The Redcliffe Visitor Information Centre is right at the entrance to the Redcliffe Jetty, inside the jetty arch entry at the front of it.
Volunteers offer free heritage walks to share the historical background of Redcliffe and its significance as the first European settlement in Queensland. They can provide local knowledge and access to information with maps and brochures.
Located at the heart of Redcliffe’s food and restaurant strip, you are bound to find something to appeal to everyone. If there isn’t already enough to choose from, the Sunday markets offer even more choice.
Address: Redcliffe Parade, Redcliffe, Queensland.
Website: https://www.visitmoretonbayregion.com.au/directory/redcliffe-visitor-information-centre
Phone: 07 3283 3577
Email: redcliffe.tourism@mbrit.com.au
Nearby Brown Signs
Bells Beach
Bicentennial Park – Bicentennial Park is on Redcliffe Peninsula, between Pelican Park and the Woody Point Jetty. Picnic tables, BBQs, children’s playground, and a parkour park
Gayundah Coastal Arboretum – The Gayundah Coastal Arboretum is a park located at Woody Point on the foreshores of the Redcliffe Peninsula
Gayundah Wreck – The Gayundah Wreck, of the gunboat HMAS Gayundah of the Royal Australian Navy, was beached as a waterbreak for the Woody Point cliffs at Redcliffe
Margate Beach
Pelican Park – Pelican Park on the Redcliffe Peninsula, named by the pelicans that visit. AquaSplash inflatable water park in summer, views of the bridge and Woody Point Jetty
Queens Beach – one of many on the Redcliffe Peninsula with a pathway along the full length of the beach, the path going from Newport to Clontarf
Queens Beach North – a beautiful sandy beach and picnic area on Moreton Bay at the Redcliffe Peninsular and a popular dog off-leash beach
Queens Beach South – a section of beach on Moreton Bay just north of Redcliffe Jetty on the Redcliffe Peninsula
Redcliffe Botanical Gardens
Redcliffe Jetty – an iconic symbol of the Redcliffe Peninsula for locals and tourists since built in 1885, next to the Redcliffe Visitor Information Centre and near restaurants and Bee Gees Way
Scarborough Beach
Scotts Point – a popular beach spot in Redcliffe at the Scotts Point Bathing Pavilion and views up the hill at the Scotts Point Progress Park
Settlement Cove Lagoon – a free water park at Redcliffe, also known as Redcliffe Lagoon. Very popular with families, shallow to deep sections, BBQs and picnic tables
Suttons Beach – a patrolled beach and one of the most popular on the Redcliffe Peninsula foreshores of Moreton Bay for locals and tourists