Blackwood National Park - In Queenslands Brigalow Belt natural region, Blackwood National Park has a landscape of undulating hills, stony ridges and alluvial flats.
Brampton National Park - Rocky headlands dotted with hoop pines, open grasslands, woodlands, sheltered bays, and coral rubble and long sandy beaches make these islands some of the most scenic off the Queensland coast. This park consists of Brampton and Carlisle Islands.
Cape Hillsborough National Park - Scenic coastal park north-west of Mackay with hoop pine rainforest, open eucalypt forest and fringing mangroves. Self-guiding trail. Marine stingers, October-May.
Conway National Park - Get away from it all in a visit to this peaceful park with its rainforest-clad hills, secluded beaches and panoramic outlooks over the scenic Whitsunday Passage.
Dryander National Park - Overlooking the scenic Whitsunday Islands, Dryander National Park is a large coastal park north of Proserpine. Fringing reefs just offshore are protected in marine parks.
Eungella National Park - This major park preserves a significant sample of the central Queensland rainforests. Most of the park is rugged and inaccessible but the southern portion is popular with campers and day visitors.
Gloucester National Park - More remote than other parks in the Whitsundays, these islands offer a quite retreat. Camp at Bona or East Side Bays (Gloucester Island), or at Armit or Saddleback Islands. Bona Bay (Gloucester Island), the largest campground, has a good anchorage, toilets, picnic tables, and a shelter shed.
Homevale National Park - Eucalypt woodland and open grasslands are bordered by dramatically rugged cliffs, peaks and mountain ranges. This vast, dry landscape contains unique ecological values and spectacular landscape features.
Lindeman National Park - Beyond the Whitsunday Passage lies the Lindeman group of islands. Like other islands in the Whitsundays, this group formed when a mountain range was drowned by rising sea levels.
Molle Islands National Park - Windswept hillsides, rocky headlands with majestic hoop pines, sandy beaches, secluded coves, natural grasslands, open forest and rainforest make the inshore Molle Islands a wildlife refuges and a scenic retreat for nature lovers.
Newry Islands National Park - Nestled close to the coast north-west of Mackay is a group of hilly continental islands.
Repulse National Park - Just off Cape Conway, Repulse Islands National Park protects a small group of islands overlooking the Lindeman Group and the rugged Conway Range.
Smith Islands National Park - Goldsmith is the largest island in this group of continental islands off Mackay, protected in Smith Islands National Park.
Palmerston National Park - Windswept rocky headlands, mangroves, swamps, rainforest and sand dunes are part of Cape Palmerston National Parks rugged beauty.
Upstart National Park - Flanked by sandy beaches, Cape Upstart is an imposing granite headland covered in a range of vegetation types from vine thicket to heath.
Whitsunday Islands National Park - The Whitsundays is about 1125 km north of Brisbane and about 725 km south of Cairns, and the climate is typical of a tropical sub rainforest region.