Halls Creek is a small town in (East Kimberley Region), in the eastern Kimberley region of northeast Western Australia, about 2950 kilometers by car from Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and about 1180 kilometres from Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory, with a resident population of about 1200.
Halls Creek is located on the Great North Highway, (Great Northern Hwy), a lonely town on an important road that runs through the North-South direction of Western Australia. There is no second town with a population of more than 1000 people in Halls Creek for 600km forward or backward. The indigenous people are the main inhabitants of the small town, and it is worth mentioning that, Halls Creek underwent a relocation and that the entire town of, Halls Creek moved to the vicinity of the airport after the completion of (Halls Creek Airport) at the Halls Creek airport in 1948. The abandoned town is now known as the old Halls Creek Old Halls Creek.
Halls Creek, though remote, is the nearest town to several famous national parks in the East Kimberley area, the most famous of which is (Purnululu National Park, the Honolulu National Park. (about 100km by car) and the Wolf Valley Crater National Park (Wolfe Creek Crater National Park, (about 150km by car), which also makes Halls Creek an important transit and resupply destination for tourists, bringing life and economic income to remote towns.