Buderim, town, southeastern Queensland, Australia. It is situated on the Sunshine Coast on a volcanic plateau, about 62 miles (100 km) north of Brisbane by the Bruce Highway.
The area was inhabited by Aboriginal Kabbi Kabbi (Gubbi Gubbi) people when first contact with Europeans was made in the 1820s. The town was proclaimed in 1869, its name coming from an Aboriginal word for honeysuckle; the land was cleared for agriculture, and settlement began shortly thereafter. The red volcanic soil of the area produces avocados, citrus fruits, vegetables, and ginger. The town lent its name to a brand of ginger, although the ginger-processing plant (among the world’s largest) was moved to the nearby town of Yandina in 1978. Tourism is a major component of the economy. Pop. (2006) 25,202; (2011) 27,069.