Yes. Cornwall House Accommodation in Kojonup has 12 rooms across four room types, which means a group can book multiple rooms and stay under the one roof. Family rooms sleep 3 to 4 guests. Queen and twin rooms suit couples or individuals travelling together. There is no minimum group size requirement.
Finding accommodation in regional WA that works for a group is harder than it sounds. Most short-stay properties are single dwellings that either sleep a big group or do not, with nothing in between. Motels with multiple rooms tend to lack the shared amenities that make a group trip feel like a group trip rather than just a bunch of people in the same building.
Cornwall House in Kojonup sits differently. With 12 individually configured rooms, it can accommodate groups of various sizes and compositions without everyone needing to share walls, bathrooms, or beds they did not sign up for. Each room has a private ensuite. Everyone gets climate control, Wi-Fi, and a proper bed.
Here is a practical breakdown of how the property works for groups, what the town offers when you get there, and what to think about before you book.

What Cornwall House Can Accommodate
The property has four room types. Groups can mix and match depending on who is travelling and what they need.
- Queen rooms: 2 guests, queen bed, private ensuite.
- Twin rooms with ambulant access: 2 guests, 2 king-single beds, accessible ensuite.
- Family rooms: 3 to 4 guests, queen bed plus king-single, ensuite. A porta-cot or swag fits in the room for an additional sleeping arrangement.
- Family rooms with special wheelchair access: same sleeping configuration, fully accessible ensuite.
All 12 rooms are reverse-cycle air-conditioned, have free Wi-Fi, a Smart TV, mini fridge, microwave, kettle, and tea and coffee facilities. There is also a work desk in each room. No shared bathrooms, no common sleeping areas.
The mix of room types means a group does not have to choose between “book the whole house” and “figure it out across two separate motels.” A family reunion with couples, families with young kids, and a grandparent with mobility needs can all be in the same place without compromise.
What Types of Groups Use the Property
Kojonup is a working agricultural town on the Albany Highway, roughly 260 km south of Perth and 160 km north of Albany. That position makes it a practical overnight stop for groups moving through the Great Southern region rather than pushing the full drive in one go. Some common scenarios:
- Family groups or multigenerational trips where different family units want their own rooms and bathrooms.
- Sporting or social groups travelling for the Wandecla Races in February or other regional events.
- Work crews or contractors needing short-term accommodation in the area for a project.
- Small tour groups using Kojonup as a base for the Wildflower Festival or the Great Southern wine trail.
- Friends or colleagues heading to or from Albany who want a proper overnight stop rather than camping or arriving exhausted.
The accessible rooms also matter for groups that include someone with mobility needs. One ambulant-access room and one full wheelchair-access room means the whole group does not need to split across different providers to make the trip work.
What to Do in Kojonup
The town has enough to fill a day or two if the group has time either side of the main reason for travelling.
Kodja Place is the obvious first stop. It is a rammed-earth visitor centre shaped like a stone axe, the Noongar word for which gives it its name. Inside there are interactive farm-life exhibits, a gallery of Noongar and farming artefacts, and a stage surrounded by native bush. Outside is the Heritage Rose Maze, planted with over 2,000 Australian-bred rose bushes across roughly 100 varieties. The roses tell the stories of three local women through mosaics, letters, and journal entries. October to June is the bloom period, with November at its peak.
For those who want to get out on foot, the Myrtle Benn Flora and Fauna Sanctuary has community-built walking trails with good birdlife, and the Farrar Nature Reserve covers 1,000 acres including the historic Railway Dam, now home to long-neck tortoises, frogs, and kangaroos.
The Wildflower Festival brings more than 400 named species into bloom each spring, and the region is worth the detour for that alone if the timing works. Frankland River, about 45 minutes from Kojonup, has cellar doors at Alkoomi, Ferngrove, and Frankland Estate for groups interested in the Great Southern wine region.
Back in town, the Commercial Hotel is one of WA’s oldest continually licensed hotels. The Black Cockatoo Cafe is open seven days. The Kojonup Bakery and Country Kitchen cover most other meal needs. For a group that has been on the road, that is more than enough.
Planning a Group Booking
Please contact us directly to book either through our contact page or call (08) 9831 0214 to talk through your group’s needs and check availability.
FAQ
Can Cornwall House accommodate a group booking?
Yes. With 12 rooms across four room types, groups can book multiple rooms and stay at the one property. There is no set minimum or maximum group size.
What is the maximum capacity at Cornwall House?
The property has 12 rooms. Family rooms sleep 3 to 4 guests each. Queen and twin rooms sleep 2 each. Total capacity across all 12 rooms depends on the room mix available for your dates.
Does Cornwall House have accessible rooms?
Yes. There is one ambulant-access twin room and one family room with full wheelchair access, both with private ensuites. Groups that include someone with mobility needs can book these alongside standard rooms.
Where is Kojonup in WA?
Kojonup is at 72 Albany Highway, approximately 260 km south of Perth and 160 km north of Albany. It sits in the heart of the Great Southern agricultural region and is a practical overnight stop on the Albany Highway route.
How do I make a group booking?
Contact Cornwall House directly via the contact page or call (08) 9831 0214 to confirm room availability and combinations for your group.


