Best of Melbourne
The Best Day Trips From Melbourne: A Local's Guide
One of the quiet joys of living in Melbourne is how quickly the city falls away behind you. Point the car in almost any direction and within an hour or two you can be standing among cool-climate vineyards, walking a fern-gullied rainforest track, soaking in mineral hot springs, or watching little penguins waddle ashore at dusk. Victoria packs an unusual amount of variety into a short radius, which is why the day trip is practically a Melbourne institution.
Below are five of the best day trips from Melbourne, covered at a concept level with rough drive directions so you can plan a route. We have deliberately left out exact drive times and opening hours, because traffic, seasons and operator schedules change. For anything time-sensitive (penguin viewing sessions, cellar door bookings, winery tours), confirm the current details with the official sources linked throughout. A reminder on Melbourne weather: the city is famous for getting four seasons in one day, so pack layers and check the Bureau of Meteorology forecast before you leave.
Great Ocean Road and the Twelve Apostles
The Great Ocean Road is Victoria's signature coastal drive, running from the surf town of Torquay west toward the historic fishing village of Port Fairy. Expect cliff-top ocean views, surf beaches, the rainforest of the Great Otway National Park, and wildlife including koalas, kangaroos and seasonal whales.
From Melbourne, head south-west to Geelong, then on to Torquay where the coastal road begins. The route winds through Anglesea, Lorne and Apollo Bay before turning inland through the Otways toward Port Campbell, where the Twelve Apostles rise from the Southern Ocean (despite the name, only around seven stacks remain). The Apostles sit roughly 275 km west of Melbourne, several hours along the coast. A faster inland return via the Princes Highway through Colac is shorter. Because of the distance, locals often treat this as an overnight rather than a single long day.
Yarra Valley wine country
The Yarra Valley is Melbourne's classic food-and-wine day trip and one of the closest. This cool-climate region north-east of the city, centred on Healesville and Yarra Glen, is known for chardonnay, pinot noir and sparkling, with many cellar doors alongside restaurants, distilleries, breweries and produce growers.
Head north-east via the Maroondah Highway (or the Eastern Freeway and EastLink, then Maroondah Hwy) toward Lilydale and Healesville, roughly 50 km from the CBD. Wineries are spread across rolling country and public transport is limited, so a car or an organised wine tour is the practical way to get around (and the sensible choice if you are tasting).
Mornington Peninsula
The Mornington Peninsula hooks south-east of the city and offers an unusually well-rounded day: calm bay beaches and surf beaches, heritage bathing boxes, cool-climate wineries, good restaurants, and geothermal hot springs drawing on a deep underground aquifer for mineral bathing.
Head south-east via the Mornington Peninsula Freeway (M11) and Nepean Highway toward Mornington, Red Hill, Rye and Sorrento. Public transport here is fragmented, so a car is recommended to link the wineries, hot springs and coastal walks.
Dandenong Ranges
The Dandenong Ranges are the easiest mountain escape, a forested range about 40 km east of Melbourne rising to around 633 metres at Mount Dandenong. Think tall mountain-ash and fern-gully forest in Sherbrooke Forest (wild superb lyrebirds are often seen near Grants Picnic Ground), ornamental gardens, village cafes, and the much-loved Puffing Billy heritage steam railway, which first opened in 1900 and today runs between Belgrave and Gembrook through the gullies. Autumn brings striking deciduous colour.
Drive east via the Eastern Freeway and EastLink, or the Burwood Highway, toward Belgrave, Sherbrooke, Olinda and Sassafras. This is one of the few trips you can do without a car: a Metro train to Belgrave connects with Puffing Billy. Check current PTV timetables and Myki fares before you go.
Phillip Island
South-east of the city, Phillip Island is connected to the mainland by a bridge and famous for its Penguin Parade, home to the world's largest little penguin colony. At dusk, year-round, the penguins return to their burrows across the beach and can be watched from boardwalks and platforms. The island also has the coastal boardwalks of The Nobbies, Churchill Island, a koala reserve and motor-racing heritage.
Head south-east out of Melbourne and follow the signed route toward San Remo, then cross the bridge to the island near Newhaven. Allow extra time from the bridge to reach the Penguin Parade on the south side. Penguin Parade bookings are essential and it is a cashless venue.
Which trip should you pick?
- Closest and most relaxed: the Yarra Valley and the Dandenong Ranges, both close to the city.
- A full but doable day: the Mornington Peninsula and Phillip Island.
- Best as an overnight: the Great Ocean Road, where the Twelve Apostles alone are a long drive each way.
- Without a car: the Dandenong Ranges via the Belgrave train line is the simplest. The peninsula, Phillip Island and the Great Ocean Road really want a car or an organised tour.
For attraction details and seasonal events, the official Visit Melbourne site is the best starting point, and Parks Victoria publishes current track conditions and any closures for the national parks.
This is general information produced with AI. Please confirm current drive times, fares, seasons, bookings and opening hours with the linked official sources before you travel.