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From south to north, here’s what to do in the city this summer.

The Tasmanian summer is light and bright. In fact, the state has Australia’s longest hours of daylight across the warmer months, and one of the busiest summer festival calendars in the country. It’s time to celebrate the good things in life.

 

Summer shines in Hobart

Culture and creativity

Christmas kicks off a summer of festive fun in the capital. As the crews competing in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race sail up the River Derwent, Tasmania’s Taste of Summer is flavouring the docks: watch the yachts arrive from a waterside table. Music and art events dot the city – Cygnet Folk to Clarence Jazz – while markets revel in the warm days and evenings, be it Saturday at Salamanca Market or Friday night at the dual-venue Hobart Twilight Market. And why not roll out a beach towel and settle into a good book? Hobart was named a UNESCO City of Literature in 2023, after all.

In a busy outdoor market, a mother and daughter look at colourful yellow and pink flowers with greenery.
Salamanca Market
City of Hobart and Alastair Bett
Food and drink

Tasmanian seafood never feels fresher than in summer. Seek out a crayfish – they’re in season – dine at one of Hobart’s waterfront seafood restaurants, or grab some fish and chips from a floating fish punt and munch by the water. Seasonal palawa (Tasmanian Aboriginal) food is the focus on a kipli takara bush-tucker walk with palawa kipli. And you’ll need barely leave the city centre to find a craft brewery of choice: Overland, Deep South Brewing Co and Shambles are just the beginning. Sweeten things up again with an ice cream from Van Diemens Land Creamery’s floating punt at Constitution Dock.

A woman kneels down and reaches to pull a plant from a cluster growing together on the ground in the bush.
palawa kipli, kipli takara tours
Samuel Shelley
Two baskets of seafood and chips sit on the edge of a wharf, with the dark water below. People are midway through reaching for the food.
Seafood on the Hobart waterfront
Samuel Shelley
Experiences

Accept the sun’s invitation and hit the water, sailing the River Derwent – one of the world’s deepest natural harbours – with Hobart Yachts. Or paddle into the docks for some floating fish and chips with Roaring 40s Kayaking. Catch a wave at Clifton Beach, or hire a bike and pedal the Intercity Cycleway to Mona – the quirky Mona ferry can get you there as well. Lap up the sun at a beach – close to the city are the family-friendly Nutgrove and Long beaches – or at a cricket match at Bellerive Oval.

A group of kayakers in yellow and green kayaks paddle across the dappled river water of a city harbour.
Roaring 40s Kayaking
Tourism Australia
Wild nature

Hobart’s natural guardian, kunanyi / Mount Wellington, is webbed with tracks for walkers, trail runners and mountain bikers. Skip town to cruise among marine wildlife and beneath some of Australia’s highest sea cliffs on Turrakana / Tasman Peninsula or Bruny Island. Or find coolness beneath the Earth’s surface with a tour of Hastings Caves – you can always warm up again afterwards in the 28°C waters of the caveside thermal pools.

A man and a woman look out from a viewing platform atop a mountain, with a river snaking through a city in the distance.
kunanyi / Mount Wellington
Luke Tscharke
An aerial view of a boat cruising through clear blue water next to two islands with steep, bushy cliffs.
Bruny Island Cruises
Joe Shemesh
History and heritage

Hobart's Constitution Dock is bookended by the 19th-century sandstone warehouses of Salamanca Place and Hunter St. Slip behind Salamanca to find history in abundance in Battery Point, from cottage-lined streets to a sculpture trail telling local tales. Step into the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery to find everything from palawa culture to a thylacine exhibit and Tasmania's oldest surviving public building. Tour the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Cascades Female Factory Historic Site, which imprisoned 7000 women convicts between 1828 and 1856, then ponder it all at Cascade Brewery, Australia’s oldest continually operating brewery.

An old, multi-story, sandstone building stands above trees.
Cascade Brewery
Tourism Tasmania and Kathryn Leahy

Summer scenes in Launceston 

Culture and creativity

Raise a frothy glass to the New Year at Launceston BeerFest in Royal Park, featuring live music, comedy, kids’ activities, fireworks and the star amber act – beer. In City Park in February, Festivale is the city’s premier summer celebration – a three-day fusion of entertainment, top Tasmanian produce and local wines, beers and spirits.

A group of festival goers dance amongst bubbles in the park as part of Launceston's Festivale.
Festivale
Adam Gibson
Food and drink

How can your taste buds go wrong in one of the world’s UNESCO Cities of Gastronomy? Construct picnics of local produce at the Saturday morning Harvest Market, or graze as you tour through the vineyards and cellar doors of the Tamar Valley Wine Region – some Tasmanian sparkling wine is the perfect summer accompaniment. Go behind the beer scenes with a tour and tasting at James Boag Brewery, or get crafty at Du Cane Brewery.

A group of people holding wine glasses stand outdoors around a table with a wine bottle on it, listening to a man speak.
Josef Chromy Wines
Osborne Images
Experiences

Start your day on a high with a hot-air balloon flight over the forest and farmland surrounding Launceston. Cruise kanamaluka / River Tamar and Cataract Gorge, or propel yourself on a pedal-powered kayak tour along the city shores. Picnic in City Park, with its raucous macaque enclosure and dinky weekend train for the kids. Venture out of town to swing through the treetops on a zip-line course at Hollybank, tee-off at world-class Barnbougle, and barrel down the slopes on George Town’s mountain bike trail network.

A large yellow and purple patterned air balloon sails peacefully over farmlands on a clear, sunny day.
Hot Air Balloon Tasmania
Tourism Australia
Child ziplines through the trees with their hands in the air at Hollybank Wilderness Adventures.
Treetops Adventure Hollybank
Tourism Tasmania & Rob Burnett
Wild nature

Nature presses close to the city in Cataract Gorge. Follow walking trails along its banks, pausing for a swim in its riverside pool or to ride the chairlift. When the snow melts, nearby Ben Lomond National Park reveals another side of its high plateau. Drive Tasmania’s wildest and wriggliest road – Jacob’s Ladder – to check it out, and take the short walk to the summit of Tasmania’s second-highest peak, Legges Tor (1572m). Discover wildlife and beaches in abundance at Narawntapu National Park, north of ‘Launnie’; while Tasmania Zoo is home to more than 100 rare, exotic and native species.

A kangaroo staring straight into the camera at Narawntapu National Park.
Kangaroos on Springlawn, Narawntapu National Park
Jess Bonde
History and heritage

Launceston is one of Australia’s oldest cities (founded 1806). History looms large here as you walk the streets, passing the likes of the grand Holy Trinity Anglican Church, the colourful Victorian Quadrant and elegant Albert Hall. There’s everything from Tasmanian Aboriginal art to colonial masterpieces and a planetarium at Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Australia’s largest regional museum; while history filters out to the towns surrounding Launceston – fire up the jalopy for a visit to Evandale, Westbury and Longford.

An artwork made from twine hangs from the ceiling of a gallery space with polished floorboards.
QVMAG at Royal Park
Tourism Tasmania & Rob Burnett
A historical statue outside Clarendon Arms pub in Evandale.
Clarendon Arms, Evandale
Alastair Bett

Frequently asked questions

How far apart are Hobart and Launceston?

By Australian standards, Tasmania isn’t big. But the island is almost as big as Scotland or Ireland – don’t expect to whiz between A and B in a flash. That said, Hobart and Launceston, Tasmania’s two largest cities, are just 201km apart – around a 2.5hr drive.

Do I need to book accommodation in Tasmania in summer?

Short answer: yes. Longer answer: things get busy here in summer, especially around the New Year when the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race fleet is around Hobart, and in Launceston over the Festivale celebrations in February. So book your beds as far in advance as you can.

What is the weather like in Tasmania in summer?

Summer runs from December through to February with average maximum temperatures hovering between 20 and 25 degrees Celsius in Hobart and Launceston. The sun has a kick to it though and the weather can be changeable – come armed with a hat, sunscreen and a jacket too. Read more about Tasmania’s climate and weather.

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