The Overland Track is widely regarded as Australia's finest multi-day walk. Stretching roughly 65 kilometres through the heart of Tasmania's World Heritage wilderness, it connects the iconic dolerite peaks of Cradle Mountain to the serene shores of Lake St Clair. But what many walkers don't realise is that this legendary trail isn't a one-size-fits-all experience. 

With us, there are six distinct ways to walk it, each suited to a different traveller, pace, and style.

1. The Classic Self-Guided Walk

For independent bushwalkers with strong navigation skills and a desire for solitude, the classic self-guided Overland Track remains a rite of passage. You carry your own gear, manage your own itinerary (within the regulated walking direction, north to south during peak season), and stay in the public huts or camp alongside them. It demands preparation, fitness, and a tolerance for unpredictable alpine weather, but rewards you with an unfiltered connection to the wilderness.

2. The Fully Guided Small-Group Walk

A fully guided small-group experience transforms the Overland Track into something more accessible and arguably richer. An expert guide leads the way, sharing deep knowledge of the local ecology, geology, and Indigenous history. Accommodation is in private lodge huts with real beds and hot meals waiting at the end of each day. This is the format Australian Walking Holidays specialises in, and it suits anyone who wants to focus entirely on the experience rather than logistics.

3. The Private Guided Walk

For couples, families, or groups of friends who want the guided experience but on their own terms, a private guided walk offers complete flexibility. Your guide, your pace, your group. It's the most personalised way to walk the track and works particularly well for milestone celebrations or corporate retreats where group cohesion matters.

4. The Family Walk

The Overland Track doesn't have to be reserved for seasoned trekkers. Tailored family walks break the journey into manageable stages, incorporate age-appropriate side trips, and use vehicle support to reduce pack weight. Children often find the landscape — platypus, wallabies, ancient pencil pines — utterly captivating. Done well, it becomes a formative adventure that kids talk about for years.

5. The Supported Self-Guided Walk

A supported self-guided walk offers a compelling middle ground. You walk independently, making your own decisions on the trail, but your accommodation, meals, and luggage transfers are arranged in advance. You carry only a daypack. It suits walkers who want the freedom of going at their own pace without the weight and planning burden of a fully independent trip.

6. The Day Walk Sampler

Not everyone can commit to six or more days in the wilderness, and that's perfectly fine. Several sections of the Overland Track — particularly around Cradle Mountain and Lake St Clair — are accessible as outstanding day walks. Dove Lake Circuit, Hansons Peak, and the Cynthia Bay lakeside walk all offer genuine Overland Track scenery without an extended expedition. They're also an excellent way to decide whether you want to come back and do the whole thing.

Choosing the Right Style for You

The right way to walk the Overland Track depends on your fitness, experience, available time, and what you want to get out of the journey. If you value comfort and local expertise, a guided option is hard to beat. If independence is your priority, self-guided walking in some form will serve you well. And if you're unsure, speaking with a specialist operator who knows the track intimately is always a good starting point.