Winter Camping Gear Checklist for Aussie Families
Winter Camping Gear Checklist
for Aussie Families
Everything your family needs to stay warm, safe, and smiling from the first cold morning to the last campfire ember.
There's something genuinely MAGICAL about a winter campsite. The crowds are gone, the air is sharp, the kids are finally off their screens, and the billy's on the fire before anyone's fully awake. But ask any seasoned Aussie camper and they'll tell you the same thing: winter camping lives or dies by how prepared you are for the great outdoors.
Forget one layer and you're spending Saturday night staring at the tent ceiling, rigid with cold. Forget the gloves and the kids will be begging to go home before breakfast is done. We've pulled together a complete, family-tested checklist for 2026 — everything from shelter to hand protection — so your next winter adventure goes smoothly.
“Winter camping in Australia is wildly underrated. Less flies, fewer crowds, and cooler days instead of 40-degree afternoons. Just crisp air, quiet trails, and a fire that actually feels necessary.”
Before You Pack
Know Your Temperatures
Australian winters vary dramatically by region. Understanding what temperatures you're actually heading into is the foundation of your packing list.
|
STATE |
Day Temp |
Night Temp |
Gloves Needed? |
|---|---|---|---|
|
ACT |
14°C | 1–4°C |
☑ Yes |
|
VIC |
16°C | 7–9°C |
☑ Yes |
|
NSW |
19°C | 10–13°C |
☑ Morning & night |
|
SA |
17°C | 8–10°C |
☑ Yes |
|
TAS |
14°C | 3–5°C |
☑Essential |
|
QLD |
22°C | 12–15°C | Optional |
The Glove Most Families Forget to Buy — Until It's Too Late

Here's how it goes: the family packs everything, drives three hours to the campsite, sets up in the dark, and then someone reaches for their phone to check the weather forecast — and realises their hands are too cold to work a touchscreen. Then the kids start complaining. Then the parents start arguing about who forgot the gloves.

The 710-K was built for exactly this scenario. It's a full-coverage outdoor glove with fleece lining for genuine warmth, and smart-touch fabric on both the thumb and index finger — not just one finger — so you can actually use your phone, check maps, and pay at the servo without taking them off. The reflective patches mean the kids are visible when they're running around the campsite after dark. And it comes in sizes S through XL, so the whole family is covered from one product.
2026 Picks
Best Family Winter Camping Spots in Australia

The best thing about Aussie winter camping? The popular summer spots are suddenly quiet. Here are our top picks for family-friendly winter sites this year.
Grampians National Park
Misty morning landscapes, world-class bushwalking from the campsite, and wildlife that's far more active in the cool. Halls Gap is the perfect family base.
Kosciuszko National Park
For adventurous families. The Snowy Mountains in June are beginning their ski season — camp near Thredbo and let the kids experience the snow without the hotel price tag.
Wilsons Promontory
Pristine beaches and granite mountains with far fewer visitors than summer. Wombats wander through the Tidal River campsite at dusk — the kids will never forget it.
Blue Mountains
One of the most accessible family winter destinations from Sydney. Cathedral Reserve offers bush camping with magnificent mountain scenery as your backdrop.
Flinders Ranges
Rugged mountains, wildlife, and some of the most ancient landscapes on earth. Winter brings mild days and cold, clear nights perfect for stargazing.
Glenworth Valley, Central Coast
For families who want the full off-grid experience without the extreme cold. An hour from Sydney, campfires permitted, and room to roam.
💡 Pro Tips from Experienced Aussie Family Campers
- Book your campsite early — winter weekends at popular spots fill up fast, especially around school holidays and the June long weekend.
- Test your setup in the backyard first. Pitch the tent, check the stove, try on all the gear. Discovering a broken zipper at home beats discovering it at the campsite.
- Keep gloves accessible — not buried in your bag. Mornings are the coldest and most hands-on time. Kids tend to refuse to wear them until they're already freezing.
- Store your power bank and lithium batteries in your sleeping bag at night — cold dramatically reduces battery capacity.
- Pack one more warm layer than you think you need. You can always take it off.
The Bottom Line

Winter camping with the family isn't about suffering through the cold — it's about being prepared enough to actually enjoy it. The quiet trails, the campfire that earns its keep, the kids running around a site that isn't elbow-to-elbow with tourists. That experience is genuinely one of the best things about Australian winters.

Get your shelter right, layer properly, and don't underestimate the small things — like a good pair of gloves for every member of the family, from the littlest one to the tallest. Cold hands are the number one reason families call it early on a winter camping trip. It's the easiest problem to solve.
Available in sizes S to XL — for every member of the family.
Shop KAMELO Winter Gloves →