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Driving in Australia: What No One Tells You

The practical primer no rental agency hands you. Left side, vast distances, road trains, wildlife at dusk, the petrol-station gaps, and the country driving etiquette you only learn after you've quietly upset a road train driver.

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Australia is, depending on how you measure it, either the sixth-largest country on Earth or a continent with a coastline. Most international visitors arrive expecting to drive from Sydney to Melbourne in an afternoon, look at a map, and reckon a road trip across to Perth sounds breezy. Five hours later they've recalculated, sat down with a cold drink, and accepted that they need either a much longer holiday or a flight.

This guide is the actual driving primer non-Australians need: left-hand-side basics, the real time and distance scale of the country, what to do when you encounter a road train, the wildlife situation, fuel station logistics, and the small etiquette things that mark you as someone who's done this before.

The left side: easier than you think, harder than you expect

Australia drives on the left. The steering wheel is on the right side of the car. If you've never done this before, three honest truths:

One: in city driving and on highways with traffic, your brain catches up within an hour. The cars around you are doing the right thing and you follow their lead. It's not a problem.

Two: the danger is empty rural roads at the start of your day. With no other cars to mirror, your brain reverts to your home country's defaults — especially when you're tired, in a roundabout, or making a turn from a stop. Most rental-car wrong-side incidents happen in the first 48 hours, in remote areas, on quiet roads. Stay alert specifically when conditions feel low-stakes.

Three: roundabouts go clockwise here. If your home country drives on the right, your instinct will be to enter a roundabout to the right. This is wrong and dangerous. Give way to the right (vehicles already in the roundabout) and enter to the left. Take five minutes to practice on a quiet one before you need to do it in traffic.

Survival tip: rent a car with automatic transmission unless you genuinely need otherwise. Driving on the unfamiliar side AND shifting with your left hand is asking your brain to do two new things at once. Pay the small extra cost for an automatic; you'll have spare mental capacity for the road.

The distances are real

Some honest numbers, because Google Maps doesn't really prepare you:

The interstate drives between capital cities are doable in a few days each. The cross-country drives (Adelaide to Perth, Darwin to Alice) are multi-day expeditions that require planning. Don't underestimate them. The combination of fatigue, monotony, and remote terrain is what makes Australian long drives genuinely dangerous — not the technical driving itself.

The safe rule of thumb: if Google Maps says a drive will take 6+ hours, assume you'll need a full day with stops, and don't plan to do anything meaningful at the destination that evening.

The wildlife problem (and it is a problem)

Kangaroos, wallabies, wombats, emus, and cattle on unfenced roads are not theoretical hazards. They're the leading cause of serious rental-car incidents in regional Australia. A full-sized red kangaroo hit at 100 km/h can total a car and seriously injure people inside it. Wombats are like driving into a stationary boulder.

The risks are highest:

What to actually do:

Road trains: yes, they're as long as you've heard

A road train is a single prime mover towing two, three, or sometimes four full-length trailers. Total length: up to 53.5 metres — longer than the cricket pitch you'll never go to. They operate on highways across the Northern Territory, Western Australia, South Australia, and parts of Queensland.

Things to know:

The petrol-station gap problem

In urban and coastal Australia, petrol stations ("servos") are common. In the outback, they're not. The distance between fuel stops on remote highways can be 200, 300, sometimes 500+ kilometres. Running out of fuel between them isn't a minor inconvenience; depending on where you are, it can be a serious situation.

The practical rule for regional driving: refuel when you're at half a tank, not when you're nearly empty. The next servo may be closed, out of fuel, or further than your remaining range. Treat half-tank as your "find fuel soon" signal, not quarter-tank.

Some specific routes where this really matters:

On these routes, fuel-up at every roadhouse, regardless of how much you have left. The roadhouse menus are usually mediocre and the prices are higher — that's the cost of supplying fuel 400km from anywhere. Pay it without complaint.

Speed limits, signage, and the unexpected variations

Default speed limits:

Police speed enforcement is taken very seriously and the tolerances are tight. Many states use unmarked cars and high-density camera networks. The traffic-fine system also includes demerit points that, if accumulated, can lead to licence suspension — foreigners are not exempt. Drive at the limit, not over it.

Country driving etiquette: the small things that matter

Where to get a car

Major international rental brands (Hertz, Avis, Budget, Europcar) operate in every capital city airport. Booking ahead is usually cheaper than walking up, especially during school holidays and peak tourism months (December-January, June-July). If you're doing a long one-way drive (say, Sydney to Cairns), expect a one-way fee that can be significant; budget for it.

Compare across providers before you commit — the price spread for the same car class can be substantial between agencies in the same airport. A quick search through a comparison platform usually beats whatever you find by walking up to a counter.

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One last unsolicited opinion

The road trip is the way to see Australia. Not because it's the most efficient — flying between capitals is faster — but because the country is mostly in the spaces between the cities. The roadhouses, the small towns, the long quiet stretches where you don't pass another car for an hour. That's the actual Australia people come for and then somehow miss. Plan a trip with at least one multi-day drive in it. You'll be tired and slightly bored at points. You'll also see the country.

Keep reading: Before you go, our what to pack guide covers the gear, sun protection, and biosecurity rules every visiting driver gets wrong. Most road trips end or begin in Sydney — the Sydney accommodation guide helps you pick the right neighbourhood. And the first-time pub guide is essential reading for the inevitable country-pub stops along the way.

Test what you learned

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