Currumbin Wildlife Hospital

Peek inside one of the busiest hospitals in the world

Currumbin Wildlife Hospital treats over 16,000 sick, injured and orphaned native wild animals each year. When you visit the Sanctuary, you can get a behind the scenes look at the amazing work of the veterinary team. As a not-for-profit charity, just by purchasing your Sanctuary ticket, you are helping fund the essential work at the hospital.

Wildlife Hospital Presentation

11.30am Daily

Watch through the glass hospital walls as our team talks you through the treatment being provided to the sick and injured wildlife in our care.

Green Location Icon

Map Location: Q2

Four children and a staff member look through a glass window inside a wildlife facility. Medical equipment is visible inside the room.
girl looks at echidna being treated during wildlife hospital tour

wildlife hospital Tour

9.30am Daily

Get an exclusive behind the scenes look at Currumbin Wildlife Hospital and spend 60 minutes inside one of the busiest wildlife hospitals in the world.

Help Us, Help Wildlife

Make a difference for thousands of animals

Currumbin Wildlife Hospital treats thousands of sick, injured and orphaned native animals as a free service to the community. We can’t do it alone, all donations make a difference.

A woman in a green shirt feeds a koala medicine using a syringe while the koala clings to a tree.

Find Out More

Find out more about one of the busiest wildlife hospitals in the world and learn how you can help us to treat, rehabilitate and release native Australian wildlife.

vets look after koala in wildlife hospital

Jingeri – Hello

We respectfully acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the greater Yugambeh language region, the Country on which Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary and Hospital are situated today. We recognise their continuing connections to the land, sky, waters (waterways), and wildlife. We thank them for caring for this Country and its ecosystems.

We celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures, and we pay our respect to Elders past and present.

Birds
A vibrant red and orange bird