Home Travel 18 Best Festivals And Events In Australia To Add To Your Bucket List!
Travel - January 2, 2026

18 Best Festivals And Events In Australia To Add To Your Bucket List!

18 Best Festivals And Events In Australia To Add To Your Bucket List!

From the red-dusted heart of the Outback to the sun-soaked edges of its sprawling coasts, Australia is not just a country to visit for nature, it’s also packed full of immersive festivals and events that showcase its diverse culture and creative community.

To wander through Australia’s festival calendar is to chase sunrises across time zones and follow dreamlines carved by ancient cultures. It’s to taste bush food beside bonfires, to sway beneath eucalyptus-scented skies, to join crowds who believe that a good celebration lasts all night. Australian festivals are luminous, loud, and sometimes delightfully bizarre.

From dazzling fireworks displays on New Year’s Eve to rural grassroots music festivals and amazing art and fringe festivals, when you visit Australia there’s always something happening.

Table Of Contents

  1. 1. Vivid Sydney
  2. 2. Carols by Candlelight
  3. 3. Sculptures by the Sea
  4. 4. Sydney New Year's Eve
  5. 5. Bluesfest Byron Bay
  6. 6. Adelaide Festival
  7. 7. Australia Day, January 26th
  8. 8. Tamworth Country Music Festival
  9. 9. Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Parade
  10. 10. Australian Open, Melbourne
  11. 11. Perth International Arts Festival
  12. 12. Henley on Todd Regatta, Northern Territory
  13. 13. Sydney Fringe Festival
  14. 14. RISING Melbourne
  15. 15. Brisbane Festival
  16. 16. AFL Grand Final Day
  17. 17. Rabbits Eat Lettuce Festival
  18. 18. Woodford Folk Festival
  19. More Australia Travel Tips

1. Vivid Sydney

opera house sails covered in lights for the Vivid Sydney Festival
Vivid Sydney Festival
  • When: last week of May until mid-June
  • Where: Sydney
  • Website: VividSydney.com

The Sydney Vivid Music and Lights festival is an annual festival that transforms the city at night into a colourful canvas of light, music, and creative ideas. The hugely popular Vivid Lights get switched on every night for a month in winter, lighting the areas around The Rocks District and Circular Quay.

The festival features interactive and immersive light shows, art installations, illuminated skyscrapers, and large-scale 3D mapping projections on the Sydney Opera House, Museum of Contemporary Art, and Customs House. This takes place every year and is free to witness – each year it’s just as fun as the last.

2. Carols by Candlelight

Carols in the Domain
Carols by Candlelight

Carols by Candlelight is a popular Australian Christmas event. It takes place at Melbourne’s Sidney Myer Music Bowl each year on Christmas Eve and has been running for over 85 years. It’s basically exactly what it says on the tin – it’s an open air event that invites a lineup of musicians, comedians, actors and children’s entertainers to put on performances, meanwhile thousands of battery powered candles light up the night.

Arrive early with a picnic blanket and chairs and bring your own food and drink. Settle in to watch a Christmas performance given by some of Australia’s biggest stars. It’s the biggest and oldest Christmas event in Australia, and each year attracts around 10,000 people. It’s also to raise funds for Vision Australia’s children’s services. 

Sydney also has its own Carols by Candlelight called Carols in the Domain and is held every year in the Domain Gardens in Sydney. It takes place in the coming days before Christmas and raises money for The Salvation Army.

3. Sculptures by the Sea

Sculptures on the rocks by the Sea, Bondi, NSW
Coral by Coral Collective | Credit: Tourism Australia
  • When: March in Cottesloe and October in Bondi
  • Where: Cottesloe and Bondi Beach
  • Website: SculptureByTheSea.com

A very popular event along the Tamarama stretch of beaches, on the famous Bondi to Coogee Beach coastal walk, and in Cottlesloe WA, is the Sculptures by the Sea annual event. The beaches become canvases for some of Australia’s top sand sculpture artists. Each piece of work adds to the dramatic natural setting, and it’s possible to see 108 works by artists from Australia and overseas exhibited.

The event is temporary in Bondi and Cottlesloe, but they last about a month and are free to see. The dates vary each year but are usually in March in Cottlesloe and October in Bondi. You can also see a permanent exhibit along the Snowy Valleys Sculpture Trail from Adelong to Cellar Doors.

4. Sydney New Year’s Eve

fireworks over sydney harbor bridge
Bring on the New Year
  • When: December 31st – January 1st
  • Where: Sydney Harbor

Known to have the most spectacular fireworks display in the world. Sydney New Year’s Eve on the Harbour is a spectacle that should be on every person’s bucket list. We are still yet to check it off, depsite growing up outside Sydney, but are dreaming of that Sydney Harbour Cruise in a prime position overlooking the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House, with waiters that hand us oysters and wine all night long.

Fancy doing a New Year’s Eve cruise of Sydney Harbor? Then check this tour out!

5. Bluesfest Byron Bay

ben harper singing into a microphone
Ben Harper

Folk, soul, blues, and rock- how could you miss this convergence of music in the ultra-cool alternative town of Byron Bay? Bring only a laid-back attitude and a pair of gum boots. This festival is so chilled and has loads of music and fun for all ages.

The four-day event has more than 200 gigs you can attend, as well as food stalls and beer counters serving up good food and beer so you can enjoy the festivities. We went to the Byron Bay Bluesfest and loved it.

6. Adelaide Festival

dancers performing at the adelaide fringe festical
Strut & Fret, LIMBO | Credit: South Australian Tourism Commission

Every year in March, the warm Adelaide evenings become electrified as the very best in theatre, dance, music, film and the arts come to town. The Fringe festival runs for 2 weeks with lots of off-the-wall performances in a variety of venues across the city. The festival is now self-supported and has grown so much that it’s now Adelaide’s top annual festival.

7. Australia Day, January 26th

couple posing for camera with sydney opera houes behind them
Sydney Harbor is a great place to celebrate Australia Day
  • When: 26th January
  • Where: Everywhere

Anywhere in Australia will be raising the roof on the 26th of January for Australia Day. It’s the one day of the year where Aussies can celebrate being Aussie! On this day, cultural events and festivals take place all over Australia to celebrate the establishment of the first permanent European settlement in Australia.

It was on January 26th, 1788, that Arthur Phillip sailed to what is now Sydney Cove with a shipload of convicts and declared it their new home. The best way to celebrate this day is to head down to the beach or the park for a picnic and a game of cricket. Sydney also has fireworks and events all over the country, especially in major cities. This is our national day so come celebrate with us!

8. Tamworth Country Music Festival

singer perfomring on stage looking at the crowd at the tamowrth country music festival
Credit: Tourism Tamworth
  • When: mid-late January
  • Where: Tamworth
  • Website: tcmf.com.au

You don’t even have to like country music to enjoy the festivities at Tamworth Country Music Festival. It is wild fun, and a great festival to attend if you’re a tourist visiting Australia because it feels like a real authentic and fulfilling Aussie experience.

For 10 days in January, every street corner will have a busker playing and pubs will be filled to the brim with patrons, live music, and mechanical bulls. For country music fans, you’ll enjoy this gem of a festival because there is something for everyone. Concerts from Australia’s best country stars are held as well as the Australian Country Music Awards.

9. Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Parade

group of gay men in rainbow costumes smiling at camera at Sydney gay and lesbian mardi gras
Credit: Tourism Australia

One of Australia’s hottest festivals of the year is the Sydney Mardi Gras Parade, which celebrates Gay Pride in Australia

Every year at the end of February, celebrate with the LGBTQ community as they take to Oxford Street on parades filled with floats, fancy dress, street performances, and outlandish costumes whilst waving Pride fags.

It is crazy good fun and a great way to raise awareness and show support for this community. You can dress up in rainbow fare and get involved, or simply watch on as spectators.

10. Australian Open, Melbourne

empty tennis court at australia open
  • When: mid-late January
  • Where: Melbourne
  • Website: AusOpen.com

Australia’s grand slam event and the first for the tennis circuit year. Experience live daily entertainment, from free music concerts and DJ sessions to an all-day music festival and carnival village. And of course, you get to watch the tennis matches from the spectator’s box.

Big outdoor screens are set up outside the arena for those who can’t get tickets or who don’t want to pay. The atmosphere will be pumping.

11. Perth International Arts Festival

crowds gathering at on cottlesloe beach
DAWN Opening ceremony on Cottesloe Beach

The Perth International Arts Festival (PIAF) has now been running for over 60 years. It’s Australia’s longest-running arts festival, and the longest-running in the southern hemisphere. It’s a three-week-long festival including a wide variety of performing arts such as opera, dance, theatre, music, visual arts, and the Perth Writers Festival.

Performers are drawn from Australia and around the world and the schedule of events are held at venues throughout the city of Perth, including some street theatre and performances.

12. Henley on Todd Regatta, Northern Territory

Caroline Makepeaceمصدر

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