The Best Places in Australia to Disconnect for a Creative Retreat
From artist residencies to off-grid cabins, these places make it easier to tap into your creative instincts (and maybe, truly, finish that novel).
There’s a specific brand of exhaustion that no amount of scrolling on the couch can alleviate. The tabs are multiplying, your attention span is fried, and every second person online appears to be “working on something exciting” – everyone, it seems, except you. Increasingly, the creator’s fantasy isn’t about luxury so much as absence – absence of noise, pressure, notifications, or obligation.
Which is perhaps why the creative retreat has undergone a modern reinvention. Once synonymous with sparse monasteries or prestigious residencies, today creative escape can look like many things: a heritage cottage an hour from Sydney, an off-grid shack overlooking the Southern Ocean, a tiny rainforest cabin beside a creek, or a formal residency designed specifically to give artists space and solitude.
Some creatives want structure and community, while others just want a wood fire, a notebook, a canvas, or several uninterrupted hours to stare dramatically out a window. This list is a mix of both – official creative residencies alongside design-led stays that appear engineered for finally finishing the thing you keep saying you’re going to write/plan/paint/draw/make.
The Special House | Ettalong Beach, NSW
There are some houses that immediately alter your nervous system. The Special House is one of them. Tucked away in Ettalong Beach just over an hour from Sydney, the 1940s cottage belongs to artist and creative director Caroline Presbury and her husband Sunny Wood, who lovingly restored the double-brick home into something personal and transporting. The philosophy here isn’t polished perfection – it’s charm, patina, imperfection, and ease (“humble is the new luxury,” as the house gently insists).
Every detail feels considered without ever tipping into precious. There’s a three-metre monastery dining table sourced from Japan, a giant couch seemingly designed for accidental naps, French flax linen bedding, hand-built cabinetry finished using the Japanese shou sugi ban technique, and an outdoor bath where entire afternoons can disappear with alarming ease.
But what makes The Special House particularly suited to creative work is the atmosphere it creates. This place feels analogue in the best possible way – where you suddenly remember how to read for three straight hours or wake up wanting to draw before checking your phone.
Lake Eildon Cabin | Victoria
Where some retreats compel productivity, the architecturally designed Lake Eildon Cabin in Victoria simply asks you to slow down enough to notice the light changing across the water. Perched above Lake Eildon, every room angles your attention outward – towards the glassy water or the shifting mist or the gum-lined horizon. You can see the lake from the shower, the bed, the deck, even while cooking dinner.
Inside, interiors are minimal without feeling cold – think natural textures, soft bedding, warm timber, and enough creature comforts to make disappearing here for a week extremely plausible. Outside, there’s a plunge pool, direct lake access and uninterrupted privacy. It’s the kind of place where your screen time accidentally plummets because there’s simply nothing pulling at you.
Camel Beach House | Eyre Peninsula, South Australia
If your ideal creative retreat involves the sensation of being completely removed from civilisation, Camel Beach House delivers. Located on a vast private conservation sanctuary on South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula, the off-grid stay sits between roaring ocean and sprawling desert scrub. One direction leads to ancient headlands and empty beaches, while the other opens onto dunes and enormous skies painted in dusty pink light.
The cabin itself feels part fisherman’s shack, part artist hideaway – rustic and eclectic, and filled with books, textiles, music, and objects collected over time. There’s no television, limited reception and very little to do besides read, swim, cook and stare at the horizon while contemplating your existence.
Wee Tiny | Austinville Valley, QLD
Deep in Queensland’s rainforest hinterland, beside a running creek beneath Springbrook National Park, sits Wee Tiny – a tiny house that feels emotionally expansive. Brought to life by husband-and-wife duo Clancy Palmer and Fiona Gunn, the retreat was designed explicitly as a place to switch off (spoiler: it succeeds). The cabin’s small footprint encourages a slower pace almost immediately: mornings spent beside the creek, afternoons reading on the veranda, evenings bathing in the wood-fired tub while listening to cicadas rise through the trees.
The interiors are layered with reclaimed timber, antique fittings, mottled windows and vintage pieces that give the space a lived-in warmth. Wee Tiny understands that creativity often arrives through simplicity rather than stimulation, so there are no unnecessary distractions here.
Carreg Cottage | West Woombye, Queensland
With its hand-built stone walls and rolling green surrounds, Carreg Cottage feels less like Queensland and more like you’ve stumbled into a tiny cottage somewhere in the Scottish Highlands. Overlooking a small dam and surrounded by farm animals, the stay leans fully into rustic charm (in the best possible way). Think timber interiors, misty mornings, cups of tea by the fire, and evenings spent reading beneath blankets while rain hits the roof.
For creatives, it’s ideal precisely because there’s very little spectacle. You can wander into nearby Montville for supplies, then retreat back to the cottage and disappear from the world again.
Pumphouse Point | Lake St Clair, TAS
There’s something kind of mythic about Pumphouse Point. Set dramatically on a glacial lake in Tasmania’s wilderness, the adults-only retreat sits isolated among bushland and water, connected to shore by a long jetty that immediately makes everyday life feel very far away.
The mood here is, well, moody – all timber interiors, mist rolling across the lake and long quiet dinners beside the fire. You’re encouraged to lean into slowness: walking trails, wine by the water, books from the communal shelves, deep baths and early nights. For creative work, it’s ideal. Not because it’s hyper-productive, but because the landscape recalibrates your sense of scale. You stop thinking in ‘inbox terms’ and your brain stretches out again.
Cleves Hut | Nannup, WA
Cleves Hut is unapologetically secluded, set beside the Blackwood River in Western Australia, and surrounded by grazing cattle and towering trees that feel almost suspicious if you’re used to city life.
The off-grid cabin’s interiors are simple and cosy, but the true hero is the outdoor bath – oversized and perfectly positioned for long soaks beneath uninterrupted stars. This is the kind of place where you rediscover tiny pleasures: cooking slowly, making coffee at sunrise, watching weather move across paddocks, writing by hand because somehow it feels more appropriate. We’ll say it: it’s romance novel energy.
Sea Sea Hotel | Crescent Head, NSW
Not every writer’s retreat needs to happen in total isolation. Sometimes creative energy comes from being around interesting people, good design and slightly chaotic coastal charm.
Sea Sea Hotel in Crescent Head manages to feel both social and restorative at once. The interiors read as surf shack meets artist residency meets very cool friend’s beach house – filled with colour, texture, books, and art.
Importantly, Crescent Head itself moves at a different speed. Mornings begin with surfers heading out before sunrise; afternoons linger into tacos, wine, conversations that could stretch for hours. You could absolutely come here to create seriously. You could also accidentally spend most of the trip talking to strangers and reading by the pool instead. (Both feel valid.)
The Salty Dog | Newport, NSW
If your brain only fully relaxes once surrounded by water, The Salty Dog may be your answer. Floating just offshore in Pittwater, the tiny home stay turns disconnection into something totally cinematic. You arrive by boat, rinse off after ocean swims beneath the outdoor shower, then spend evenings watching the light disappear across the harbour from the deck.
The space itself is compact but cleverly designed, with everything you need and nothing you don’t. The gentle rocking of the water, combined with the physical distance from shore, creates a strange sense of suspension from normal life. We’d argue that it’s difficult to doomscroll when you’re literally floating.
The Second | Sydney, NSW
Unlike many retreats focused purely on solitude, The Second approaches creativity as conversation. Its invitation-only residency program hosts a rotating mix of writers, photographers, filmmakers, designers, and artists inside an extraordinary warehouse apartment in Sydney. Rather than prescribing outcomes, the residency encourages exploration, exchange and experimentation across disciplines.
The loft itself is spectacular – soaring five-metre ceilings, Carrara marble, vintage Murano lighting, and enormous warehouse windows flooded with morning light. But the real appeal lies in the atmosphere created between residents. There’s an openness to ideas here, a sense of creative cross-pollination that feels increasingly rare.
For creatives stuck in isolation or craving creative momentum again, it offers something different: not escape from people, but immersion among the right ones.
Bundanon | Shoalhaven, NSW
Bundanon is perhaps Australia’s most iconic creative residency – and for good reason. Gifted to the Australian public by artist Arthur Boyd and his wife Yvonne, the sprawling Shoalhaven property exists specifically to support creative practice across disciplines.
Artists, writers, musicians, scientists, and researchers come here to think, make, and collaborate within an extraordinary natural landscape of bushland and river. And unlike many commercial “creative retreats,” Bundanon is grounded in genuine artistic legacy and exchange – the residency program offers participants time, space and community away from the pressures of daily life.
Varuna | Blue Mountains, NSW
For writers specifically, Varuna occupies near-mythical status. Known as The National Writers’ House, the beloved “big yellow house” in the Blue Mountains has hosted generations of Australian writers seeking what can often feel impossible elsewhere: uninterrupted time to work.
Residencies here balance solitude with gentle creative community. Writers spend their days independently working before gathering for meals, feedback or conversation in the evenings. There’s mentorship available, but no rigid structure – just space, support and an understanding that writing often requires both discipline and openness. The Blue Mountains setting doesn’t hurt either – misty mornings, eucalyptus air and the distant sense that your novel may finally sort itself out.
Craftaways Creative Retreat | Mornington Peninsula, VIC
Not every creative retreat needs to involve complete isolation and existential reckoning. Craftaways on the Mornington Peninsula takes a more communal approach, designed specifically for groups gathering to make things together – whether that’s writing, sewing, photography, wellness workshops, or collaborative creative projects.
The atmosphere is relaxed and welcoming. Large, shared spaces encourage conversation and collaboration, while the nearby beaches and Peninsula Hot Springs provide easy opportunities to step away from the work entirely. For writers feeling creatively blocked, there’s something genuinely useful about temporarily working alongside other people also trying to make something. Even if it’s just for accountability’s sake.
Pack the Essentials
Espresso & Sky Piped Long Sleep Set Espresso & Sky Piped Long Sleep Set
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