef and rainforest trips. The shift from Gold Coast glitz to tropical Cairns is immediate. Palm trees, warm air, a completely different pace.
Trade tip: The transition from self-drive to transfer-based touring works well here. Families don’t need a car in Cairns – everything operates on hotel pickups. The Pullman’s location means the family can walk to restaurants and the Esplanade lagoon on arrival day without needing to organise anything. It’s a good soft landing after the travel day.

Kuranda – Skyrail & Scenic Railway
Today is the Kuranda half-day experience, and it’s one of those days that works for absolutely every age group. The family is picked up from the hotel and takes the Skyrail Rainforest Cableway up to Kuranda village, then returns via the Kuranda Scenic Railway. Or the reverse – the itinerary is flexible on direction.
The Skyrail spans 7.5 kilometres over World Heritage-listed tropical rainforest in six-person gondola cabins, gliding just metres above the canopy. There are two stops along the way – an information centre and a boardwalk through the forest floor. Allow about 90 minutes for the full Skyrail experience. The Scenic Railway descends through 15 hand-carved tunnels and past waterfalls, with commentary on the pioneering history of the 1800s construction. It’s dramatic engineering through dramatic landscape.
Kuranda village itself has markets with handcrafted goods, Aboriginal artefacts, cafes, and restaurants. It’s surrounded by World Heritage rainforest containing around twelve hundred species of flowering plants. Laid-back but not without sophistication.
Trade tip: This is a half-day experience, which leaves the afternoon free. Families often use it for the Cairns Esplanade lagoon or just relaxing at the hotel pool. The Skyrail gondolas comfortably fit a family of four or five, so there’s no splitting up. Younger kids find the railway particularly exciting.

Cairns at Leisure – Free Day
A deliberately unstructured day in Cairns. And there’s no shortage of ways to fill it. The Tjapukai Dreamtime Walk offers an introduction to Indigenous culture with damper and tea. For families with older children or teenagers chasing adrenaline, AJ Hackett bungy jumping and white-water rafting on the Barron River are both available as add-ons.
Or the family can simply take it easy. The Cairns Esplanade has a free saltwater lagoon pool that’s perfect for kids, barbecue areas, playgrounds, and walking paths along the foreshore. After a few days of structured activities, a breather is welcome.
Trade tip: This free day is strategically placed between the Kuranda experience and the reef day. It prevents touring fatigue, which is a real issue with family itineraries. The Tjapukai Dreamtime Walk and adventure add-ons aren’t included in the base itinerary but can be added. Worth discussing with clients based on their children’s ages and interests.

Day on the Outer Great Barrier Reef
This is the headline day. The family transfers to Port Douglas for a wave-piercing catamaran cruise to Agincourt Reef on the outer edge of the Great Barrier Reef, right on the Continental Shelf. Approximately 6.5 hours at the reef. Departs daily at 10:00am.
The platform at Agincourt Reef is purpose-built for families. Snorkelling equipment is provided with qualified safety officers on hand. For non-swimmers and younger children, the semi-submersible vessels and underwater observatory give the same coral and fish viewing without getting wet. There’s a marine biologist presentation, crew-led fish feeding, and morning and afternoon tea on board plus a hot and cold tropical buffet lunch.
This is a Quicksilver operation – their platform and crew are geared towards all swimming abilities, which is exactly what you need when you’ve got a family with mixed confidence levels in the water.
Trade tip: The reef day is the single biggest selling point of the Cairns leg. The Quicksilver outer reef platform is the right choice for families because it offers genuine alternatives to snorkelling – many competing operators require guests to get in the water. The semi-submersible and observatory mean even toddlers get a reef experience. Transfers from Cairns and Northern Beaches accommodation are included.

Daintree Rainforest & Cape Tribulation Full Day Tour
A big day – roughly 12 hours – but a brilliant one. The family is collected at 7:00am for a guided tour that takes in an enormous amount of Tropical North Queensland. The route follows the Great Barrier Reef coastal drive to Port Douglas, then crosses into the Daintree on the cable-driven river ferry.
First stop is Wildlife Habitat, where the family can hand-feed kangaroos and wallabies, see the endangered cassowary, and have photos taken with a koala. Morning tea is included here. Then it’s into Daintree National Park proper – a magnificent wilderness region where the World Heritage rainforest meets the coast. Tropical lunch is provided at a picturesque setting. Cape Tribulation Beach is the turnaround point, with time to walk the boardwalk to the lookout and join a guided rainforest walk.
On the return, the tour stops at Alexandra Lookout for views across the Daintree River and Coral Sea, then finishes with a Daintree River cruise searching for crocodiles, birds, and other wildlife in the mangroves.
Trade tip: This full-day tour is comprehensive – Wildlife Habitat entry, ferry crossing, lunch, guided walks, and river cruise are all included. It’s a long day for very young children, so worth flagging with agents whose clients have toddlers. For families with kids aged five and up, though, it’s outstanding. The crocodile-spotting river cruise at the end is the part kids remember most.

Cairns to Sydney
Private transfer to Cairns Airport for the flight to Sydney. On arrival, a transfer takes the family to the Novotel Sydney on Darling Harbour. The change of scenery is total – from tropical palms to harbour skyline.
The Novotel sits in one of Sydney’s premier harbour locations with views across Darling Harbour to the city. Shopping, restaurants, and entertainment are at the doorstep. Chinatown is a short walk, the boutique shops of Pyrmont and Paddington are nearby, and the famous Sydney Fish Markets are close. Ferries, buses, and light rail all connect within walking distance. If there’s energy left after the travel day, a ferry ride across the harbour to Luna Park is a memorable first evening in Sydney.
Trade tip: Darling Harbour is the right base for families in Sydney. It’s flat (important with kids and prams), everything is connected by waterfront walkways, and the Novotel’s direct link to the CBD via public transport means the family isn’t relying on taxis. The harbourside restaurants at Darling Harbour are also family-friendly without being exclusively aimed at children.

Blue Mountains Day Tour
Morning pickup for a full-day Blue Mountains tour – roughly 10.5 hours, departing at 7:55am. This is Sydney’s most popular day trip and it deserves the reputation.
The route climbs through the townships of Blaxland, Lawson, and Wentworth Falls to the famous Three Sisters – a trio of rocky pinnacles with staggering views across the Jamison Valley. Then it’s Scenic World, where the family rides the Scenic Railway (the steepest in the world), the Cableway, and the Skyway across the canyon. At the bottom, a 2.4-kilometre boardwalk winds through Jurassic rainforest. Entry and all rides at Scenic World are included.
Lunch is in picturesque Leura village – grab something from one of the many cafes and explore the quaint shops and galleries. The tour also includes entry to Featherdale Wildlife Park, where the family encounters koalas, kangaroos, wombats, and other native animals up close. Return to Sydney by coach or cruise down the Parramatta River into Sydney Harbour.
Trade tip: Scenic World alone justifies this day. The combination of three rides, the rainforest boardwalk, and the valley views keeps children genuinely engaged. Featherdale Wildlife Park is more intimate than bigger wildlife parks – better for families. The optional Parramatta River cruise return is worth recommending if the schedule allows, as it gives a completely different perspective on Sydney.

Sydney Day at Leisure with Flexi Attractions Pass
Today the family explores Sydney with their included Sydney Flexi 3-in-1 Attractions Pass. Three entries from a list of over 30 attractions – Sydney Opera House tour, Sydney Aquarium, Taronga Zoo, Sydney Tower Eye, Manly Bike Tours, Captain Cook cruises, Oz Jet boating, The Rocks Walking Tour, and plenty more. The pass is valid for three months, so there’s no pressure to use all three entries today.
We’d recommend a harbour cruise and a city sightseeing tour for this day, but the beauty of the pass is that the family chooses. Manly is a ferry ride away with one of Australia’s best surf beaches. Bondi is accessible by bus. The harbourside walking tracks offer world-class views for free. There’s genuinely no wrong answer.
Trade tip: The Flexi pass saves up to 40% on admission fees compared to buying individual tickets. It includes a full-colour guide with maps and attraction information. Agents should note that the pass requires online check-in for a digital pass – details are provided at booking. Clients can easily extend Sydney by an extra night or two if they want more time. Most families wish they had.

City Sights Including Sydney Opera House
A structured city sightseeing day that covers Sydney’s highlights in a logical loop. The itinerary takes in Darling Harbour, Chinatown, the Sydney Opera House with an Essential Tour inside the world’s most recognisable sails, The Rocks (Sydney’s birthplace), Parliament House, Hyde Park, the Art Gallery and the Domain, Mrs Macquarie’s Chair for harbour and skyline views, Kings Cross, Double Bay and Vaucluse, Bondi Beach, Paddington, Sydney Tower, and Sydney Town Hall.
The Opera House tour is the centrepiece. It takes guests inside the building to discover the innovation, creativity, and controversy behind its construction. Even children who don’t care about architecture tend to be impressed once they’re standing inside those soaring interiors.
Trade tip: This guided day works well as the second-last day because it ties together all the places the family has glimpsed from ferries and walks over the previous days. The Bondi Beach stop is popular with families – allow for the fact that teenagers may not want to leave. The Opera House Essential Tour is included and is genuinely engaging for all ages.

Depart Sydney
A private transfer takes the family from their Darling Harbour hotel to Sydney’s Kingsford Smith Airport for their onward flight. Depending on the flight time, there may be a chance for a final walk along the harbour or a quick visit to the nearby Sydney Fish Markets for breakfast.
Trade tip: For families who aren’t ready to leave, this itinerary extends naturally. An extra night in Sydney gives time for Taronga Zoo or a Manly beach day. We can also add pre-tour nights in Brisbane, or extend the Gold Coast stay to four or five nights for families who want more theme park time. The entire itinerary is customisable – AABH builds these to suit each family’s interests, ages, and pace.

WHAT’S INCLUDED



















