Wilbinga National Park.
The Kings Park of the North.

Wilbinga.
A rare stretch of coastal bushland at the northern edge of Perth. Home to endangered wildlife, Yued cultural heritage and irreplaceable ecosystems.

Support the efforts in securing Wilbinga as a National Park, before it's lost forever.

Perth's Wild North Deserves Protection. 

Located just north of Two Rocks, where Perth’s urban expansion ceases – lies Wilbinga.

This area encompasses in excess of 120 square kilometres of coastal heathland scrub, ancient limestone aquifers, banksia woodlands, large stands of tuarts, verdant wetlands and bordered by Moore River to the north.

It serves as a habitat for Carnabys Black Cockatoos (large flocks present in Wilbinga), a rare species of Stygofauna (found nowhere else on earth) and the recently discovered Yanchep Peacock Spider (Maratus Yanchep) endemic to this area.

This land has been cared for Yued people, since time immemorial.

Currently, no formal safeguards protect this landscape from being developed.

We are advocating for change by calling on the Western Australian Government to declare Wilbinga a National Park.

Your support in joining this cause is vital, for ensuring the protection of Wilbinga.

We must act. Please sign The Pledge.

See the Wilbinga Film.

You’re invited to Murdoch's screening of “Wilbinga” — the documentary that brings this extraordinary place to life. “Wilbinga” is a documentary exploring the landscapes, wildlife and stories of the proposed National Park north of Perth. From the coastal limestone scrub to the wetlands of the Moore River Estuary, the film makes the case — in pictures — for why this land deserves permanent protection.

Pre-film refreshments will be available from 5:30 pm, with the screening commencing at 6:00 pm.

A panel discussion will be held at the end of the screening.

Date: Thursday 2nd July 2026
Time: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Venue: Kim Beazley Lecture Theatre at Murdoch University
Cost: FREE (Reservation Required)

The Place

Wilbinga sits on Perth’s northern edge — between the Perth’s northern suburbs, the Indian Ocean, the Moore River and Indian Ocean Drive.

At roughly 120 square kilometres, it’s one of the largest remaining areas of intact coastal bushland near Perth — and closer to the city than most people realise.

As Perth has expanded northward, much of its coastal landscape has been cleared for development.

Wilbinga is what remains.

Join the Campaign

Join thousands of Western Australians who need to have Wilbinga protected permanently.

Take The Pledge — it's free, it takes 60 seconds — and it matters.