There is a version of the Blue Mountains most visitors never see. It belongs to the people who show up in March, or April, or on a cold May morning when the mist sits low over the valley and the forest has turned every shade of copper and rust.
Summer gets the crowds. Autumn gets the place.
If you have been thinking about visiting and have not locked in dates, this is your window. Here is what makes the next eight to ten weeks worth organising your life around.
The foliage nobody talks about
The Blue Mountains is not a place most people associate with autumn colour. That is the mistake. The towns along the Great Western Highway, particularly Leura, Blackheath, Mount Wilson, and Mount Victoria, were settled in the late 1800s by Europeans who brought their trees with them. Elms, maples, liquidambars, poplars, and oaks. They planted them along the streets, around the guesthouses, in the private gardens that eventually became the show gardens the region is now known for.
By mid-March the liquidambars start turning. By April the whole main street of Leura is doing something theatrical. Blackheath's residential streets, which most visitors walk right past on the way to Govetts Leap, become worth a slow loop on foot. Mount Wilson, about 25 minutes from Bell, goes haywire with colour in late April and early May and is worth the drive up the escarpment specifically for the trees.
None of this is especially well-publicised, which is why you will share it with maybe a dozen other people on any given weekday.
Events happening right now
The events calendar fills up from early March through to Easter. These are confirmed for the coming weeks:
Evenings at Everglades, Leura (6 March 2026): Everglades House and Gardens is a heritage-listed 1930s garden at 37 Everglades Avenue in Leura. The evening sessions are rare: you get the garden without the daytime crowds, at the hour when the light is doing its best work.
Art Deco Ball at The Carrington, Katoomba (7 March 2026): The Carrington Hotel has been at the top end of Katoomba Street since 1882. Greg Poppleton performing authentic 1920s-30s big band. Dressing up is expected and encouraged.
Hartley Valley Garden Festival and Plant Fair (7 March 2026): Five private gardens open to the public in Little Hartley, about 30 minutes from Katoomba. The kind of event that does not travel far beyond the locals who have been going for years.
Blackheath Growers Market (7 to 8 March 2026): Corner of Gardiner Crescent and the Great Western Highway. A good snapshot of what is being grown and made in the region.
Blue Mountains Bushwalking Retreat, Wentworth Falls (9 to 11 March 2026): Two nights combining guided hikes, gentle yoga, and meals. The organisers are based in the mountains and the routes they use are off the standard visitor path.
Mandala Mindscapes Exhibition (on now through 22 March 2026): Local Blue Mountains artist Marion van den Driesschen. Running Wednesday to Sunday.
The Blue Mountains Music Festival runs 13 to 15 March in Katoomba with more than 90 performances across multiple venues. It is the biggest event on the autumn calendar and transforms the whole town for a weekend. Book accommodation well ahead.
Why autumn walking is different
Summer in the Blue Mountains is fine. It is also often crowded at the main lookouts, and the humidity in January and February can make the canyon walks feel less pleasant than they look in the photos.
Autumn solves most of this. Temperatures in March sit around 19 to 22 degrees during the day. By April it is cooler, 14 to 17 degrees, which is ideal for walking. The air is dry and clear, which means the valley views from Sublime Point, Evans Lookout, and Pulpit Rock are sharper than at any other time of year.
The Prince Henry Cliff Walk between Echo Point and Leura is a comfortable half-day in autumn. The Six Foot Track, which runs 46 kilometres from Katoomba to Jenolan Caves, is at its best in the cooler months. Most walkers take three days and camp along the route. If you want a single-day walk with genuine payoff, the Grand Canyon circuit near Blackheath takes about four hours and goes through creek beds, rock overhangs, and fern gully that feels remote even though the carpark is off the highway.
Where to stay
Staying in or near Katoomba puts you within walking distance of Echo Point, the Scenic World cable cars, the town centre, and most of the transport options. It is the logical base if you are arriving by train from Sydney and do not have a car.
Leura is about four kilometres east and has a quieter, more residential feel. The main street has good coffee, good bookshops, and the Leura Gardens, which are worth a morning in late April when everything is turning.
Blackheath, 14 kilometres further west, is less visited than either and rewards the detour. Govetts Leap gives you one of the best unobstructed valley views in the mountains, and the town has a genuine local food culture.
The drive from Sydney is about 90 minutes via the M4 and Great Western Highway. Trains from Central run hourly and take around two hours to Katoomba.
Easter weekend (early April 2026) brings the biggest visitor numbers of the autumn season. If you want the foliage without the crowds, the weeks on either side of Easter are your best bet. Mid-March to late March is genuinely quiet by Blue Mountains standards, the colour is starting, and accommodation availability is still good.
A note on timing
Late April and May bring the most dramatic foliage, particularly at Mount Wilson, but you are also looking at colder mornings and genuine rainfall. Pack layers. The mist that settles over the valley on still mornings in May is one of the better things about being there in autumn, but it does require a jacket.
The Blue Mountains is two hours from Sydney and walkable from the train station. September school holidays bring families. Summer brings everyone else. Autumn brings the people who know.
Book direct with us and save 15% compared to booking platforms. Both our cottages have fireplaces, full kitchens, and everything you need for an autumn stay.


