Where is the Seven Valleys?
This place sits on the quiet edge of the Blue Mountains, close enough to Sydney for a day trip and far enough to feel like you have stepped into a different rhythm.
The Seven Valleys stretch across country that links the mountains to the Central West. It is a landscape shaped by deep gorges, winding rivers, and open views that seem to go on without trying. Lithgow anchors the region. From there, roads and walking trails guide you out toward places and experiences you’ve heard of. Wolgan Valley, the Glow Worm Tunnel, the Gardens of Stone, and the iconic Zig Zag Railway that has carried generations through these hills.
People often ask how a place can feel remote while sitting only a couple of hours from Sydney. That contrast is the heart of the Seven Valleys. The moment you arrive, the noise falls away. The air feels different. You can see the sweep of the mountains without the crowds. It is not the Blue Mountains, yet it shares the same sense of openness and calm that people chase when they head west from Sydney.
If the name is new, the experience is not. Bring up camping at Newnes and you can guarantee someone has a story from their childhood. Families have been coming here for weekends in the bush for decades. Hikers have wandered through sandstone cliffs and fern-filled gullies. Travellers have watched in awe as old railway tunnels are illuminated by the resident glow worms. The region is full of places people know, only now brought together under a name that reflects the land itself.
So where is the Seven Valleys? It is closer than you think and bigger than you imagine. A place you have brushed past for years, waiting for you to see it properly. When you are ready, it is here.
The Seven Valleys is roughly a 90-minute drive from Western Sydney and a 40-minute drive from the Blue Mountains.
Must-sees in the Seven Valleys
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