Queensland offers a diverse prospecting landscape, from the tropical riverbeds of the far north to the arid, high-yield territory of Clermont.
In the North, specifically the Palmer River, gold is found in Jurassic age conglomerates. These ancient river gravels have been compressed into rock over millions of years. Modern erosion now "re-washes" this gold into the current river loops, creating a recursive system of gold replenishment.
Tropical wilderness and high-grade gold. Famous for its rugged history and remote access.
The most accessible goldfield in QLD. Designated General Permission Areas (GPA) for easy detecting.
The town that saved Queensland. Historic deep lead mining and lush green fossicking.
Thanes Creek and Talgai. Southern QLD goldfields within reach of Brisbane.
Exploration permits and general permission area (GPA) data for the Sunshine State.
LODE ASSETS
150
PLACER ASSETS
1,800
TOTAL ACTIVE
1,950
LODE ASSETS
65
PLACER ASSETS
840
TOTAL ACTIVE
905
LODE ASSETS
420
PLACER ASSETS
120
TOTAL ACTIVE
540
Yes, you need a Queensland Fossicking Licence. It costs $10.40 for individuals or $20.80 for families and is valid for one year. You can apply online through the Queensland Government website.
General Fossicking Areas are designated zones where you can fossick without needing landowner permission. Queensland has many GFAs throughout the state, primarily in historic goldfield regions.
May through August (dry season) is the only practical time. The wet season (November-April) brings monsoon flooding that makes the river inaccessible and dangerous. Crocodiles are a year-round hazard.
Yes! Saltwater and freshwater crocodiles are present in the Palmer River and other Far North Queensland waterways. Never work alone, avoid the water's edge, and never prospect at dusk or dawn when crocs are most active.
Yes, metal detecting is allowed with a Fossicking Licence in designated areas. The Minelab Gold Monster 1000 is popular for QLD conditions due to its auto-tracking sensitivity for conglomerate gold.
Queensland has diverse gold types: fine alluvial gold in tropical rivers (Palmer), coarse nuggets in conglomerate gravels (Clermont), and lode/reef gold in quartz veins (Gympie). The Palmer River is famous for high-purity gold.
In the North, the "Wet" replenishes the river gold every year. Don't bother detecting the creek beds until the waters recede in May or June.
Unlike other regions, small-scale suction dredging is highly restricted in QLD. Most prospectors stick to high-bank sluicing or dry-blowing in the arid regions.
Queensland's tropical gold is hard-won. Protect your findings by diversifying into vaulted bullion through an Australian SMSF.
Optional gold-culture references for readers curious about bars, coins, purity and storage language after prospecting. These are third-party resources, not financial advice.
Third-party resource for learning how vaulted physical gold services describe storage, fees and custody.
Useful for comparing bars, coins, premiums and purity language after learning field testing basics.
Browse mainstream bullion product formats and premiums as gold-culture background, not prospecting advice.
Reference catalogue for seeing common retail names, weights and purity markings used on coins and bars.
Land access rights, safety conditions, and public fossicking zones change. You are solely responsible for verifying regulations with local authorities (DOC/Council/BLM) and assessing river safety before visiting. Paystreak.io accepts no liability for injury, fines, or trespassing. Never dig on private land without explicit permission.
✓ Information last verified: January 2026