Torquay, the Great Ocean Road Arch & Wild Koalas
Pick-up from selected Melbourne CBD hotels runs between 7am and 8am, with the tour heading south-west toward Victoria’s Surf Coast. The first stop is Torquay – birthplace of Australian surfing culture and home to some of the country’s best-known breaks. Travellers enjoy a complimentary beachside morning tea here, with time to take in the coastal atmosphere before boarding again.
From Torquay, the route follows the Great Ocean Road itself. A photo stop at the Great Ocean Road Memorial Archway marks the official starting point of this celebrated coastal drive, built by returned soldiers between 1919 and 1932 and dedicated to those who served in World War I. It’s a moment that gives international travellers some context for why this road exists at all.
The coach continues through towering eucalyptus forests and along cliff-edge stretches of road with the Southern Ocean below. At the Kennett River township, the group stops to spot wild koalas resting high in the gum trees. These are genuinely wild animals in their natural habitat – not a sanctuary or zoo. Sightings are common but can never be guaranteed, and colourful native birdlife is often visible along the same stretch.
Trade tip: The koala stop at Kennett River is one of the most popular moments of the entire tour. It works well across all demographics – families, couples, solo travellers. Set expectations with clients that these are wild koalas, so sightings depend on the day. The guides know where to look, and the success rate is high.



Apollo Bay Lunch & Ancient Rainforest Walk
The tour continues along the coast to Apollo Bay, one of the Great Ocean Road’s most loved seaside towns. Travellers have free time here to explore and purchase lunch at their own expense. The town has a good range of options – fish and chips on the foreshore, cafe meals, bakeries. Most can cater for dietary requirements including vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free, though availability varies by venue.
After lunch, the route heads inland into the Great Otway National Park. This is a different world from the coastal scenery. A guided walk takes the group through ancient cool temperate rainforest – towering Mountain Ash trees, some of the tallest flowering plants on earth, with an understorey of giant ferns and mosses that feels almost prehistoric. The air is noticeably cooler and the light filters through the canopy. It’s quiet in a way that cities never are.
The guides provide context on the ecology and history of the Otways throughout the walk. For travellers who’ve only experienced Australia as beaches and red desert, this rainforest section often reshapes their understanding of the country’s landscape diversity.
Trade tip: The Otway rainforest walk is a genuine surprise for many international travellers. They don’t expect ancient temperate rainforest on a coastal day tour. It’s the section that adds real depth to what could otherwise be a photo-stop-to-photo-stop itinerary. Remind clients to bring a light jacket – the forest is noticeably cooler than the coast, even in summer.

Port Campbell National Park & the Twelve Apostles
The afternoon brings the headline attraction. The Twelve Apostles are limestone sea stacks formed over millions of years by the relentless erosion of the Southern Ocean against the mainland cliffs. They’re constantly changing – waves and weather continue to reshape them. The scale is hard to convey in photographs. Standing on the viewing platforms with the wind coming off the ocean, looking down at these enormous structures rising from the surf, is one of those moments that lands differently in person.
Travellers have time to walk the scenic pathways along the cliff edge, take photographs from multiple vantage points, and simply absorb the landscape. The guides share the geological story and point out features that are easy to miss without context.
Optional helicopter flights with 12 Apostles Helicopters are available on the day (booked through the guide, not pre-bookable through the tour operator). A 16-minute flight offers an aerial perspective of the coastline. Worth noting that wait times can be long on busy days, and delays may mean missing the next stop at Loch Ard Gorge.
Trade tip: The Twelve Apostles are the reason most travellers book a Great Ocean Road tour in the first place. Time of day matters – afternoon light is generally excellent for photography. If clients ask about the helicopter, set expectations honestly: it’s weather-dependent, subject to queues, and can’t be guaranteed. But when it works, the aerial views are extraordinary.

Shipwreck Coast – Loch Ard Gorge, Island Archway & the Razorback
A short drive from the Twelve Apostles brings the group to Loch Ard Gorge, named after the clipper ship Loch Ard that ran aground on nearby Mutton Bird Island in June 1878. Of 54 people on board, only two survived – Tom Pearce, a young apprentice, and Eva Carmichael, a passenger. The gorge where they washed ashore is now one of the most visited sites on the Shipwreck Coast. The guides tell the full story, which is equal parts tragic and astonishing.
The gorge itself is visually striking. Sheer sandstone walls frame a narrow inlet of turquoise water, and the staircase down to the beach puts you right where the survivors came ashore. Nearby, the collapsed Island Archway and the narrow blade of rock known as the Razorback offer further perspectives on how the ocean continues to reshape this coastline.
From here, the tour begins the journey back toward Melbourne, stopping in the regional town of Colac for a dinner break (own expense). Guests arrive back in Melbourne at approximately 8:30 to 9:30pm.
Trade tip: Loch Ard Gorge is more than a scenic stop – the shipwreck story gives it emotional weight that elevates the entire tour. It’s often the moment travellers talk about most afterward. For agents building broader itineraries, this tour fits well as a full-day add-on to a Melbourne city stay. The late return time means clients need a free evening, so schedule accordingly.

Practical Details for Agents
The Great Ocean Road Full Day Eco Tour departs daily from Melbourne CBD with selected hotel pick-ups between 7am and 8am. Additional pick-up points are available at Torquay and Waurn Ponds for clients already on the Surf Coast – these need to be arranged at least 48 hours in advance.
Total tour duration is approximately 12 to 13 hours, with guests returning to their Melbourne pick-up location between 8:30pm and 9:30pm. The tour runs rain or shine, year-round.
Group size is capped at 24 guests, making this a genuine small-group experience. The touring vehicles feature upgraded seating for comfort on the longer drive sections. Guides are highly trained specialists – passionate, knowledgeable, and experienced at working with international travellers.
Lunch at Apollo Bay and dinner at Colac are at the traveller’s own expense. Complimentary beachside morning tea at Torquay is included. Guests are also welcome to bring their own packed meals.
Trade tip: The 12-13 hour duration means this is a full-day commitment. Advise clients not to book flights or evening activities on the same day. For travellers staying in Melbourne CBD, the hotel pick-up service makes logistics straightforward. The daily departures give you flexibility when building multi-day Melbourne itineraries.

16-Language Audio Guide & Discovery Clips
While all tours are conducted in English by the onboard guide, the Go West Tours app provides an audio guide available in 16 different languages. Travellers download the app before departure or use the free onboard Wi-Fi. They’ll need their own headphones.
In addition to the audio guide, Discovery Clips – short explainer videos with deeper insights into specific locations and landmarks – are available in 17 languages. The guide can provide access details on the day of the tour.
This multilingual capability makes the tour accessible to a wide range of source markets. For agents working with Chinese, Japanese, South East Asian, Middle Eastern, or European travellers, the language barrier is effectively removed without compromising the small-group experience.
Trade tip: The multilingual audio guide is a strong selling point for non-English-speaking markets. AABH’s own multilingual team can coordinate pre-tour communication in English and Chinese, and we can handle the booking process entirely in-language where needed. This combination of AABH’s trade support and the tour’s on-the-ground language tools makes it a reliable option for diverse source markets.

Responsible Wildlife Encounters
This is an eco-certified touring operation that takes wildlife welfare seriously. The koala stop at Kennett River offers sightings of genuinely wild animals in their natural habitat. Because these are wild koalas, sightings are common but cannot be guaranteed on any given day.
The operator actively discourages the feeding of wild animals. Feeding changes natural behaviour, leads to poor diet, and ultimately reduces animals’ ability to forage for themselves. This policy applies across all wildlife encounters on the tour.
The rainforest walk in the Otways is guided with a focus on ecological context – the age and significance of the forest, the species that call it home, and how it fits into the broader Victorian landscape. It’s educational without being dry.
Trade tip: For clients from markets where wildlife feeding is a common expectation, it’s worth setting this expectation in advance. The tour delivers outstanding wildlife encounters – just in a responsible, hands-off way. The wild koala experience is actually more memorable than a zoo or sanctuary encounter for many travellers because of its authenticity.

12 Apostles Helicopter Flights
Optional helicopter flights over the Twelve Apostles are available through 12 Apostles Helicopters. These are booked on the day through the tour guide, with only the 16-minute flight option available during the tour stop.
A few important caveats. Flights cannot be pre-booked through the tour operator. The operator advises against building them into the itinerary as a confirmed experience, because tour timing and weather can both affect availability. Wait times can be long on busy days, and if the wait extends too far, travellers may miss the visit to Loch Ard Gorge.
After the flight, participants can explore the viewing platforms near the visitor centre before rejoining the group.
Trade tip: The helicopter flight is a premium add-on that some clients will want, but it needs to be positioned as an opportunity rather than a guarantee. If your client is set on flying, consider booking a separate dedicated helicopter experience on another day rather than relying on availability during the group tour. That said, when it works, the aerial view of the Apostles and the Shipwreck Coast is unforgettable.

How This Tour Fits a Melbourne Programme
The Great Ocean Road Full Day Tour is one of the most requested day tours from Melbourne, and it slots naturally into a broader Victorian itinerary. Most international travellers spend three to four nights in Melbourne. This tour fills one full day, leaving the remaining nights free for the city’s laneways, dining, arts, and sporting culture.
For agents building Fully Independent Traveller (FIT) programmes, the tour works well on Day 2 or Day 3 of a Melbourne stay – giving clients a day to settle in before the early pick-up, and a day or evening afterward to recover before their next destination.
The tour also pairs naturally with our Go Beyond Melbourne regional itineraries. Clients who want more time in regional Victoria can combine this day tour with a multi-day extension into the Yarra Valley, Mornington Peninsula, or Phillip Island. We can build seamless multi-day programmes that incorporate the Great Ocean Road as one element of a wider regional experience.
Trade tip: This tour is bookable through AABH at wholesale trade rates via our FIT/HELiO platform. It can be bundled with Melbourne accommodation, airport transfers, and other Victorian experiences in a single itinerary package. Contact our team to discuss how it fits your clients’ broader Australian programme.
Connecting to Sydney, the Reef & Beyond
Melbourne and the Great Ocean Road form a strong opening or closing chapter for longer Australian itineraries. From Melbourne, travellers can fly direct to Sydney (1.5 hours), Cairns and the Great Barrier Reef (3 hours), Uluru (2.5 hours), or Hobart and Tasmania (1.5 hours).
A typical programme might look like: Melbourne city (3 nights) with the Great Ocean Road day tour, followed by a flight to Cairns for the reef and rainforest, then Sydney for the harbour and Blue Mountains. Or reverse the flow. AABH builds complete Australian itineraries across all major destinations, so the Great Ocean Road fits as one component of a much larger programme.
For agents working with New Zealand-bound travellers, we can extend any Australian itinerary across the Tasman through our subsidiary New Zealand and Beyond Holidays (NZABH). A Melbourne-to-Auckland connection is straightforward, and NZABH handles all New Zealand ground arrangements in NZD.
Trade tip: The Great Ocean Road is often a client’s first real experience of Australia’s natural landscape, especially if they’ve flown into Melbourne. Position it early in the itinerary to set the tone. The wild coastline, the wildlife encounters, the rainforest – it establishes that Australia is far more than cities. For agents who want to discuss multi-destination programmes, contact us at enquiries@aabh.com.au.
Incentive Groups & Series Departures
The standard tour operates with a maximum of 24 guests per vehicle, making it a ready-made option for small incentive groups and corporate rewards programmes. For larger groups, multiple vehicles can be coordinated on the same departure date, or AABH can arrange private charter departures with customised scheduling.
For Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, and Exhibitions (MICE) programmes, the Great Ocean Road makes an outstanding pre- or post-conference day activity. It gets delegates out of the hotel, into a genuinely spectacular natural environment, and provides shared experiences that build team connection. The combination of coastal scenery, wildlife, rainforest, and geological drama packs a lot into a single day.
For series groups – regular repeat departures – AABH can coordinate ongoing allocations and handle the booking logistics through our automated platform. Daily departures mean scheduling flexibility is rarely a problem.
Trade tip: For incentive groups, consider adding the helicopter flight as an exclusive upgrade for VIP delegates. We can also arrange private photography at the Twelve Apostles for corporate branding purposes. The tour’s multilingual audio capability (16 languages) makes it particularly practical for diverse international groups attending conferences in Melbourne.
TOUR HIGHLIGHTS AT A GLANCE





















