Horseshoe Bend Station

Horseshoe Bend Station is a pastoral lease that operates as a cattle station in the Alice Springs region of the Northern Territory.

The property occupies and area of 5936 km2 and includes approximately 80 km frontage to the ephemeral Finke River with a string of semi-permanent waterholes. Situated upstream of Crown Point Station, the homestead is on the Depot sandhills, 23 km south of the junction of the Finke and the Hugh Rivers. The property includes a 2000 km2 desert block that has never been developed. The station was originally a staging post for the Overland Telegraph Line and the North–South Road, with a hotel and post office. The former Central Australia Railway line passed about 72 km west of the homestead.

The area around the station was hit hard by drought in 1897, so much so that several of the surrounding properties were abandoned. The second owners of the property were the firm of Sargeant and Elliot, who also operated the hotel. They restocked the property with cattle; in 1908 they sent stock in 16 railway cattle cars from Oodnadatta to Adelaide and an unspecified number from Warrina. Mr Sargeant, described as "one of the oldest and best-known residents of the far north", died in 1912.

Pastor Carl Strehlow, the founder of Hermannsburg, died and was buried at the station. He arrived at Horseshoe Bend in 1922 after a 250 km buggy ride from Hermannsburg while en route to reach medical treatment in Adelaide.

By 2018, Horseshoe Bend Station was reported to be run by Viv Oldfield who also owned other properties nearby including Clifton Hills Station, Andado Station and Pandie Pandie Station.