Stay Uluru: Your Home in the Heart of the Desert.
Whether you’re seeking a luxury sanctuary under the stars or a family-friendly base for adventure, every stay at Uluru is part of the experience.

AYERS ROCK RESORT, YULARA, NORTHERN TERRITORY
Stay Uluru: Find Your Perfect Desert Sanctuary From Luxury Lodges To Red Sand Campsites
Staying at Uluru is a unique experience where modern comfort meets the ancient Outback. Every accommodation option, from five-star hotels to the iconic caravan park, is nestled within the self-contained sanctuary of the Yulara resort village. Whether you are looking for a romantic escape with a view of the monolith or a family-friendly base for Red Centre adventures, your journey starts here.

Hotel & Luxury Lodges
Best for: Couples & Honeymoons.
Premium comfort with iconic views and 5-star service.

Family & Budget Stays
Best for: Families & Groups
Spacious apartments and social hubs that won’t break the bank.

Camping & Caravanning
Best for: Road Trippers & Vanners
The ultimate Red Centre adventure under a canopy of stars.

Resort Facilities
Everything you need, from the IGA supermarket to the free shuttle.
The “One Resort” Ecosystem: Yulara
The resort ‘township’ is officially known as Yulara. It is a purpose-built service village located just outside the National Park boundary. Except for one ultra-luxury lodge, every single bed, blade of grass, and burger at Uluru (excluding the delicious burgers at the Cultural Centre) are located within this resort township loop.

The Hub-and-Spoke Layout
The resort is designed like a circular “necklace.” One main road (Lasseter Highway turning into Yulara Drive) loops around a central red sand dune.
- The Center: The central dune features several “Lookouts” where guests can walk up to see Uluru in the distance without leaving the resort.
- The Ring: All the hotels, the campground, and the “Town Square” are dotted along this circular road.
From Town to Oasis: The Story of Yulara
Yulara wasn’t always a resort; it was originally a town built by the government to rescue the environment around the base of Uluru. In a bold move, the entire town was eventually sold as one package.

Why “The Experience” is Seamless
Because it is one entity (Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia), the guest experience is unified:
- Cross-Charging: You can stay at the Campground but walk over to Sails in the Desert for a high-end dinner and “charge it to your room” (or site).
- The Free Shuttle: A free bus runs every 20 minutes from 10:30 AM to late at night. It circles the loop constantly. This means a family at the budget Emu Walk Apartments can easily access the luxury pool or the IGA supermarket without a car.
- The Town Square: This is the “heartbeat.” It contains the only supermarket (IGA), a post office, a tour desk, and several cafes. It feels like a small outback village square.

The Sole Exception: Longitude 131°
While all other accommodations are clustered together in the Yulara loop, Longitude 131° is located on a private duneside closer to the park.
It is gated and completely separate.
It has its own private touring and dining.
You cannot visit it for a look or a meal.
The Birth and Sale of Yulara: From Town to Resort
The Pre-Yulara Chaos (The 1950s – 1970s)
Before Yulara existed, tourism at Uluru was a “Wild West” scenario. Motels and airstrips were built right at the base of the Rock.
- The Impact: This was environmentally damaging and deeply disrespectful to the Aṉangu (the Traditional Owners), as sacred sites were being encroached upon by laundry lines and petrol stations.
- The Decision: In the 1970s, the Federal Government decided to move all human habitation at least 15km away to protect the monolith


The Gazetted Town (1984)
The Northern Territory government built a brand-new, architecturally designed town called Yulara.
- Governance: It was a proper gazetted town with a town council and local government structures.
- Design: It won numerous architectural awards for its “tented” roof structures (like at Sails in the Desert) designed to blend into the desert and provide natural cooling.
- The Split: At this time, different companies operated different hotels within the town boundaries.
The Great Privatization (The 1990s)
Maintaining a town in the middle of the desert was expensive for the NT Government. In the early 90s, they bundled the entire town—the infrastructure, staff housing, library, council buildings, gym, and the hotels—and sold it as a single package. Yulara ceased to be a gazetted town and the town council was disbanded.

