Nambucca Heads, town and promontory, north-coastal New South Wales, Australia. It is located at the mouth of the Nambucca River.
The name of the town and of the river is derived from an Aboriginal term meaning “entrance to the waters.” The Nambucca River flows some 70 miles (115 km) through heavily timbered country to enter the Pacific just south of the promontory. The town was founded in 1842 by cedar lumbermen, but by the 1870s dairy farmers were appropriating the deforested river flats. Proclaimed a village in 1885, it became a shire in 1915. Connected to Sydney (250 miles [400 km] southwest) by rail and the Pacific Highway, it serves a region of mixed farming (bananas, dairying, beef, corn [maize], and vegetables) and lumbering. Tourism, based on nearby New England National Park, fishing and surfing facilities, and the spectacular view of the coast afforded by Yarrahampi Lookout, provides additional income. Pop. (2006) urban centre, 5,873; (2011) urban centre, 6,220.