Australia has a few animals that can be extremely dangerous, and the crocodile is high up on that list. You’ll find them in the northern parts of Australia, and as the statistics will tell you, they can, and do attack and kill humans.
That said, with a bit of caution, understanding and common sense you’ll be able to safely explore the stunning northern parts of Australia like thousands of others every year with minimal risk.
Having grown up in Perth, WA, my understanding of crocodiles was fairly limited prior to a few trips to the Kimberley and Northern Territory. I picked up a lot of interesting information from various crocodile parks, tour guides, northern locals and the indigenous people and I want to share it with you. You should have a healthy fear of crocodiles and play it safe, but they are very misunderstood too.
Freshwater crocodiles relaxing at a croc park in Darwin.
Types of crocodiles
Let’s start right at the very beginning, and talk about the different crocs we have here in Australia. You get two types – the fresh water, and the estuarine (or saltwater).
Freshwater crocs are much smaller and have a very narrow head to snout. It’s rare to see them over 3 metres long. These are only found in fresh water, and unless provoked are timid animals. If you visit Windjana Gorge on the Gibb River Road, you can see hundreds of them bathing on the side of the water, or floating the day away. As soon as you get within about 3 metres of them they take off, away from you.
You will likely see freshwater crocs floating the day away.
Tunnel Creek (just up the road from Windjana) is home to a few freshwater crocodiles, and you’ll see their eyes when you walk through the tunnel and water. Thousands of people do this every year, and never have a problem with them; they just move out of the way and do their own thing.
There have been a few people attacked by freshwater crocodiles, but it’s due to antagonising them or getting too close. These have incredibly sharp teeth and will do serious damage if they bite you, so leave them alone and they will do the same.
A couple of freshwater crocs sunbathing at Windjana Gorge.
Estuarine (or saltwater crocodiles)
The saltwater crocodile is on the other end of the spectrum. They can grow up to 7 metres long and are incredibly dangerous. A number of people have been killed by Salties over the years, and plenty more wounded. They are patient, cunning and sneaky animals that have very few weaknesses.
Despite the name, saltwater crocodiles can be found anywhere there is water. This includes freshwater lakes, creeks, rivers and billabongs.
The saltwater species are extremely dangerous animals.
The real difference between fresh and saltwater crocodiles
On a tour in Kakadu National Park, the difference between freshwater crocodiles and salties was put very clearly, and concisely. If you were to fall into the water, fresh water crocodiles would swim away from you, and saltwater crocodiles would swim towards you looking for an easy meal.
While on a boat cruise in Kakadu, it was made clear what separates the species.
Where do you find wild crocodiles?
You’ll find Crocodiles anywhere from Port Hedland in Western Australia all the way around the northern coast and back down just south of Brisbane. The further north you go the more common they are, but anywhere between Broome and Gladstone, they are relatively common.
Due to an increase in numbers, crocodiles are being found further and further south every year, so always be on the lookout.
Northern Australia is an incredible place to visit, but it is where crocs are found.
What do crocodiles mean for travelling in the north?
If you are exploring the magic country of Northern Australia, it means you need to pay attention, be careful and don’t take risks near water. Crocodiles are very dangerous and will continue to attack and kill people who are in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Where do you need to be cautious?
Crocodiles live near water. Any time you are near billabongs, creeks, rivers, the beach or other swimming holes in the northern part of Australia you should be aware that there is a chance of a crocodile living nearby.
Always be cautious around water and when swimming.
The wet and dry season
If you aren’t familiar with the seasons in the northern part of Australia, here’s a quick rundown. From December to March it’s hot and pours with rain. From May to November it’s dry, with warm days.
The wet season plays a big role in where you will find Crocodiles. After a lot of rain, water levels rise dramatically and crocodiles spread out significantly. As the dry season goes on and the water levels dry up they are more restricted and tend to head back to the larger water bodies.
What it means though, is that late in the wet season/early on in the dry season there is a much higher chance of seeing crocodiles outside of where they might normally be.
It takes time for the national parks, rangers and property owners to deem each swimming hole safe before opening it to the public after every wet season, so take extra caution early on.
Malcolm Douglas Crocodile Park in Broome.
Crocodile traps
One of the more common signs of crocodile activity in the northern parts of Australia are traps. These are usually big, floating aluminium cages with some form of meat tied to the inside. The crocodile enters the cage and the door shuts behind them. These are then relocated.
You’ll find crocodile traps all over the place, including the very highly frequented swimming holes like Berry Springs near Darwin and Bitter Springs in Mataranka. Saltwater crocodiles are frequently removed from popular swimming locations.
If there aren’t traps, another popular method is to use a foam float. This is just tied somewhere and checked regularly. Crocodiles will bite these, and the bites are used to tell if anything has come through.
A big crocodile up in Broome.
What can you do to stay safe from crocodiles?
Crocodile attacks can be avoided. If you do the following, your risk of a crocodile attack is almost completely removed.
1. Read and obey the signs
Where tourism is common, signs are located telling you of crocodiles in the area, and where it is safe to swim.
Obey the signs that you come across.
2. No signs does not mean it’s safe
If you can’t see any signs, that doesn’t mean the water body is safe. There’s no way signs can be put up and maintained everywhere, and if you are off the beaten track there will be no signs. Always assume a crocodile could be living in the water and you’ll be just fine.
3. Listen to your gut
Your gut feeling is usually pretty good. If you don’t feel comfortable near the water, there’s a reason for it. Trust your instinct.
Fishing like this is super dangerous.
4. Stay back from the water’s edge
The croc safe campaign in the northern parts of Australia says to stay a minimum of 5 metres away from the water’s edge. If you’ve seen how fast a crocodile moves, you’d stay a lot further away than that.
5. Don’t clean fish near the water
If you catch fish (and the fishing up north is unreal) don’t clean them near the water. Take your catch well away and do it there, and dispose of the offal intelligently.
When fishing, keep a safe distance and clean your fish away from the water.
6. Put your food away
Leaving food out is a sure way to attract unwanted attention, so put it away.
7. Don’t swim if you can’t see the bottom
If you can’t see the bottom of the water you want to swim in, it’s an absolute no for swimming. Crocodiles love muddy, dirty water and if you can’t see very clearly where you are walking and swimming, they could be hiding anywhere.
Take responsibility for your safety, and read signs carefully.
8. Accept the risk for yourself, and weigh it up
At the end of the day, you are responsible for your safety. Some signs will say ‘this is a known crocodile area’, and that it has been cleared, but there’s nothing stopping a crocodile moving into the area after the area has been deemed croc-free.
Every time you hop in the water up north, do so at your own risk knowing that there could be a croc there. The chances in popular tourist swimming holes are very limited, but it’s still a risk that you have to consider and accept.
Common crocodile attacks
The most common crocodile attacks are men, and usually locals. They’ve been around crocodiles for a long time, and become haphazard and careless. All it takes is to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and you’ll be dinner for a big Salty.
Saltwater crocodiles are not to be messed with, but you should still respect them.
Don’t hate the croc
Just like sharks, when you enter their backyard you are accepting the risk. More and more people are travelling up north and that means more contact with crocodiles. They are just living their lives and looking for an easy meal.
Have a healthy fear and respect for them, use your common sense and gut, and don’t take unnecessary risks. Missing out on a nice refreshing swim is hardly a price to pay when compared to what would happen if you were attacked.
The northern parts of Australia have some of the best places to visit in the country, but do so with a full appreciation for what may also be there!
Have you ever spotted a croc in the wild, or even encountered one?
If it involves four-wheel driving, Aaron loves it. When he isn’t writing for his blog, 4WDing Australia or the Snowys Blog, you’ll find him camping and driving around Western Australia.
Some of the best advice about croc safety I have received was from an indigenous ranger in Kakadu. I asked how she decided if it was safe to swim in a pool in Kakadu. After the usual advice about how rangers decided it was safe she said she, personally, waited until there were at least a dozen tourists splashing and yelling about, having fun for a while, then she would enter the water…
Hey Numb Thumbs, thanks so much for your insight! That’s a clever suggestion too. Happy adventuring, and stay safe out there!
Really informative article, I had the opportunity to learn a lot, thank you.
https://www.thetradevision.com/
Thanks Trade Vision, that’s great feedback 🙂
They are an apex preditor with no competitors whatsoever. They used to be culled once for this very reason. They are being regularly spotted in areas not often seen in and are being seen further and further south every year. Far too many of them now competing over dwindling food resources. They need to go back on the cull list for a while. I value human life way more than the life of a prehistoric apex preditor that is far from being extinct.
Thanks for this input, Stevie 🙂
Was camping on the Normanby River FNQ, had a morning routine of breakfast then read a book for an hour or so facing the river which was about 20 meters away, I looked up one morning to see a very large “snappy lizard” motionless in the water just eyeballing me, if I stood up it would just submerge without a ripple or any bubbles … His/her routine was the same until I left…
Stealth & cunning are their mainstay!! Having had other experiences & listening to the experiences of others the moment you become a little complacent you will be a victim!!
Man, you just cannot be too careful around water anywhere north of Gympie/ They are there, hungry and getting bigger and bigger due to non-culling. They don’t care about your race, colour, politics, religion or how fast you can run. My Granddad always said you have to run in a zig zag if one gets after you, but I’ve seen they move and they are PDQ. One of the biggest salties ever caught (shot!) was in fresh water west of Mackay, near Devereau Ck.
Yes I live in Mackay and I have seen them in the Pioneer River.
I am a nurse and I lived in Wyndham in the Kimberley for one and a half years in the 90’s . In the wet I had a saltie in my front yard when we had a flood ( and I wasn’t that close to the Cambridge Gulf!) and in the wet it was very common to see salties on the road from the town to the port. My friend was chased up the slipway near the Port while fishing and spent a fair bit of the afternoon on the roof of her car. I also looked after a few aboriginal people who had been attacked by crocodiles in the past and survived. They told me that that’s one of the reasons why aboriginal people have so many dogs because a crocodile will take a dog before a person because they are smaller! So I learned very quickly to be wary of them . They are smart and dangerous – too many people up there get complacent and too many tourists think they are safe. Like a shark, the crocodile that gets you is the one you don’t see! Great article and those people that have left stupid remarks probably don’t believe in climate change!
THANK YOU FOR ALL INFORMATION! VERY USEFUL!
You know they used to come up to the butcher’s shop in Townsville for a feed. And there was a 35 foot saltie killed near beenleigh.
What a load of BS….you will not find crocodiles just south of brisbane…maybe a 1000 ks north…what an alarmist article
Thanks for your feedback, we’re not trying to be alarmist, but there are quite a few news articles online (one which you can check out here) that discuss how over the past few years crocodiles have been returning to southern habitats, so it’s just good for travellers in the area to be aware.
Just for your information “not in impressed”??? sightings of crocs have been reported Sth of Brisbane!! Do a little research before the knee jerk!! Jerk.
And as for BS, you state “maybe a 1000 ks (Km) north (North)” (my corrections)..
https://www.frasercoastchronicle.com.au/news/fraser-coast-crocodile-sighting-statistics-reveale/3614551/
The Wide Bay/Frazer area is only 240Km Nth of Brisbane… Go figure!!
The article is correct & concise… Ignore at your peril!!!
Really quite silly of you to say this actually considering they have not only been found south of Brisbane, they have been found, relocated and this is documented fact my friend. Perhaps hold your tongue unless you in fact KNOW what your talking about. Cheers
UM….you’ll find crocodiles just south of brisbane…..really…….maybe you need to reset your compass about 1000 km north
As someone who has lived in North Queensland and Far North Queensland almost most of their lives, I’m pretty croc wise. I’ve seen tourists cleaning their dishes at the edge of croc country waters and also wading in the river at low tide and putting in crab pots. The croc watches and comes to realise this routine and will attack. So please if you’re in croc country don’t clean your dishes at the waters edge and also is catching a few crabs really worth your life? Use your common sense. I think people become complacent and think if they can’t see one right now or haven’t spotted one in the time they’ve been staying at a particular place they’re not around & ignore the signage, but they are definitely there! The closest I got to a croc was a visit up the Cape and we went fishing off the bank of a river near Loyalty Beach and just as we turned up, across the estuary was a 4m croc in a death roll with a piglet. It was pretty awesome to see but also a testament to what these amazing animals are capable of.
I ran into a saltie at the front beach at Point Samson, about 30Km North of Karratha, last September while wading through knee deep water. Didn’t see it at first but heard a big splash and looked around, only to see a couple of beady eyes slowly coming towards me. I took a quick photo before scrambling up a rock face to safety. Nobody believed me, not even the local Ranger, until I showed him the photo. Apparently the last croc sighting there was in 2002. As you say, you need to keep your eyes and ears open when travelling up North.I don’t think this was a huge croc but it was definitely out for a taste of me.