Sydney's Best Beaches in 2026: From Bondi to the Northern Beaches
A local's guide to the beaches that make Sydney one of the world's great coastal cities.
A local's guide to the beaches that make Sydney one of the world's great coastal cities.

Sydney is blessed with ocean beaches on a scale that few cities can match. From the iconic Bondi in the east to the long sweep of the Northern Beaches, the city's coastline is one of its defining assets. Here is a guide to what makes each area distinct.
Bondi Beach is the most famous beach in Australia and earns its reputation. The broad crescent, the reliable surf, the Icebergs ocean pool and the coastal walk to Coogee make it a genuinely exceptional destination. The walk from Bondi through Tamarama, Bronte, Clovelly and Gordons Bay to Coogee is one of the finest coastal walks in any world city. Bondi is crowded in summer but worth it for the energy and the view.
The Northern Beaches — Manly, Freshwater, Curl Curl, Dee Why, Collaroy, Narrabeen, Mona Vale, Newport and Bilgola north to Palm Beach — offer a quieter alternative to the eastern beaches. The northern beaches communities have a distinct culture: more surf-focused, less tourist-oriented than Bondi. Palm Beach, at the northern tip of the peninsula, has a secluded quality remarkable for its proximity to a city of five million people.
Cronulla in the south is Sydney's only beach accessible directly by train. A long stretch of beach, a surf culture that goes back generations and a community character separate from the rest of Sydney make it worth the trip. The Royal National Park coast to the south is wild and accessible by ferry.
Sydney's ocean pools — at Bondi, Bronte, Coogee, Malabar, Mahon, Queenscliff and others — are one of the city's distinctive coastal features. They provide safe swimming in saltwater pools carved from the rock platform, filled by the sea.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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