
4WD Trails in Western Australia
3,721 trails in Western Australia, Australia.
About Western Australia
Western Australia is bigger than most countries, and its 4WD network reflects that. The Gibb River Road, the Canning Stock Route, the Pilbara, the Karijini gorges, and the Cape Range coastal tracks each demand serious preparation.
In the south-west, the Yeagarup dunes, the D’Entrecasteaux coast, and the Southern Forests offer accessible weekend driving. The further north you push, the longer the distances between fuel and the more critical your self-recovery setup becomes.
Most northern routes are dry-season-only, May through October. The Canning is a multi-week expedition. Long-range tanks, satellite communication, and a tested recovery kit are mandatory above the 26th parallel.
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Popular trails in Western Australia
Showing 2137–2160 of 3,721 trails
Morton Street
Runnymede Road
Davis Road
Pead Road
Swann Road
Chittock Road
Needilup Refuse Road
Hesford Road
Pead Road
Fenwick Road
Metcalf North Road
Judal - Mileura Road
Jam Road
Runnymede Road
Fleay Road
Runnymede Road
Ludwing Road
Cooksey Road
Boase Road
Hesford Road
Ure Road
Toole Road
Black Road
Thornton Road
Frequently asked questions
When is the best time to drive the Gibb River Road?
May through September is the classic window — cool and dry, river levels manageable, stations and roadhouses open. The road is usually accessible from late April and stays driveable until October or early November. Outside that window, wet season rains close multiple crossings. Check the Shire of Derby-West Kimberley road conditions page before departure.
How long does the Gibb River Road take?
The main track from Derby to Kununurra is 660 km of unsealed road. Most groups allow 7–10 days to do it properly — that includes side tracks to Bell Gorge, Tunnel Creek, Manning Gorge, Barnett River, and the Mitchell Falls Plateau. Rushing it in three days misses the point entirely. The Mitchell Falls walk adds a 4-hour return trip from the plateau camp.
Is a snorkel essential for WA 4WD trips?
For the Kimberley and Pilbara, a snorkel is strongly recommended — the Pentecost River crossing on the Gibb and others can be axle-deep in a normal dry season. For south-west WA tracks (Yeagarup dunes, Holland Track, Collie State Forest), a snorkel is optional. Check your vehicle's factory wading depth before crossing anything unfamiliar — the depth rating matters more than the snorkel itself.
Do I need a permit for the Canning Stock Route?
The Canning Stock Route itself does not require a single permit, but several sections cross Aboriginal land requiring free permits from the relevant Land Council (Martu, Ngaanyatjarra, or Kiwirrkurra depending on the section). The permits are free and take 2–4 weeks to process. The trip is 1850 km through the Gibson and Great Sandy Deserts — only attempt it with at least two well-equipped vehicles, a satellite communicator, and fuel for 700+ km between resupply points.