You’ve shortlisted three or four luxury glamping options in Victoria, and the listings don’t agree on what ‘luxury’ means. One operator’s luxury tent is a bell tent on a wooden deck. Another’s is a geodesic dome with a private bathroom. The photos all look about the same, and the listings all use the same handful of marketing words.
There’s no formal definition of luxury glamping and no standards body. What follows is the set of features that turn up reliably in the listings that earn the label, the questions worth asking before booking, and where Marysville Holiday Park’s three glamping tents fit in.
What separates luxury glamping from regular glamping
The line between regular glamping and luxury glamping isn’t sharp, but six features turn up reliably in the listings that earn the luxury label. None of them are essential on their own. Together, they form the picture.
Climate control. A reverse-cycle split system keeps the tent comfortable on a 35-degree summer day and a 5-degree winter night. Listings that mention ‘climate-controlled’ without specifying split-system air conditioning often mean a fan in summer and a portable heater in winter, which is a different category of stay. Year-round comfort is the single biggest practical differentiator.
Bathroom arrangement. Some luxury tents include a private ensuite with a shower, basin and toilet. Others share a high-spec amenities block with two or three other tents. Shared isn’t a downgrade by default. A purpose-built block close to the tent, kept clean, with hot showers, is a different experience from public toilets at a campground. But the arrangement is worth knowing before you book.
Outdoor living space. A firepit, a gazebo, and a private or semi-private outlook are common to most luxury glamping setups. If the deck looks straight onto another tent or onto a road, that’s worth knowing before you book a quiet weekend away.
Real beds and proper bedding. Luxury glamping tents have queen or king beds with quality mattresses, full linen, doonas and pillows. Regular glamping can mean thinner mattresses, sleeping bags supplied, or shared bunk setups. If a listing says ‘sleeps four’ without explaining the bed configuration, the bedding is worth asking about.
Kitchen and coffee setup. Most luxury glamping tents in Victoria include a coffee machine, a kettle, a fridge, and often a small kitchenette. Some have full cooking facilities. The line is usually whether you can prepare a meal in the tent or whether you’ll be using a shared camp kitchen. Both work, but they’re different stays.
Bell, safari, dome, yurt, pod, A-frame and vintage caravan all turn up in luxury glamping listings across Victoria. Each has a distinct shape, ceiling height and feel, and each handles winter, summer and quiet differently.
The short version:
- Bell tents: round, single-pole canvas. Cosy, characterful, with sloping walls.
- Safari tents: rectangular twin-pro canvas. More upright space, easier to fit a proper split system.
- Domes: geodesic frames with clear panels for stargazing. Lose heat faster than canvas in winter.
- Yurts: circular Mongolian-style structures with felt insulation. Warm and unusual.
- Pods and A-frames: timber cabins styled as glamping. Cabin in the woods, not a tent.
- Vintage caravans: restored mid-century vans on permanent sites. A different category again.
The structural differences matter. A safari tent handles winter heating better than a bell tent. A dome looks dramatic at night but loses warmth through the clear panels once the sun goes down. The full breakdown of each tent type, with worked examples of Victorian operators running each, sits in our piece on glamping tents in Victoria

What to ask before you book
Six questions cover most of what the listings don’t tell you.
Bathroom arrangement. Is the tent ensuited, shared with one other tent, or shared with the wider park? How far is the amenities block from the tent door? At night and in winter, the walk matters more than it sounds.
Heating and cooling. Confirm what’s installed. ‘Climate-controlled’ can mean a reverse-cycle split system, a portable heater, or just a ceiling fan. The difference is the difference between a year-round tent and a fair-weather one.
Bed configuration. Queen, king, or twin? One bed or two? Some tents marketed as luxury are really four-person family setups with one queen and a pull-out couch. If the listing photo shows two beds, check whether it’s two queens or a queen and singles.
Kitchen setup. Full kitchenette, coffee machine and fridge, or kettle only? Some sites ask guests to use a shared camp kitchen for any cooking. If you’re planning to bring food and stay in for a meal, confirm what you can do inside the tent.
Pet and noise policies. If you’re travelling with a dog, ask. Some luxury glamping is couples-only and pet-free; some sites have pet-friendly cabins next door but not pet-friendly tents. If you want quiet, ask whether the tents are couples-only and how close the next tent sits.
What’s included in the price. Some operators charge extra for firewood, linen hire, amenities block access, or late check-out. Most don’t, but the listings rarely spell out the inclusions in detail, and the extras can add up by the time you check out.
Marysville Holiday Park's three glamping tents
Marysville Holiday Park has three glamping tents on the Steavenson River, all couples-only, all on permanent fixed decks within a short walk of a shared amenities block.
Kookaburra is a 5-metre traditional bell tent set right on the riverbank. It has a queen bed, a reverse-cycle split system, a coffee machine, kettle and microwave, plus a firepit and a fixed gazebo on the deck for shade.
Black Cockatoo and Lyrebird are 6-metre by 4-metre twin-pro safari tents on elevated decks slightly upstream. Both have queen beds, two occasional chairs, reverse-cycle climate control, a coffee machine, kettle and microwave, and a TV for DVDs or USB content. Each has its own firepit. The decks are private enough that the next tent isn’t part of the view.
The amenities block is a short walk from each tent. It’s a purpose-built park amenities block with hot showers and proper finishes, not a bush long-drop. The bathroom arrangement is the trade-off: shared rather than ensuite, with the on-deck setup, fixed gazebo, firepit and split system at a luxury spec. All three tents face the river, and the drive from Melbourne is about 90 minutes via the Black Spur.


Common questions about luxury glamping in Victoria
Is luxury glamping worth it compared to a hotel?
For most travellers booking a nature-led short break, yes. A luxury glamping tent gives you a forest or river setting, a private deck and firepit, and the sound of the outdoors at night, which a hotel can’t. A hotel beats a tent on convenience and central-city location. The question is what kind of trip you’re booking.
Are luxury glamping tents heated in winter?
The good ones are. A reverse-cycle split system runs as both heating in winter and cooling in summer, and it’s the standard for Victorian luxury glamping operators that stay open year-round. Tents without proper heating tend to close over winter or limit bookings to warmer months.
Do luxury glamping tents have private bathrooms?
Some do, some don’t. Higher-priced setups like glamping pods, domes and dedicated luxury sites often include an ensuite. Most canvas tents (bell, safari, yurt) in Victoria use a shared amenities block close to the tent, and price the stay accordingly. The arrangement is worth confirming before booking.
What's the difference between glamping and luxury glamping?
There’s no formal definition. In practice, luxury glamping in Victoria usually means a permanent fixed deck, a real bed with full linen, reverse-cycle climate control, a private outdoor area with a firepit, and either an ensuite or a high-spec shared amenities block. Regular glamping might include some of these features but rarely all of them together.
Can I bring my dog to a luxury glamping tent?
Most luxury glamping tents in Victoria are couples-only and pet-free, including the three tents at Marysville Holiday Park. If you’re travelling with a dog, look for pet-friendly cabins instead. Marysville has three Maple cabins that allow up to two dogs, on the same site as the glamping tents.
Choosing the right tent for the trip
The right tent depends on what kind of trip you’re booking. A bell tent on a riverbank suits a quiet anniversary weekend with long evenings on the deck. A safari tent works better through winter, with more space and stronger climate control. A geodesic dome suits a stargazing trip in clear weather and shoulder season. A pet-friendly cabin is the right call if the dog is coming.
If you’re booking from Melbourne and want forest, river and a 90-minute drive, the glamping tents at Marysville Holiday Park cover both bell and safari styles. Bookings tend to fill quickly through summer and during snow season at Lake Mountain. Three or four weeks ahead for a weekend, or a fortnight ahead for midweek, is usually enough lead time.

1130 Buxton Road, Marysville Victoria, 3779