Heard Island and McDonald Islands
Phone Code
+672
Capital
Population
0 (uninhabited)
Native Name
Heard Island and McDonald Islands
Region
Timezone
French Southern and Antarctic Time
UTC+05:00
On This Page
Heard Island and McDonald Islands comprise one of Earth's most remote and pristine territories—an uninhabited Australian external territory located 4,100 kilometers southwest of Perth in the southern Indian Ocean, where active volcano Big Ben towers over glaciated landscapes, massive penguin and seal colonies thrive in complete absence of human habitation, and extreme sub-Antarctic conditions create wilderness visited only by occasional scientific expeditions. The territory consists of Heard Island (368 square kilometers of volcanic terrain dominated by 2,745-meter Big Ben—one of world's most active volcanoes and Australia's highest peak) and the McDonald Islands (small volcanic group 44 kilometers west). No permanent human presence has ever existed—occasional research expeditions camp temporarily, but even these visits are rare with years passing between human contact. The islands sit on Kerguelen Plateau amid vast Southern Ocean, experiencing relentless winds averaging 35 km/h with gusts exceeding 160 km/h, near-constant cloud cover, frequent precipitation, and temperatures rarely above 5°C creating environment hostile to all but specialized wildlife and hardy vegetation. UNESCO World Heritage status (inscribed 1997) recognizes outstanding natural values as rare pristine sub-Antarctic island ecosystem with ongoing volcanic and glacial processes, complete absence of introduced species or human modification, and exceptional wildlife including king penguins, macaroni penguins, elephant seals, fur seals, and numerous seabirds. Visiting requires special permit from Australian Antarctic Division (rarely granted except for scientific research), access only via chartered vessel on multi-week voyages through stormy seas, and acceptance of extreme conditions where even landing may be impossible due to weather and surf.
Heard Island Access & Permit Requirements
Heard Island and McDonald Islands are NOT open to tourism and visiting requires special permit from Australian Antarctic Division under Environment Protection and Management Ordinance. Permits are granted almost exclusively for scientific research expeditions with legitimate research objectives, appropriate environmental management plans, and demonstrated capability to operate safely in extreme sub-Antarctic conditions. The permit process requires detailed proposals submitted months in advance outlining research goals, environmental impact assessments, waste management procedures, biosecurity protocols preventing introduction of non-native species, emergency plans, and proof of adequate insurance and logistical support. Even with permits, access is extraordinarily challenging—no scheduled transport exists, requiring chartered expedition vessel or private yacht capable of multi-week voyages through Southern Ocean's roughest waters. The Australian Antarctic Division occasionally conducts supply/research voyages aboard Aurora Australis or chartered vessels, but these are limited to essential scientific work. Landing is only possible in rare calm weather windows—the islands have no harbors, landing occurs via zodiac through heavy surf onto rocky or ice-covered shores, and weather can trap visitors for weeks if conditions deteriorate. Tourism proposals are essentially never approved—the government prioritizes protection of pristine wilderness and scientific research over recreational access. For general public, experiencing these islands occurs only through documentaries, satellite imagery, and scientific literature describing this ultimate wilderness.
Common Visa Types
Scientific Research Permit
Accredited scientific expeditions with approved research programs
Essential Information
For the extraordinarily rare permitted visitors, Heard Island delivers ultimate wilderness experience dominated by Big Ben—Australia's only active volcano, erupting sporadically with lava flows extending the island through new land formation. The 2,745-meter peak rises above extensive glaciers covering 80% of island surface, though rapid warming has caused dramatic glacier retreat (some glaciers lost 30% of mass since 1947). The coastline features black volcanic sand beaches where massive king penguin colonies numbering tens of thousands gather, creating dense rookeries of trumpeting birds. Southern elephant seals haul enormous bodies onto shores during October-December breeding season—bulls weighing up to 4 tons fight for dominance while harems give birth and nurse pups. Antarctic fur seals crowd rocky areas, recovering from 19th-century sealing that nearly exterminated them. Macaroni penguins, southern giant petrels, kelp gulls, and endemic Heard shags populate cliffs and inland areas. The McDonald Islands—tiny volcanic islets 44 kilometers west—experienced dramatic volcanism in 1992 creating new land and steaming fumaroles on previously dormant peaks. The islands provide living laboratory for studying volcanic processes, glacier dynamics, sub-Antarctic ecosystem functioning without human interference, and climate change impacts on polar environments. UNESCO World Heritage status recognizes these values, emphasizing that protection depends on continued exclusion of human activity beyond minimal scientific research.
Discover Heard Island and McDonald Islands
Ways to Experience This Destination
Join accredited research programs studying volcanic processes, glacier dynamics, wildlife populations, or ecosystem functioning—only legitimate access for general public with appropriate scientific credentials.
Money & Currency
Australian Dollar (A$, AUD) - theoretical only
Currency code: AUD
Practical Money Tips
Australian Dollar (AUD) — technically the currency, but no economy exists on the islands
Heard Island and McDonald Islands (HIMI) are an Australian External Territory in the sub-Antarctic Southern Ocean, approximately 4,100 km southwest of Perth. The Australian Dollar (AUD) is the legal currency, but this is entirely theoretical — there are no inhabitants, no businesses, no shops, no accommodation, and no commercial transactions of any kind on the islands. The territory is a UNESCO World Heritage Site managed by the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD) under the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. All visits require prior authorization from the AAD. There is nothing to buy, exchange, or pay for on the islands themselves.
No ATMs, no banks, no financial services of any kind
There are no ATMs, banks, payment terminals, or any financial infrastructure on Heard Island or the McDonald Islands. The islands are among the most remote and inaccessible places on Earth, visited only by occasional scientific research expeditions (typically Australian government-funded or Australian Antarctic Division-authorized expeditions) and, very rarely, authorized private expeditions. All expedition costs — vessel hire, logistics, equipment, permits — are arranged and paid in advance from Australia. Researchers and expedition members bring all supplies from Australia; no commercial services exist on the islands.
No Apple Pay, no Google Pay, no card payments — no commercial activity whatsoever
Apple Pay, Google Pay, and all card payment technologies are completely irrelevant to Heard Island and McDonald Islands. There is no infrastructure, population, or commercial activity to support any payment system. The island group is one of the least-visited places on the planet — access requires months of planning, Australian government authorization, and a purpose-built vessel capable of navigating the exceptionally challenging Southern Ocean conditions. Mobile and internet connectivity is limited to satellite communications used by research teams. All financial planning for any expedition occurs entirely on the Australian mainland before departure.
No price levels apply — expedition costs planned and paid entirely before departure
There are no prices, costs, or expenditures on Heard Island or McDonald Islands because there is nothing to purchase there. The only relevant financial consideration is the cost of mounting an expedition to reach the islands, which is extremely high due to the remoteness and the Southern Ocean conditions. A private charter vessel from Fremantle, Australia, takes approximately 10–14 days each way in some of the world's most challenging seas. Expedition costs for a scientific research visit typically run into the tens of thousands of Australian dollars per participant. The islands themselves are a pristine sub-Antarctic wilderness — the most volcanically active sub-Antarctic land on Earth, home to elephant seals, penguins, and the active volcano Mawson Peak on Big Ben.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
Cities with missions
Where this country maintains embassies or consulates
Embassies in Heard Island and McDonald Islands
These foreign embassies and consulates are based here. Choose a mission to open its in-depth guide and contact details.
All countries by continent
Heard Island and McDonald Islands represent ultimate wilderness—pristine sub-Antarctic territory with active volcano, massive wildlife colonies, and environment so extreme that human presence remains virtually non-existent. Access requires scientific research permits rarely granted to general public.
Learn About Heard Island