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Brisbane City & Surrounds
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Brisbane City & Surrounds

South Bank ParklandsLone Pine Koala SanctuaryMt Coot-tha LookoutStory Bridge & City
8–9 hrsQLDPrivate
8–9 hrs
Door-to-door pickup
Private — your group only
Full refund if we can't confirm

Overview

Queensland's sunny capital is built around a lazy river bend, with riverside beaches, koala cuddles and a city-mountain lookout. A relaxed, walkable day with a driver who knows the shortcuts.

Best for: City explorers, couples, koala fans

Where you'll go

Your driver adapts the route on the day — stops can flex to suit your pace and interests.

  1. 1

    South Bank Parklands

    Street Beach, the Wheel of Brisbane and riverfront cafes.

    About this stop

    South Bank occupies the riverside site of World Expo 88, reborn as Brisbane's favourite parklands. Its centrepiece is Streets Beach, a man-made swimming lagoon with real sand in the middle of the city, joined by the bougainvillea-draped Grand Arbour walkway and the Wheel of Brisbane.

    Make the most of it

    Start the day here while it's cool — a flat 45–60 minute stroll along the river takes in Streets Beach, the Grand Arbour and the Wheel without rushing. Pack swimwear if travelling with kids; the lagoon is free and supervised by lifeguards. Skip the Wheel ride itself if Mt Coot-tha is on your route — the lookout's view is bigger, and free.

    Why it's worth it

    Swimming at a palm-fringed beach while skyscrapers glitter across the river is a uniquely Brisbane pleasure — and the parklands around it show the city at its most relaxed.

  2. 2

    Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary

    The world's first and largest koala sanctuary — hold a koala, feed kangaroos.

    About this stop

    Founded in 1927 on a quiet bend of the Brisbane River, Lone Pine is the world's first and largest koala sanctuary, home to well over a hundred koalas. Queensland is one of the few places where visitors may hold a koala, and Lone Pine's open paddock lets you hand-feed roaming eastern grey kangaroos.

    Make the most of it

    Book the koala-hold photo for soon after you arrive — sessions run to a timetable and sell out first on busy days. Ninety minutes covers the essentials: the hold, the kangaroo paddock (buy a bag of feed on the way in) and a look at the platypus and dingoes. Go mid-morning if you can; the light is kind and the tour groups are still on the highway.

    Why it's worth it

    Holding a koala is the photo that defines a Queensland trip — and feeding a kangaroo from your palm in an open paddock comes a very close second.

  3. 3

    Mt Coot-tha Lookout

    The classic panorama over the city to Moreton Bay.

    About this stop

    Mt Coot-tha is Brisbane's closest mountain, its summit lookout delivering the classic city panorama — the river winding among the CBD towers and, on a clear day, out to Moreton Bay and its islands. The name is widely held to come from an Aboriginal word for the wild honey once gathered on its slopes, and the Brisbane Botanic Gardens spread across its foothills.

    Make the most of it

    Twenty to thirty minutes is genuinely enough — this is a view stop, not a hike — which makes it easy to slot between Lone Pine and the city. Aim for late afternoon when the light warms the skyline, or come after dinner for the city lights; the summit cafe suits a coffee break either way. Haze can sit over the bay on hot days, so pick the clearest sky your day offers.

    Why it's worth it

    One short drive, and the whole of Brisbane arranges itself at your feet — the view that makes sense of everything else you've seen all day.

  4. 4

    Story Bridge & City

    Heritage laneways, the Botanic Gardens and the CBD.

    About this stop

    The Story Bridge, completed in 1940, is Brisbane's heritage-listed steel cantilever icon, engineered under John Bradfield of Sydney Harbour Bridge fame. Below it the city unfolds along the river — the City Botanic Gardens, sandstone-era buildings and laneways threaded between modern towers.

    Make the most of it

    Let your driver do the work here: a slow loop over the bridge, a pause at Wilson Outlook or the Kangaroo Point cliffs for the postcard angle, then a drop-off for a riverside walk. If energy is running low, trade the laneways for a drink at Howard Smith Wharves directly under the bridge — the view does the entertaining. An hour covers it comfortably.

    Why it's worth it

    Brisbane saves its best face for the river, and the Story Bridge is the centrepiece — steel arcs, cliff-top lookouts and a city that glows as the evening comes on.

Just your group, no one else

Every tour runs as a private hire — your vehicle, your driver, your pace. No shared coaches, no waiting for strangers. You set the agenda; we handle the logistics.

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What's included

  • Private vehicle + local driver for 8–9 hrs
  • Hotel pickup & drop-off
  • River + city loop
  • Bottled water
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