Western Australia
Perth
Australia's most isolated capital rewards a slower pace: bank a Rottnest quokka day, a Swan Valley wine run, and don't try to rush the place.
Best length
3-4 days (more if it's the start of a WA road trip)
Airport
Perth Airport (PER), ~12-18km east of the CBD
Airport to centre
Airport Line train ~20 min to Perth Underground
Best base
Perth CBD/Northbridge for the centre; Fremantle for harbour character
In short
Perth at a glance
Perth is the one Australian city you can reach nonstop from the UK โ Qantas flies London Heathrow here in about 17 hours โ so it suits a slower trip that opens or closes a Western Australia leg rather than a packed sightseeing list. Base in the city centre or Fremantle, give a full day to Rottnest Island and its quokkas, spend a long lunch in the Swan Valley and a morning in Kings Park, tap a SmartRider-compatible card on the trains and ferries, and accept that everything here is a long way from the rest of the country.
The short version
- Perth is Qantas's London nonstop arrival point โ about 17 hours direct, the one Australian city you reach without a connection.
- Give Rottnest Island a full day: it's the quokka selfie and a car-free cycling-and-swimming island, not a quick add-on.
- The Swan Valley is a 25-minute drive of cellar doors, breweries and produce โ Australia's oldest wine region after the Hunter, and far closer to a capital than most.
- Fremantle is worth a half-day or a base in its own right: the prison, the markets, the harbour and a craft-beer scene 30 minutes south on the train.
- Tap a contactless card or buy a SmartRider for the trains, buses and ferries; the free CAT buses loop the city centre and Fremantle for nothing.
Perth is the most isolated big city in the world, and that fact shapes the whole trip. Itโs closer to Singapore than to Sydney, a five-hour flight from the east coast, and the one Australian capital you can reach nonstop from the UK โ Qantas flies London Heathrow to Perth in about 17 hours. The mistake UK visitors make is bolting it onto an east-coast itinerary as an afterthought and then resenting the travel. Either give it its own leg as the front or back end of a Western Australia trip, or skip it; what it doesnโt reward is being squeezed in between Sydney and Cairns. Once you accept the distance, the upside is a sunny, low-stress, low-crowd city thatโs genuinely easy to like.
Three to four days is the honest span: a morning in Kings Park above the river, a full day on car-free Rottnest Island for the swimming and the quokkas, and a day split between the port town of Fremantle and the cellar doors of the Swan Valley. The other thing first-timers underestimate is how quiet the centre goes midweek after dark โ plan your evenings in Northbridge or Fremantle, not the CBD. The structured planning below โ where to base yourself, whatโs worth booking, how to get in from the airport on the train, and a realistic budget in pounds โ picks up from here.
Plan your Perth trip
Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.
Top things to do in Perth
Rottnest Island
Book a Rottnest ferry online before you go โ summer and weekend sailings from Fremantle and Perth fill days ahead, and you add the A$23.50 island admission at the same checkout, so there's no separate ticket to queue for on arrival. Hire a bike at the Thomson Bay jetty rather than relying on the island bus, give yourself the full day for the swimming bays, and meet the quokkas calmly near the settlement at dawn or dusk rather than chasing them in the midday heat. The island is car-free, so plan around bike and ferry timings, not a hire car.
Kings Park and Botanic Garden
Kings Park is one of the world's largest inner-city parks, spread over a rise above the Swan River with the Perth skyline laid out below. It is free, an easy walk or short bus from the CBD, and at its best in the September-October wildflower season. The standouts are the treetop Federation Walkway through the Botanic Garden, the State War Memorial lookout and the long views over the river and city. You can wander for an hour or settle in for a half-day.
Where to stay first
The areas that make a first visit easier โ not an exhaustive directory.
Perth CBD & Northbridge
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe most convenient first-timer base: the airport train, the free CAT buses, Kings Park and the river foreshore are all on the doorstep, with Northbridge's bars, small restaurants and the WA Museum a short walk over the rail line. The cultural-and-nightlife heart, slightly noisier on weekend nights.
Best for: First-timers who want the centre, the train and Kings Park nearby
Fremantle
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe harbour-town move 30 minutes south by train: heritage streets, the markets, the brewing scene and a more relaxed evening rhythm than the CBD. Better value and far more character than a city tower, at the cost of a longer hop into the centre when you want it.
Best for: Harbour character, food and beer, repeat visitors
Scarborough & Cottesloe
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe beach bases on the Indian Ocean: Cottesloe is the postcard swimming-and-sunset beach a short train-plus-bus from the centre, Scarborough the surfier strip with the foreshore pool. Best for a beach-first stay, less handy for the city sights and Rottnest ferry.
Best for: Beach-first stays, sunset watchers, longer trips
Subiaco & Leederville
ยฃ valueLeafy inner suburbs on the train line, full of cafรฉs, weekend markets and a calmer local feel than Northbridge. The value-and-character alternative for a quieter base that's still a few minutes from the centre by rail.
Best for: Value, cafรฉs, a quieter local base
Airport to city centre
| Option | Time | Cost | Book ahead? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Airport Line train to Perth Underground | ~20 min | Transperth fare ~A$5.20 (~ยฃ2.75) | Just tap a contactless card or SmartRider |
| Taxi or rideshare to the CBD | ~20-30 min | usually A$35-50 (~ยฃ19-26) | Good for late arrivals or groups with luggage |
| Pre-booked shuttle / private transfer | ~25-40 min | from about A$25 (~ยฃ13) per person | Useful door-to-door for hotels off the train line |
When to go
Sweet spot: September to November (spring) and March to April (autumn) are the sweet spot: warm, dry days for Rottnest and Kings Park without the brutal heat of high summer, and the September-October window catches the wildflowers. Perth gets a hot, dry Mediterranean summer and the seasons are flipped from the UK.
December to February is high summer โ hot, dry and the priciest time, with the cooling afternoon sea breeze locals call the Fremantle Doctor that takes the edge off the beaches; book Rottnest ferries well ahead. June to August is a mild, wetter winter, more like a cool UK autumn, fine for the city and Fremantle but too cool and choppy for much swimming. The shoulder months either side give the best mix of weather, price and space.
What it costs
Return economy from the UK to Perth runs roughly ยฃ900-ยฃ1,500: the Qantas London Heathrow nonstop is usually the priciest single leg but saves you the connection, while one-stop fares via Singapore, Dubai or Doha can come in cheaper. The nonstop is about 17 hours in the air; budget the December-January peak and school holidays at ยฃ1,500+ and the cheapest May-June dates nearer ยฃ800-ยฃ900.
Daily budget per person
Perth's prices sit a notch below Sydney's, but the city empties at night midweek, so plan dinners in Northbridge or Fremantle rather than expecting the CBD to be busy. Tipping is not expected anywhere, and choose Australian dollars when a card terminal offers you GBP.
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Where to stay
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Also in Australia
Perth FAQs
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