Cave Point Lookout
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Get a birds-eye view of the Fitzgerald River National Park’s stunning coast from a lookout on the edge of the sea cliffs at Cave Point approximately 20 minutes drive from Hopetoun’s town centre.

The sheer cliffs at Cave Point and vast Southern Ocean in all it’s moods are a must see on your visit during your stay on the Fitzgerald Biosphere Coast. The point is an ideal place to spot whales and seabirds and discover a diversity of plants in the rock gardens that clothe these exposed headlands.

Fantastic foundations
The jagged and tilted rocks at Cave Point are a distinctive feature of headlands and peaks throughout the park. They were once layers of silt and sand deposited on an ancient the sea floor that were subsequently transformed and uplifted by movements of the Earth’s crust. Siltstone was turned into the colourful schist at Cave Point and sandstone to the much harder crystalline quartzite that has created the park’s peaks.
Coastal shapes
From Cave Point there is a clear view of the magnificent East Mount Barren where the jagged outline of tilted rock ridges resemble the spine of a giant sleeping dragon. Below the peak on its seaward slope is a distinctive broad platform carved by the action of pounding waves when the sea level was higher than it is today. If you absorb this view and then look west you’ll discover that headlands all along the Fitzgerald coast are similar wave-cut platforms created at the same time.
Walks at Cave Point
The formed path from the carpark to the lookout (600m return) is on a gentle incline with two rest stops and suitable for wheelchairs. Cave Point is also the eastern trailhead for the Hakea Trail, which follows the coast past West Beach for another 20km to Quoin Head. Enjoy a short walk along the trail to the scenic bay at West Beach (1.6km return).
Your safety:
Coast Risks and Cliff Risks are significant in this park.
Cave Point Lookout
Scan the QR code to Download this page as a pdf

Get a birds-eye view of the Fitzgerald River National Park’s stunning coast from a lookout on the edge of the sea cliffs at Cave Point approximately 20 minutes drive from Hopetoun’s town centre.

The sheer cliffs at Cave Point and vast Southern Ocean in all it’s moods are a must see on your visit during your stay on the Fitzgerald Biosphere Coast. The point is an ideal place to spot whales and seabirds and discover a diversity of plants in the rock gardens that clothe these exposed headlands.

Fantastic foundations
The jagged and tilted rocks at Cave Point are a distinctive feature of headlands and peaks throughout the park. They were once layers of silt and sand deposited on an ancient the sea floor that were subsequently transformed and uplifted by movements of the Earth’s crust. Siltstone was turned into the colourful schist at Cave Point and sandstone to the much harder crystalline quartzite that has created the park’s peaks.
Coastal shapes
From Cave Point there is a clear view of the magnificent East Mount Barren where the jagged outline of tilted rock ridges resemble the spine of a giant sleeping dragon. Below the peak on its seaward slope is a distinctive broad platform carved by the action of pounding waves when the sea level was higher than it is today. If you absorb this view and then look west you’ll discover that headlands all along the Fitzgerald coast are similar wave-cut platforms created at the same time.
Walks at Cave Point
The formed path from the carpark to the lookout (600m return) is on a gentle incline with two rest stops and suitable for wheelchairs. Cave Point is also the eastern trailhead for the Hakea Trail, which follows the coast past West Beach for another 20km to Quoin Head. Enjoy a short walk along the trail to the scenic bay at West Beach (1.6km return).
Your safety:
Coast Risks and Cliff Risks are significant in this park.