21 Best Sights in Adelaide, South Australia

Background Illustration for Sights

We've compiled the best of the best in Adelaide - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Adelaide Botanic Garden

City Center Fodor's Choice

These magnificent formal gardens include an international rose garden, giant Amazonian water lilies, an avenue of magnificent Moreton Bay fig trees, acres of green lawns, and a gorgeous Victorian palm house. The Bicentennial Conservatory—the largest single-span greenhouse in the southern hemisphere—provides an environment for lowland rain-forest species such as the cassowary palm and torch ginger. The Santos Museum of Economic Botany contains fascinating exhibits on the commercial use of some species, and on-site Restaurant Botanic utilizes many plants grown on-site in exquisite degustations. In summer the Moonlight Cinema series screens new, classic, and cult films in adjacent Botanic Park at sunset; if you forget a picnic blanket you can hire one as well as buy drinks and snacks. Tickets sell fast, so plan ahead. Check the website for workshops, events, and exhibitions in the park.

Art Gallery of South Australia

City Center Fodor's Choice

Many famous Australian painters, including Tom Robbins, Margaret Preston, and Sidney Nolan are represented alongside Renaissance and British artworks. But the real jewel is the collection of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander works that showcases artists, including Albert Namatjira, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, and John Prince Siddon. There is also a café and bookshop on-site.

Coopers Brewery

Fodor's Choice

Founded by Thomas Cooper in 1862, this is Australia's only large-scale, independent, family-owned brewery. The Coopers beer story began when Thomas created a sparkling tonic for his ailing wife, Ann, but other customers soon began to clamor for the all-natural ales and stout that he delivered by horse and cart. Visitors can take accessible guided tours of the production facility and enjoy samples of the award-winning Coopers ales in the tasting room post-tour. Displays on the history of the brewery are brought to life with exhibits that include vintage delivery carts and brewing equipment, while the excellent 400-seat on-site restaurant has an extensive menu designed to pair with the in-house drops. Tour run Tuesday through Saturday for over-18s.

230 Regency Rd., Regency Park, SA, 5010, Australia
08-8440–1800
Sight Details
Tours A$45

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Henley Beach

Fodor's Choice

The eminently approachable beach in this affluent coastal suburb offers white sand, gently lapping waves, summer entertainment, and a square known for popular dining spots. You'll find families spread out along the shore, and there's plenty of space on the wide lawns to enjoy a picnic or fish-and-chips. The jetty is perfect for walking or fishing—drop a line in the water and try your luck. During summer, Henley Beach Square comes alive with live music and festivals while eateries along Henley Beach Road bring the world to your plate—Asian, African, Mediterranean, and Indian mix with local cuisine and incredible gelato. Amenities: food and drink; parking; toilets. Best for: sunrise; sunset; swimming; walking.

Penfolds Magill Estate

Fodor's Choice

Founded in 1844 by immigrant English doctor Christopher Rawson Penfold, this is the birthplace of Australia's most famous wine, Penfolds Grange, and one of Australia's only city wineries. Introduced in 1951, Grange is the flagship of a huge stable of wines priced from everyday to special-occasion (collectors pay tens of thousands of dollars for complete sets of Grange). Book ahead for the two-hour Magill Heritage Experience (10 am daily) to hear some of the stories behind the site; if you're a serious wine lover take the Ultimate Penfolds Experience to visit the original Penfold family cottage followed by some some premium wine tastings, or go for the Iconic Penfolds Experience, which includes a three-course lunch and wine pairings in addition to the tour.

78 Penfold Rd., Magill, SA, 5072, Australia
08-8301–5569
Sight Details
From A$35

Something incorrect in this review?

Adelaide Town Hall

City Center

This imposing Victorian building with an eye-catching clock tower made from local stone has looked out over the city since 1866. Tours visit the Colonel Light Room, where objects used to map and plan Adelaide are exhibited, and there are regular art exhibitions. The balcony of the Town Hall is famous for the appearance of the Beatles in 1964, which attracted the venue's largest crowd to date: approximately 300,000 screaming fans.

Adelaide Zoo

City Center

Australia's second-oldest zoo still retains much of its original architecture. Enter through the 1883 cast-iron gates to see giant pandas, Sumatran tigers, mischievous meerkats, and giant tortoises housed in modern, natural settings. The zoo is world-renowned for its captive breeding and release programs, and rare species including the red panda and South Australia's own yellow-footed rock wallaby are among its successes. In 2008, the Australian government and Adelaide Zoo signed a cooperative agreement to help secure the long-term survival of the giant panda, and in 2024 Xing Qiu and Yi Lan replaced the beloved Wang Wang and Fu Ni as the only giant pandas in the southern hemisphere. Special VIP panda tours are also available, as are Keeper For A Day tours that let you go behind the scenes and interact with a range of animals. Ask at the ticket office about feeding times, and consult the website for opening times for specific areas of the zoo.

Frome Rd., Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia
08-8267–3255
Sight Details
A$46

Something incorrect in this review?

Glenelg Beach

Glenelg

Located just 11 km (7 miles) from the Adelaide city center, palindromic Glenelg is a busy seaside suburb known for its sandy beach, historic jetty, volleyball courts, bustling shops, hotels, restaurants, bars, and The Beachouse entertainment complex. Trams lead the way to the beach, carrying passengers from the city along Jetty Road while pedestrians weave in and out of the various retail outlets that line the strip. A day trip to Glenelg is a summer tradition, but the easygoing beach vibe encourages everyone from backpackers to more discerning travelers to make it their Adelaide base. The beach is large and sandy with a very gentle slope, and the waters are calm. Expect to see large crowds on hotter days and, depending on the season, seaweed can be a problem. Amenities: food and drink; lifeguards; parking; showers; toilets; water sports. Best for: sunset; swimming; walking. 

ILA

City Center

The multifaceted Centre of Immersive Light and Art houses a restaurant, café, and live music venue, but the second-floor Light Room Studio is the beating heart of this high-tech complex. Accessed via a gallery that showcases works sitting at the intersection of art and technology, this one-of-a-kind venue is enclosed by 1,500 square feet of high-definition LED screens that serve as canvases for digital artists who create stunningly intricate digital gardens, rain forest, and aquaria. Exhibitions change regularly.

63 Light Sq., Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia
0421-104–469
Sight Details
Free; Light Room Studio tickets from A$25
Closed Mon. and Tues.

Something incorrect in this review?

Kaurna Walking Trail

City Center

Dual names that recognize Adelaide’s Kaurna heritage are increasingly common throughout the city, and this 10½-km (6½-mile) trail explores 24 sites of significance to the Kaurna people as it meanders along the banks of the River Torrens/Karrawirra Parri before finishing up at Victoria Square/Tarntanyangga. Along the way, artworks, interpretive signs, and historical records illuminate the everyday lives and customs of the Kaurna people before, during, and after colonization, as well as showing how much the landscape has changed in just two centuries.

Migration Museum

City Center

Exhibits in the converted 19th-century Destitute Asylum, which also served as a school where Aboriginal children were forced to train as servants to the British, explore the origins, hopes, and fates of some of the millions of immigrants who settled in Australia over the past two centuries. The museum is starkly realistic, and the bleak welcome that awaited many migrants is graphically illustrated, while temporary exhibitions point to a more hopeful future.

MOD.

City Center

This futuristic “museum of discovery” is aimed at young adults, but the rotating exhibitions that tackle surprisingly ambitious themes are designed to appeal to all ages. Interactivity is at the heart of the displays, which incorporate technology in a range of innovative ways and encourage guests to explore often complex themes and question what their impact on (and in) the future will be. In addition to Australia’s first Science on a Sphere, a giant globe that projects a range of data onto a 6-foot diameter globe, the Museum includes a café.

North Terr. at Morphett St., Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia
08-8302–6663
Sight Details
Free
Closed Sun. and Mon.

Something incorrect in this review?

National Railway Museum

Steam-train buffs will love this collection of locomotives and rolling stock in the former Port Adelaide railway yard. The largest of its kind in Australia, the collection includes enormous "mountain"-class engines and the "Tea and Sugar" train, once the lifeline for camps scattered across the deserts of South and Western Australia. For an additional cost take a ride on the historic Semaphore to Fort Glanville Tourist Railway; it runs every Sunday and public holiday from October to end of April and more frequently during school holidays. There are covered outdoor eating areas with tables and chairs at the museum, where visitors may bring their own food and drink.

76 Lipson St., Port Adelaide, SA, 5015, Australia
08-8341–1690
Sight Details
A$17

Something incorrect in this review?

National Wine Centre of Australia

City Center

This timber, steel, and glass building resembles a huge wine barrel from the outside and the soaring open-plan interior provides a suitably spectacular setting for the incredible showcase of Australian wines. The  Wine Discovery Guided Tour, offered daily at 11 am, takes you from Neolithic pottery jars to modern stainless-steel tanks, and you can even make your own virtual wine on a touch-screen computer. Guided tastings start at A$50 per person, while the on-site Wined Bar features state-of-the-art enomatic servers pouring 120 wines drawn from all over Australia. Iconic drops, including Penfold's Grange and Henschke's Hill of Grace, make regular appearances, and there’s also a good all-day menu that includes a great selection of local cheeses and smoked meats.

Parliament House

City Center

Ten Corinthian columns are the most striking features of this neoclassical parliament building. It was completed in two stages 50 years apart: the west wing in 1889 and the east wing in 1939. Alongside it is Old Parliament House, which dates from 1843. Free guided tours of both houses are offered on weekdays at 10 and 2 when parliament is not sitting, and the viewing gallery is open to the public when parliament is sitting.

SKYCITY Adelaide Casino

City Center

Housed in one half of Adelaide's grand neoclassical railway station, SkyCity is the place to go for every type of gaming, from chiming poker machines to high-stakes Texas Hold'em. The complex is also home to four bars, including the elegant Chandelier Bar, and seven restaurants, and is one of the few places in Adelaide that keeps pumping until dawn.

125 North Terr. near King William Rd., Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia
08-8212–2811

Something incorrect in this review?

South Australian Maritime Museum

Inside a restored stone warehouse, this museum in Port Adelaide, a 20-minute drive from central Adelaide, brings maritime history vividly to life with ships' figureheads, shipwreck relics, and intricate scale models including a ketch you can walk through. In the basement you can see a bunk bed aboard an 1840s immigrant ship and hear passengers telling of life and death on their journeys to South Australia. In addition to the warehouse displays, tours of the historic quarantine station are sometimes available (if that's not too real). The surrounding suburb of Port Adelaide has plenty of antiques shops to visit, and nearby Semaphore has a street lined with cafés leading to a lovely beach.

South Australian Museum

City Center

This museum's Aboriginal Cultures Gallery houses the largest collection of Indigenous Australian cultural material in the world. Old black-and-white films show traditional dancing, and touch screens convey a sense of desert life. Also in the museum are an exhibit commemorating renowned Antarctic explorer Sir Douglas Mawson, after whom Australia's main Antarctic research station is named; an Opal Fossils Gallery housing the world's most expensive opal collection and the fantastic opalized partial skeleton of a 19-foot-long plesiosaur; and a biodiversity gallery. There's also a café overlooking a grassy lawn. If you are traveling during local school holidays, there are fantastic interactive craft and education activities for children for a small fee.

St. Francis Xavier's Catholic Cathedral

City Center

A reminder of the religious tolerance espoused by the colony of South Australia, this Catholic church is the oldest cathedral in Australia. The Gothic revival structure includes a soaring nave, stone arches, side aisles with dark-wood ceilings, and beautiful stained-glass windows. For a self-guided tour, a useful free booklet called “19 minute Cathedral Tour” is available by the entrance.

17 Wakefield St., Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia
08-8210–8155

Something incorrect in this review?

St. Peter's Cathedral

North Adelaide

The spires and towers of this cathedral loom over adjacent Adelaide Oval and dramatically contrast with the nearby city skyline. St. Peter's is the epitome of Anglican architecture in Australia, and an important example of grand Gothic Revival. Free 45-minute guided tours are available Wednesday at 11 am.

Victoria Square/Tarntanyangga

City Center

Known as the "place of the red kangaroo dreaming" to Kaurna traditional owners and designated by William Light as the geographical center of Adelaide, this public space is the city's focal point and a popular meeting spot. The fountain in the square, which is lit up at night, celebrates the three rivers that supply Adelaide's water; the Torrens, Onkaparinga, and Murray are each represented by a stylized man or woman paired with an Australian native bird. The park hosts many events and attracts lunching office workers while shoppers and tourists come and go from the Glenelg-City Tram, which stops here on its way through the city.