Maria Island, Tasmania
Maria Island sits off Tasmania’s east coast in the sparkling Mercury Passage – a place with no cars, no shops, and no permanent residents. It’s a national park and World Heritage site where wombats wander the old airstrip, Cape Barren geese graze the convict-era ruins, and the beaches are yours alone. The kind of place that makes people go quiet for a moment when they first arrive.
The Maria Island Walk is a 4-day, 3-night guided experience that crosses the island from south to north. Guests walk along firm beaches and formed bush tracks, sleep in exclusive wilderness glamping camps and the historic Bernacchi House, and eat gourmet Tasmanian food with local wine by candlelight. Over 18 seasons and more than 1,300 completed walks, the operator has earned 8 National Tourism Awards. It’s the only walk on Maria Island selected as one of Australia’s Great Walks. For travel agents building premium Tasmanian itineraries – whether FIT, small group, or honeymoon – this is one of those products that sells itself once your clients understand what it actually is.

COMPLETE ITINERARY
The Maria Island Walk – Day by Day
Hobart to Maria Island & Casuarina Beach Camp
Guests are collected from central Hobart hotels at 7:30am and driven to the historic coastal town of Triabunna, roughly 90 minutes away. From there, a boat crosses the sparkling Mercury Passage to the isthmus of Maria Island. You step onto a pristine, untouched beach – exactly as explorers did years before.
Lunch is served overlooking the crystal waters of Shoal Bay before the group walks to the Casuarina Beach camp. That afternoon, there’s time to explore the trail through tall eucalypt forest down to the spectacular Haunted Bay – a wild, wind-sculpted stretch of coast that feels genuinely remote.
After a fine Tasmanian gourmet dinner, guests stroll along the beach at sunset with a glass of wine. The wilderness glamping camp is African safari-style – comfortable beds in private bush cabins, moments from the beach. You fall asleep to the sound of waves.
Distance: 8 km
Trade tip: The transition from Hobart to the island happens quickly. Within a few hours, your clients go from a city hotel to a place with no cars, no shops, no phone reception. That abruptness is part of the experience. Let them know to expect it – it’s what makes the first evening so powerful.

Camp 1 to White Gums Camp via Five Beaches
This is the day that tends to appear in every guest’s highlight reel. After a delicious breakfast at camp, the walk follows five beautiful beaches along the island’s east coast. Dolphins play in the surf. Sea eagles soar overhead. The water’s edge is lined with exotic shells, and the sand is the kind of white you only see in places that barely get visited.
By late afternoon, the group arrives at White Gums camp for a refreshing swim. The evening is unhurried – relaxing with fellow walkers before a candlelit dinner of the finest Tasmanian food and wine, prepared by the guides.
Distance: 13 km
Trade tip: Day 2 is easy walking on firm beach sand. It’s the most accessible day physically and the most photogenic. International clients who have never experienced an empty Australian beach like this will find it almost surreal. This is the day that generates the social media content your clients’ friends will ask about.

Into the Forest & Optional Summit Climb
The walk heads inland today, into the heart of Maria Island. Guests wander through the world’s largest stand of giant Tasmanian blue gums – the scale of these trees is something else entirely. The air smells different here. Dense, rich, ancient.
For those with the energy, there’s an optional pack-free climb of Mt Maria or Bishop and Clerk. It’s a 700-metre ascent through rare cloud rainforest to summit views that are, frankly, breathtaking. The main group can take a gentler route through the forest.
That evening, guests arrive at the UNESCO World Heritage-listed convict settlement of Darlington and stay at the elegant colonial Bernacchi House. The final night banquet with fine wine and conversation is a real occasion.
Distance: 9-17 km (depending on optional summit)
Trade tip: The optional summit climb requires good fitness – it’s a proper hike. But guests who skip it don’t miss out on the experience. They still walk through extraordinary forest and arrive at Bernacchi House in time to explore Darlington before dinner. Having the choice makes this day work for mixed-fitness groups, which is important when you’re building itineraries for couples.

Northern Maria Island, Fossil Cliffs & Return to Hobart
The final morning begins with breakfast at Bernacchi House, followed by a walk around the northern tip of Maria Island. The route passes through spectacular woodlands with rare endemic birds, wallabies wandering freely, and wombats that barely glance up as you walk past. The trail continues to the dramatic sea cliffs of Fossil Bay and the remarkable Fossil Cliffs, where ancient limestone formations tell a geological story stretching back hundreds of millions of years.
Back at Darlington, a celebratory farewell lunch is served before the group boards the boat to Triabunna and the mainland. Guests are transferred to their Hobart hotel by 5:00pm or to the airport at approximately 4:00pm.
Distance: 4 km
Trade tip: We recommend guests book flights departing after 6:00pm on Day 4 to allow comfortable time for the transfer. Better still, book an extra night in Hobart. After four days in the wilderness, clients tend to want a good restaurant and time to process the experience before flying out. We can arrange Hobart accommodation, city touring, and onward connections anywhere in Australia.

WHAT’S INCLUDED





















