Cherry picking in Australia: the complete guide
Cherry season is short and mostly booked out in advance, which makes it a different day trip to a strawberry patch. Here's when cherries ripen region by region, what a visit costs, and why calling ahead or booking online matters more here than for almost any other crop.
Why the cherry window is so short
Cherries have the tightest picking season of any major u-pick crop in Australia. Where a strawberry farm might run from spring into autumn, most cherry orchards are open for only six to eight weeks somewhere between mid-November and mid-January, and a single variety within that orchard can be at its best for as little as ten days. That narrow window also happens to fall across school holidays, Christmas and the run-up to New Year, which is exactly when families want a day out. The result is a picking culture that looks different from a quiet Saturday at a strawberry patch: cherry farms plan for crowds, and a growing number now sell timed entry rather than simply opening the gate and hoping for the best.
Cherry season by region
Treat every row below as a normal-year guide rather than a fixed date. Frost during flowering, rain splitting the fruit near harvest, or a hot dry spring can shift an individual farm's window by two or three weeks either side of the district average.
| Region | Typical season | Peak |
|---|---|---|
| NSW — Orange/Central West (Orange, Nashdale) | Mid-November to January | Early to mid-December |
| NSW — Hilltops (Young, Wombat, Batlow) | November to January | Mid to late December |
| VIC — Yarra Valley | November to January | Mid to late December |
| VIC — Dandenong Ranges (Silvan) | Mid-November to early February | December |
| VIC — Mornington Peninsula (Red Hill) | Mid-November to end of January | December |
| SA — Adelaide Hills | Mid-November to mid-January | Mid-December to early January |
| WA — Perth Hills (Carmel) | November to December | Early to mid-December |
During the winter months, none of this is running — cherries are firmly a summer crop everywhere they're grown in Australia, unlike strawberries, which Queensland picks through winter. If you're planning ahead for the season, our season calendar guide and the November and December in-season pages are worth bookmarking closer to spring.
Booking culture: why turning up unannounced doesn't work
Cherries are more likely than any other u-pick crop to require a booking. A cherry tree fruits all at once rather than continuously the way a strawberry runner does, so a farm can genuinely sell out its picking capacity for a Saturday. Many Yarra Valley and Dandenong Ranges orchards, including CherryHill Orchards at Wandin East/Coldstream, run all-you-can-eat entry with a booked timeslot, partly to manage numbers in the rows. Cherry Haven, also in Wandin East, recommends booking for the same reason, and in the Adelaide Hills, Harben Vale Cherries in Balhannah takes bookings and asks visitors to check picking status before driving out. A short checklist before you go:
- Check whether the farm takes bookings online or by phone — many Yarra Valley, Dandenong and Adelaide Hills cherry farms now require or recommend it, especially December weekends.
- Book earlier in the week if you can; weekend slots in the first fortnight of school holidays go first.
- Confirm what the entry fee includes — some farms charge all-you-can-eat entry plus a per-kilo rate for fruit taken home, others charge purely by weight with no entry fee.
- Ask about weekday versus weekend pricing — several orchards charge less Monday to Friday for the same crowd-management reasons.
- Call the morning of your visit if the farm takes no formal bookings — a hot spell can mean a patch is picked out by early afternoon.
Best places to pick cherries in Australia
New South Wales: Orange and the Hilltops (Young)
The Orange district, and Nashdale in particular, is one of the country's best-known cherry areas, helped by its cool-climate elevation. Nashdale Orchards at Canobolas charges $8/kg with no entry fee and recommends booking for its November-to-December season. Stockman's Ridge Orchard at Lidster runs an eat-as-you-pick model — $5 entry per person (under threes free) lets you eat as much as you like in the orchard, with fruit to take home charged at $10/kg. Thornbrook Orchard, also in Nashdale, has no entry fee at all and charges $8/kg for sweet cherries and $10/kg for sour varieties across its 16 November to 25 December window. About an hour south-east, the Hilltops district around Young is the other big NSW name in cherries — Young holds an annual National Cherry Festival — and Ballinaclash Orchard & Cellar Door charges $5 entry per person plus a small booking fee, with children under six free. Nearby at Wombat, Allambie Orchard skips the entry fee entirely and charges $10/kg for what you pick, running from November right through to January — one of the longer windows in the district.
Victoria: Yarra Valley and the Dandenong Ranges
The Yarra Valley and neighbouring Dandenong Ranges, both under an hour from Melbourne, cluster a genuine concentration of cherry orchards around Wandin East, Coldstream and Silvan. CherryHill Orchards charges roughly $22.50 per adult on weekdays and $25 on weekends for all-you-can-eat picking, with kids around $13 to $15 and family packages available. Cherry Haven charges $20 per adult and $10 for children aged four to thirteen, with under-threes free. Both run from late November into January, making the Yarra Valley/Dandenongs corridor one of the most reliable weekend cherry trips from Melbourne, provided you book ahead over the peak weeks in December.
South Australia: Adelaide Hills
The Adelaide Hills around Forest Range, Balhannah, Birdwood, Ashton and Charleston is South Australia's PYO cherry heartland, with orchards typically open for around six weeks somewhere inside the mid-November to mid-January window. Harben Vale Cherries in Balhannah charges $8 entry for adults, $4 for children under twelve and lets under-fives in free, with cherries then priced per kilogram depending on variety picked. Individual Adelaide Hills orchards vary their own exact dates by a few weeks — some open earlier in November, others don't get going until December — so it pays to check a specific farm's current status before the drive up from the city.
Elsewhere: Mornington Peninsula and Perth Hills
On Victoria's Mornington Peninsula, Ripe 'N' Ready Cherry Farm at Red Hill runs an all-you-can-eat orchard entry of $25 for adults and $10 for children aged three to fifteen, with cherries to take home priced at $15 to $22 per kilogram across its mid-November to mid-January season. Over in Western Australia, the Perth Hills around Carmel is the state's main cherry-picking district; Carmel Cherry Farm runs a shorter November-to-December window and asks visitors to confirm current entry pricing directly, since published figures vary between sources.
How to pick a ripe cherry
Unlike a banana, a cherry doesn't keep ripening once it's off the tree, so picking with intent matters.
- Look for deep, even colour for the variety — a duller or paler patch usually means it needs another day or two on the tree.
- Pick with the stem attached where you can; cherries pulled off without the stem bruise at the point of separation and spoil faster.
- Give the fruit a gentle twist rather than a hard pull, which keeps the small spur it grew from intact for next year's crop.
- Firm, plump fruit keeps better than soft fruit — skip anything with a split skin or a soft, weeping patch.
- Pick into a shallow container rather than a deep bucket; cherries piled too deep bruise each other under their own weight.
What cherry picking costs
Cherry farms tend to use one of three pricing models: a flat per-kilogram rate with no entry fee (Nashdale Orchards, Allambie Orchard), a modest entry fee plus a per-kilo rate for fruit taken home (Stockman's Ridge, Harben Vale Cherries), or an all-you-can-eat orchard entry with take-home fruit charged separately (CherryHill Orchards, Cherry Haven, Ripe 'N' Ready). As a rough guide, expect $8 to $12/kg where pricing is purely by weight, and $18 to $25 per adult where all-you-can-eat entry is the model, with children usually around half that or less. All prices here are as reported by the farms as at July 2026 — cherry pricing in particular tends to move within a season as supply tightens or eases, so confirm the current rate when you book.
Storing your cherries
Fresh cherries keep noticeably longer than strawberries or raspberries if you handle them right. Keep them out of a hot car boot on the drive home, then straight into the fridge unwashed — cherries left at room temperature soften and lose flavour within a day. Stored cold in a container or bag with a little airflow, most varieties keep for one to two weeks. If you've picked more than that, pitting and freezing them on a tray before bagging is the easiest way to stretch a big haul through winter baking; our guide to storing and freezing your pick covers the method in full.
Planning your visit
Because so much of the cherry season sits inside the school holidays, it's worth deciding early whether you're bringing kids: fruit often hangs higher in the canopy than strawberries or blueberries, so a step-stool or the farm's own picking aid usually helps younger children reach anything worthwhile. Our fruit picking with kids guide has age-by-age notes, and the what to bring fruit picking checklist covers hats, shoes and containers that apply just as much to cherries as any other crop. If cherries whet your appetite for other stone fruit, our peach picking and plum picking guides cover farms that often share the same districts, usually a little later in the summer.
Seasons shift with the weather. Always call the farm to confirm what's ripe and that they're open before you drive out.