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Kings Park and Botanic Garden, Australia
Kings Park and Botanic Garden

Western Australia

Kings Park and Botanic Garden

Perth's free, walkable showpiece: a vast bushland park on a rise above the Swan River, with the city skyline below, a treetop walkway and the September wildflowers.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Perth, Australia

Opening hours

The park is open around the clock as public open space; the Botanic Garden, the Federation Walkway and the visitor centre keep daytime hours (the walkway typically opens from around 09:00 to late afternoon). Free guided walks run most days in season. Hours shift seasonally, so confirm current times on the official site.

Tickets

Free โ€” no ticket needed to enter the park, the Botanic Garden or the Federation Walkway. Parking is mostly free, though some bays are metered, and the volunteer-led guided walks are also free. You only pay for the cafรฉ, gift shop or any special events.

Time needed

One to three hours. An hour covers the Federation Walkway, the war memorial and the main lookout; allow a half-day if you want to walk the bush trails or picnic.

In short

Visiting 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.

A park with the city at its feet

Kings Park is the thing to do first in Perth, partly because it is free and partly because it hands you the whole city in one go. Spread over a bushland rise on Mount Eliza, it is one of the largest inner-city parks anywhere, and from its eastern edge the Swan River and the Perth skyline are laid out below you. A good chunk of it is genuine native bush rather than mown lawn, which is unusual this close to a downtown, and within it sits the Western Australian Botanic Garden growing thousands of the stateโ€™s plant species.

The signature walk is the Federation Walkway, a raised path that runs partly along a steel-and-glass arched bridge through the treetops โ€” short, easy and the best single thing to aim for if your time is tight. Nearby, the State War Memorial sits at the most commanding lookout, where the view over the river is at its widest.

Timing it and getting up there

It is an easy approach from the CBD: a twenty- to thirty-minute walk up from the city or riverfront, a short bus or taxi, or a drive into the mostly free car parks at the top. Allow an hour to take in the walkway, the memorial and the main lookout, or stretch it to a half-day if you want to follow the bush trails or picnic on the lawns.

Time it for September into October if you can: that is the wildflower season, when the Botanic Garden and surrounding bush put on Western Australiaโ€™s spring show. Outside that window it is still very much worth the trip โ€” the views and the walkway carry it year-round. Free volunteer-guided walks run most days, and it is a lovely spot at dusk as the skyline lights come on. Confirm walkway and visitor-centre hours on the official site before you set out.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Perth city guide.

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Kings Park and Botanic Garden FAQs

Is Kings Park free to visit?
Yes. The park, the Botanic Garden and the Federation Walkway are all free, most parking is free, and the regular guided walks cost nothing. It is one of the best-value mornings in Perth โ€” you only spend if you stop at the cafรฉ or buy something in the shop.
How do you get to Kings Park from the city centre?
It sits on Mount Eliza right beside the CBD. You can walk up from the city or the river in around twenty to thirty minutes, take a short bus or taxi, or drive and park inside the park. The climb rewards you with the skyline-and-river view that the park is known for.
When is the best time to go for the wildflowers?
September into October is the famous wildflower season, when the Botanic Garden and the bushland put on Western Australia's spring display and the park hosts its festival. Outside that window it is still worth it for the views and the walkway, just without the carpet of flowers.