The Browse Basin lies offshore from WA’s Kimberley region and hosts vast accumulations of natural gas, some are rich in condensate, making it Australia’s next major gas producing province on the North West Shelf. It is estimated that the Ichthys gas accumulation contains 12.8 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of gas and 527 million BBL of condensate, and represents the largest hydrocarbon accumulation with recoverable liquids found in Australia since the discovery of the Gippsland Basin and Barrow Island oil fields in the 1960s. Similar amounts of gas, albeit drier (CGR 20–30 BBL/MMscf) are hosted within the Brecknock, Calliance and Torosa accumulations (cumulative of 15.9 Tcf gas and 436 million BBL condensate). For this reason, the Browse Basin continues to be a focus of exploration, in which both international companies and Australian explorers are capitalising on LNG opportunities. This extended abstract provides a summary of hydrocarbon accumulations encountered in the Browse Basin (up until late 2014). Accumulations discovered in the Browse Basin include: Abalone, Adele, Argus, Bassett, Torosa, Brecknock and Calliance, Ichthys, Concerto, Mimia, Burnside, Caspar, Caswell, Columba, Cornea, Focus, Sparkle, Crux (including Libra), Hippolyte, Echuca Shoals, Gwydion, Marabou, Poseidon (including Kronos, Boreas, Zephyros and Poseidon North), Crown (including Proteus and Pharos), Psepotus and Lasseter. The authors provide a summary of the regional geology, evolution and tectonic development of the basin, and discuss the hydrocarbon reserves and hydrocarbon potential of the basin. This provides a guide to assist potential future exploration programs in the Browse Basin.