About Burnie City Council Community Directory
The Burnie Community Directory offers a comprehensive guide to local groups, services and facilities in the Burnie region. It highlights services across a range of areas to support residents, families and visitors.
Key categories you can explore include:
- arts and culture
- disaster relief
- mental health support
- libraries and learning
- government and community centres
- social and self-help groups
- transport services
The site allows you to search or browse to discover a wide range of services, programs and community groups.
Info Hubs in the Burnie City Council
They provide a central online platform where individuals can easily find local services, community programs, and events tailored to their needs.
Explore clubs, groups, and services in
the Burnie City Council Community Directory
Showing 6 of 28 Categories
Find Local & Visiting Services in Burnie City Council
The Burnie Community Directory lists services in categories such as Aboriginal services, accommodation, ageing support, child services, crisis and emergency support, cultural and migrant services, disability services, health services, giving residents a single place to find help and support.
The directory also features transport assistance, volunteering, welfare assistance, youth services, education, employment and training, animal services, arts and creatives as well as environment and conservation groups, recreation and leisure, sport, advocacy, communication & information, information and counselling, legal assistance, peak bodies, community centres & halls, community clubs & interest groups, business services, religion and philosophy, self‑help, covering everything from community clubs, cultural programs and environment groups to legal aid and business support.
As Burnie is a populated local government area, most services are delivered locally through council facilities, schools, health centres and community organisations, with occasional visiting specialists for more complex needs.
Burnie Region
Nestled on Tasmania’s north‑west coast, Burnie blends a working port with beaches, waterfalls and a thriving arts scene. Paper mills once dominated, but now microbreweries, galleries and fern‑filled reserves draw visitors. Locals head to a secluded gully where platypus live undisturbed and gather at an art deco cinema showing classic films with homemade sweets.
Council has an approximate area of 610 km².