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Moving to Cairns: the complete 2026 guide

Reef, rainforest, and tropical life — what to know before relocating to Far North Queensland.

By Cairns Daily · 22 June 2026 at 1:02 am · 2 min read Updated

Updated 28 June 2026 at 1:02 am

2 min read· 328 words

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Moving to Cairns: the complete 2026 guide
Photo: Photo by Unsplash

Moving to Cairns means choosing the tropics and everything that entails — the extraordinary natural environment, the casual pace, the economic dependence on tourism, and the community character of a city that exists at the edge of two World Heritage areas and knows it. Here's what to know before you make the move.

The lifestyle proposition

Cairns residents cite the natural environment as the primary reason they stay. The Great Barrier Reef is half an hour away by boat; the Daintree Rainforest is two hours north; the Atherton Tablelands are an hour inland and provide the cool respite that the tropical lowlands don't. The access to this environment from the back of a suburban house is what makes Cairns residents reluctant to leave regardless of what the economics suggest.

Employment

Cairns's primary employment sectors are tourism and hospitality, healthcare (Cairns Hospital and the private health sector), education (James Cook University campus), retail, and the public service. The tourism sector employment is seasonal and the income unpredictability is a planning consideration. The AUKUS northern investment is creating new professional employment in the defence and marine sectors that is changing the employment profile meaningfully.

Where to live

The northern beaches (Palm Cove, Trinity Beach, Clifton Beach) deliver the premium lifestyle at the premium price. The inner city (Edge Hill, Mooroobool, Bungalow) provides the CBD proximity and the character housing that professionals prefer. The southern suburbs (Gordonvale, Edmonton) deliver affordability at the cost of the daily commute north.

Climate

The tropical climate is the defining Cairns experience. The dry season (April to October) is exceptional — clear skies, 26-degree days, and the conditions that make the outdoor life uniformly good. The wet season (November to April) is hot, humid, and occasionally very wet, but the green transformation of the rainforest and the waterfall access that the rain creates are genuine compensations.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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  1. Getting Around Cairns in 2026: Airport, Roads and the Far North· 27 June 2026
  2. Cairns' Multicultural Community in 2026: Pacific Islands, Indigenous Culture and Far North Diversity· 27 June 2026
  3. Moving to Cairns in 2026: Gateway to the Reef and a Growing Regional City· 27 June 2026

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Published by The Daily Cairns

This article was produced by the The Daily Cairns editorial desk and covers community in Cairns. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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