Tasmania, Australia
Extreme 4WD Tracks
8 extreme tracks in Tasmania.
Extreme 4WD tracks are for experienced, well-equipped off-road drivers only. These are the tracks where getting it wrong has serious consequences — vehicle damage, injury, or being stuck in a remote location without self-recovery capability. They are not beginner routes with a scary name.
Extreme-rated tracks on Newtracs have been driven and rated by multiple users reporting genuine difficulty — steep loose gradients, exposed shelf roads, axle-deep crossings in standard conditions, or sections where a winch is the difference between completing the route and not completing it. Respect the rating.
What to expect on an Extreme track
- Technically demanding in ways that punish inattention — not just rough and bumpy
- Gradients that may exceed 50% with loose or wet surface
- Crossings that may be hub-deep or above in normal dry-season conditions
- Shelf roads with single-track widths and no guardrails
- Remote enough that a winch recovery in the wrong spot takes hours
Vehicle requirements for Extreme tracks
A purpose-built or seriously modified 4WD with front and rear lockers, mud-terrain tyres in good condition, a quality winch (8,000 lb minimum) with at least one snatch block and a tree saver, dual batteries, long-range fuel, a full-size spare, and a second full-size spare on the longer routes. Engine snorkel mandatory for any track with significant crossings. A satellite communicator is not optional.
Driver requirements for Extreme tracks
Significant off-road experience, a completed advanced 4WD recovery course, and the ability to execute a self-recovery in awkward terrain. Do not attempt extreme tracks solo — minimum two vehicles, both capable and both recovery-equipped. File a detailed trip plan with someone who will act on it if you do not report in.
A note on Extreme ratings
The Extreme rating is based on aggregated real-world driving data from multiple users. A track does not get an Extreme rating because one driver found it hard — it has earned that rating across many trips. Conditions can make Extreme tracks worse. Rainfall, erosion, and seasonal changes can close even the most established Extreme routes without warning. Always check before you go.
Extreme tracks in Tasmania
Showing 1–8 of 8 tracks