Holiday houses in Angourie

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Popular amenities for Angourie holiday rentals

Stay near Angourie's top sights

Angourie Blue Pool29 locals recommend
Spooky Beach15 locals recommend
Barbaresco30 locals recommend
Yum Yum Angourie Cafe & General Store17 locals recommend
CAFE Angourie10 locals recommend
Yuraygir coastal walk4 locals recommend

Quick stats about holiday rentals in Angourie

  • Total rentals

    50 properties

  • Wi-Fi availability

    40 properties include access to Wi-Fi

  • Rentals with dedicated workspaces

    10 properties have a dedicated workspace

  • Family-friendly rentals

    40 properties are a good fit for families

  • Total number of reviews

    2.3K reviews

  • Nightly prices starting at

    $140 AUD before taxes and fees

Your guide to Angourie

All About Angourie

Angourie is a small coastal town in the Clarence Valley Council of New South Wales, located between the major cities of Brisbane and Sydney. Angourie faces the South Pacific Ocean to the east, where humpback whales migrate north to warmer waters during winter.

Angourie’s coast is lined with small, white-sand beaches with consistent waves that attract surf aficionados from around Australia. Spooky Beach, Angourie Point Beach, and Angourie Back Beach are just a few within walking distance of Angourie’s town centre. Driftwood washed ashore and wild trees surrounding each beach create an ambiance of an island getaway while still being connected to Australia’s mainland.

Within an hour’s drive of Angourie, you can embark on a multi-day trip to explore the Yuraygir National Park, which has beaches and waterways that draw in visitors for swimming, surfing, and snorkeling. Its panoramic lookout points along the Yuraygir Coastal Walk trail offer a different perspective of the rugged headlands jutting into the ocean. Even closer to Angourie is one of the few protected rainforests still left in the Southern Hemisphere, found in the Iluka Nature Reserve. The reserve is home to diverse tropical plant life and native marsupials including kangaroos and echidnas.


The best time to stay in a holiday rental in Angourie

No matter the time of year, you’ll be able to enjoy the sea air from your Angourie accommodation. Summer, spring, and autumn are all mild with warm, clear weather during the days and slightly cooler evenings. Winters are cool and comfortable. On sunny summer days, you can visit the Angourie Blue Pool or Green Pool, where you can swim in naturally-formed swimming holes surrounded by jagged rock formations and trees. In autumn, the waves are ideal for surfing, and you can watch surfers at Angourie Beach take advantage of the season’s bigger waves. If you visit Angourie in spring, be sure to take in the incredible purple jacaranda trees in full bloom. On a clear winter day, you can take advantage of the comfortable weather and picnic on the Yamba Lighthouse grounds. The historic lighthouse has been illuminated for local ships since 1888.


Top things to do in Angourie

Yuraygir National Park

Make a single-day or multi-day adventure into the impeccable Yuraygir National Park. Follow the park’s maintained coastal walking trail to see pristine beaches, colourful rock formations, and protected lakes. Other available activities inside the park include hiking, swimming, fishing, and surfing. There are picnic areas and campsites scattered throughout the park. If you visit during winter, keep your eye out toward the water as this is an ideal site for humpback whale watching from May to November.

Pippi Beach

Gorgeous Pippi Beach, just north of Angourie, is covered in soft white sand and bordered by water with a distinct turquoise hue. You can walk along the shore to discover the beach’s namesake: the iconic, edible shellfish known as pippis. There are plenty of picnic tables from which to take in the views here.

Iluka Nature Reserve

One of the last remaining rainforests in Australia is part of the Iluka Nature Reserve, only a 35-minute drive north of Angourie. Visitors can explore Iluka’s trailhead covering part of the Gondwana Rainforest and all of the exotic wildlife that come with it. The rare coastal emu, red kangaroo, and Australia’s small marsupials like wallabies and wombats live throughout this protected area. Tropical vegetation like the strangler trees with vine-like trunks line the trail walkway.

Destinations to explore