
Tours in Mooloolaba
See all 3 tours →I’m Hugh and I’ve been wandering up and down Mooloolaba Esplanade for our autravel team for the better part of two decades, since I first came up from Brisbane as a teenager to watch the triathlon. Mooloolaba is the Sunshine Coast at its most likeable — a walkable, palm-fringed beach village immediately south of our Maroochydore guide with one main esplanade strip, one patrolled beach, one famous aquarium, and one of those small-port-on-the-spit setups that gives any town real character. It’s busy in school holidays, sleepy in mid-week winter, and somewhere in between for the eleven other months. Most importantly, unlike the Gold Coast equivalent forty-five minutes south, Mooloolaba hasn’t been over-developed. The high-rises that exist are short, the beach is still a real beach, and you can park within reasonable walking distance of the surf club without circling for an hour.
Mooloolaba sits between the Mooloolah River mouth on its south end and the long sandy run up to Alex Bluff and our Maroochydore guide on its north. The Esplanade is a single ribbon road that hugs the beach for about a kilometre between those two ends. South of the river mouth, on the spit, is Point Cartwright and Buddina — quieter beachside suburbs that locals use to escape the Esplanade crowd. The Wharf is the working harbour on the river side, full of fishing trawlers, charter boats, and a small restaurant precinct. That’s essentially the whole town — one strip, one beach, one wharf, one spit.
The beach itself
Mooloolaba’s patrolled beach is north-facing, which is unusual on the east coast and makes it one of the few Queensland beaches that’s safe for very young children in big swells — the headland at Point Cartwright wraps around and softens almost everything that arrives. That’s why our team keeps recommending it to families with toddlers. The surf is rarely epic but reliably friendly, the sand is wide enough to set up a serious picnic without feeling crowded even in peak summer, and the patrolled flags are out every day of the year staffed by Mooloolaba Surf Life Saving Club — one of Australia’s oldest and most respected clubs. The Mooloolaba SLSC publishes flag and patrol times and is genuinely worth checking on the way to the beach if you’ve never swum here before.
Walk south down the beach and you’ll hit the basalt boulders of the Mooloolaba Spit. There’s a fenced ocean rock pool here that’s a beautiful place to swim laps in calm conditions and a slightly intimidating one in big surf. Behind it is the Loo with a View — a public toilet block that has its own architecture-award reputation and a panoramic deck. Yes, really.
SEA LIFE Sunshine Coast and the Wharf
The aquarium — rebranded SEA LIFE Sunshine Coast a few years ago, originally Underwater World — sits on the Wharf side of town. It’s the biggest tropical aquarium in Queensland and the only one in the country with a freshwater Australian river section, which the kids actually love more than the sharks. There’s an underwater walkthrough tunnel and seal feeding sessions, and the building forms one end of the Wharf restaurant precinct. We’d recommend booking online via the SEA LIFE Sunshine Coast site rather than walking up — you’ll save a chunk and skip the queue.
The Wharf itself has been steadily redeveloping for years — old fishermen’s co-op buildings turning slowly into bars, dumpling spots, an ice-creamery, and a small craft brewery. The working fishing fleet still ties up here. You can buy fresh prawns from a co-op shopfront on a Friday morning, watch a trawler unload around the corner, and have a perfectly nice cocktail twenty metres away in the late afternoon. It’s one of the small joys of Mooloolaba.
The Esplanade strip
The Esplanade is what people picture when they think of Mooloolaba — a palm-lined boulevard with cafes and gelato shops on the inland side and the patrolled beach on the ocean side. It’s where the town does its evening promenade, and on a warm Saturday night in summer the whole town seems to be out walking it with a takeaway pizza box. The cafes do not need to try very hard, and most of them don’t, but a few stand out — we’re fans of the long-running breakfast spots at the northern end where you can watch the sunrise hit the headland.
Critically, unlike our Coolum guide or Noosa Hastings Street, the Esplanade isn’t hemmed in by high-end retail. You can buy a bucket and spade, a bottle of sunscreen and a kebab without crossing town. The vibe is family beach, not boutique strip.
The Mooloolaba Triathlon
If you arrive on a long weekend in March, you’ll discover Mooloolaba is also one of the largest amateur triathlon venues in the southern hemisphere. The Mooloolaba Triathlon swims out from the Esplanade, bikes north along the highway, and runs along the spit. The town swells from 8,000 to about 40,000 for three days. It is a brilliant event to watch with kids — the swim leg is right in front of you on the beach — and a brutal one to be staying nearby for the road closures. Book accommodation knowing the dates either way.
The spit, Point Cartwright and the lighthouse
Walk or drive across the river bridge to the Mooloolaba Spit and you’re in a different town. Quiet suburban streets, a long dog-friendly beach, fishing platforms on the river side, and a basalt-rock walking track up to the Point Cartwright lighthouse. That walk is one of our team’s favourite sunrise circuits on the entire Sunshine Coast — thirty minutes return, 360-degree views from the headland, often whales visible between June and October. Park at the lighthouse car park on Pacific Boulevard and walk the loop anti-clockwise.
South of Point Cartwright is Buddina Beach, then Kawana, then the long quiet run down to Caloundra. If Mooloolaba is too busy you have all of that as overflow.
Eating and drinking
The honest version is that Mooloolaba is not a foodie destination on the Noosa or our Brisbane guide level, but you will eat well. The Esplanade does breakfast and lunch better than dinner. The Wharf does dinner and drinks better than lunch. The river-mouth pub at the spit does a Sunday roast that is genuinely worth the queue. There are two craft breweries within a short drive, a small handful of Asian restaurants on the side streets that punch above their location, and an old-school fish-and-chip institution at the southern end of the Esplanade that has not changed its recipe in thirty years. It’s not Melbourne. It is, on a warm summer evening with sand in your shoes, considerably nicer than Melbourne.
Where to stay
Accommodation in Mooloolaba sorts itself into three honest categories. The first is the long row of mid-rise Esplanade apartments — most are individually owned and managed through one of the local letting agencies, the views are real, and the layouts haven’t changed since the late nineties. They’re ideal for a family of four for a week, particularly if you can secure something on the third floor or higher to catch the ocean breeze. The second category is the boutique low-rise behind the Esplanade on Brisbane Road or Burnett Street — quieter, often a small splash pool out the back, two minutes to the sand. The third is the spit-side suburban rentals over the river bridge, which our team gravitates to when we want a proper barbecue, a garage, and the sense of being in a real neighbourhood rather than a holiday strip. Caravans and camping are over the river too at Mudjimba and Cotton Tree if that’s your style. Avoid booking anything that calls itself "Mooloolaba" but is actually in Kawana Waters or Buddina without first checking on the map — same postcode, twenty-minute walk to the patrolled beach.
Day trips and the wider region
Mooloolaba is in the middle of everything. Caloundra and Kings Beach are twenty minutes south. The volcanic peaks of the Sunshine Coast Hinterland are forty minutes west. Noosa National Park is fifty minutes north. Australia Zoo at Beerwah is thirty minutes inland. The airport is fifteen minutes back up the highway. You can stay a week in Mooloolaba and do every Sunshine Coast highlight as a day trip without changing accommodation.
When to come and what to expect
Mooloolaba is busy in school holidays, especially Easter and the long Christmas school break, and you should book early. Mid-week in winter is paradise — mid-twenties on the beach, water still warm enough to swim, half-empty cafes, and the whales just offshore. Autumn (March–May) is the sweet spot for our team. The town is loud during the March triathlon weekend and again briefly in November for the school-leavers crossover from the Gold Coast, but otherwise it’s peaceful. Come with sunscreen, a pair of decent walking shoes for the Point Cartwright track, and patience for one or two queues on the Esplanade in peak season. You’ll leave understanding why so many Brisbane families have been buying weekenders here for forty years.
Next 7 days at Mooloolaba
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Photos from around Mooloolaba
Frequently asked about Mooloolaba
- Where is Mooloolaba?
- Mooloolaba is in Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia. The destination guide above maps the area; the drive-times panel further down lists distances to other Queensland destinations so you can pencil it into a longer itinerary.
- Where can I stay near Mooloolaba?
- We list 1 caravan and holiday park in and around Mooloolaba above — powered sites, cabins, glamping, and big-rig-friendly options. Pet rules, dump points and shaded sites are noted on each park's page. For hotel-style stays, the Drive Times panel makes it easy to base yourself in a nearby town and day-trip in.
- How many days should I spend at Mooloolaba?
- Most travellers spend a day at Mooloolaba to cover the highlights without rushing. There are 3 bookable tours and experiences, 0 attractions and 0+ named viewpoints/landmarks listed for the area on this page — plenty to fill a weekend, more if you slow down and explore the outer reaches.
- Is Mooloolaba good for families with kids?
- Mooloolaba is generally suited to families — outdoor space, accommodation options for all budgets, and a slower pace away from the major cities. The "What else is around" panel above lists everything nearby; if a museum, aquarium or wildlife park is what your kids want, check the closest larger town for those.
- Is there public transport at Mooloolaba?
- Coverage varies — major destinations have train and bus links from the closest capital, but smaller regional towns rely on infrequent coach services. The most reliable way to explore the wider area is a hire car or your own vehicle. If you're using public transport, plan around the timetables and check the night before you travel; rural routes are often once or twice a day.
- How much does a trip to Mooloolaba cost?
- Budget travellers can do Mooloolaba on roughly $120–180 per person per day (caravan park, cooking your own, free walks); mid-range $200–350 (hotel, paid attractions, eating out once a day); higher-end $400+ (boutique stays, tours, fine dining). Fuel is the big variable — Australia's regional driving distances add up. Tours and attractions in the listings above show prices in AUD where the operator publishes them.
- Will I have phone signal at Mooloolaba?
- Most named destinations in Queensland have at least Telstra and Optus coverage in town. Coverage drops off quickly outside built-up areas — particularly in national parks, valleys and along long stretches of highway. If you're heading into remote areas, download offline maps before you leave, tell someone your itinerary, and consider a PLB (personal locator beacon) for serious bush walks.

















