The Jetty Bar at Felons Manly
Photograph: Supplied | Felons Manly
Photograph: Supplied | Felons Manly

Things to do in Sydney today

We've found the day's best events and activity ideas – so you can plan the perfect day in the Harbour City

Avril Treasure
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No plans today? We've got you covered.

Make the most of the beautiful and warm ocean temperatures and take a dip at one of Sydney’s best beaches, or swim your way through these incredible ocean pools. Hungry? Pack bread, pickles and cheese, and hit up these pretty picnic spots – or stroll through these fun and tasty markets and pick up a treat or two.

If the sun’s shining, gather the crew and head to one of Sydney’s top rooftop bars, or knock back a pint in a sunny beer garden at one of the city’s best pubs. Afterwards, dress up and visit one of Sydney’s best restaurants – or save a few dollars and work your way through our guide to these fab cheap eats. Wanna visit a new spot? Check out Sydney’s best new restaurants and bars here.

For a culture hit, check out the best shows in Sydney right now. And if you feel like dancing, hit up these fun and pumping clubs.

Craving a bit of relaxation? These are the top day spas in Sydney.

Want more? Check out Sydney's best yum cha, burgers and fish and chips.

Scroll on for our full list of the best things to do in Sydney today.

Want to get your weekend plans in order, right now? Check out our pick of the best things to do in Sydney this weekend.


Rain putting a dampner on your plans? These are the best things to do indoors.

On a budget? These are the Time Out team’s pick of 25 things to do in Sydney for under $25.

Stay in the loop: sign up for our free Time Out Sydney newsletter for more news, straight to your inbox. 

The day's best events

  • Things to do
  • Fairs and festivals
  • Sydney
Get to Darling Harbour on Sunday, March 1 and say 'Opa' to the Greek Festival of Sydney. It's free, it's fun and it's filled with all your Hellenic favourites. Now in its 22nd year, this celebration of Greek-Australian culture will have Tumbalong Park buzzing from 10am to 10pm.  Feast on yum souvlaki and syrupy loukoumades, watch different dance troupes perform traditional Greek dances like the Sirtaki (yes, the same one in Zorba the Greek) and the Kalamatianos (in a circle) and let the kids enjoy face painting while you browse the many pop-up stalls for handcrafted trinkets. There'll be live music, entertainment and dancing throughout the day. And at 7pm, singer Ioulia Karapataki will perform directly from Greece, so make sure to catch that.   Learn more about the Greek Festival of Sydney and plan your visit here. Stay in the loop: sign up for our free Time Out Sydney newsletter for more news, travel inspo and activity ideas, straight to your inbox. RECOMMENDED: Jetstar has just dropped a huge sale with international flights for less than $200 NSW will get 24,000 more trees thanks to a $10m tree planting program Wowsers – the median house price in Sydney is now $1.76 million
  • Art
  • Marrickville
Hate supermarket shopping? You’ll love browsing these aisles of The Grocery Store – an exhibition of inedible goods instead. This fake supermarket is packed with very real food-themed art and it’s the most fun grocery run you’ll ever do. Get to Marrickville's Voluptuary Ceramics studio for this immersive, retro-kitsch exhibition. More than 20 Australian artists have reimagined everyday supermarket staples into covetable artworks through ceramics, sculpture, photography, painting, print and textiles. Nothing is edible; everything is collectible.  Wander the aisles to find ceramic milk cartons, oil-painted mangoes, pasta clocks, glittering fish combs and even asparagus wall hooks. It’s surreal, it's tongue-in-cheek, it's the mundane made magnificent. New works are being added throughout the run, so no two visits are quite the same. The exhibition runs daily until March 15 and entry is free. Find out more here.  Stay in the loop: sign up for our free Time Out Sydney newsletter for more news, food & drink inspo and activity ideas, straight to your inbox. RECOMMENDED:  Want more? These are the best art galleries in Sydney to visit Make a day of it with these fun things to do in Marrickville  Grab a bite later at any of the Marrickville restaurants on this list
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  • Comedy
  • Millers Point
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
"You paid a hundred and sixty thousand euros for this shit?" Marc asks his old friend Serge at the start of Lee Lewis’s restaging of the 1994 satire by French writer Yasmina Reza, Art. It feels sort of meta to be reviewing and speaking to a show whose literal tagline is “Everyone’s a critic. Especially your friends.” But, here we are.   Art has been having its own sort of renaissance on world stages, with the most recent revivals featuring three well-known male celebrities to draw in crowds. In London, it was Rufus Sewell, Paul Ritter and Tim Key, while on Broadway it was Neil Patrick Harris, James Corden and Bobby Cannavale. Australian audiences have been gifted with three long-time friends and collaborators Richard Roxburgh (Rake, The Correspondent), Damon Herriman (Justified, Together), and Toby Schmitz (Boy Swallows Universe, Gaslight). It’s a massive drawcard for audiences to have three actors of this calibre together on stage in a play about the worth of art and what holds together a friendship. And it’s one that has been proving to be working, if the “House Full” sign that’s been sitting outside Sydney Theatre Company’s Roslyn Packer Theatre during previews is anything to go by. What type of show is Art? Marc (Roxburgh) is filled with “some indefinable unease” by his friend Serge’s (Herriman) most recent extravagant spend on a painting that essentially appears to be a blank, white canvas. It’s the recurring gag, the somewhat theatrical McGuffin to Reza’s satiric...
  • Dawes Point
  • 5 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
The question of meaning has long shaped the human condition, at once a source of existential anxiety and a catalyst for some of the world’s most powerful artistic expression. For some, purpose is not pursued but inherited – something life quietly unfolds in its own time, revealing itself only in hindsight. For others, it is a relentless obsession, a restlessness that has driven monks, scholars and countless others towards faith, philosophy and protest in the hope of naming and securing it. Whatever the path, one thing remains certain: purpose is a question that sits within all of us.  Sydney Theatre Company has built a reputation for championing African American voices, staging landmark works by writers such as August Wilson (Fences, 2023) and Lorraine Hansberry (A Raisin in the Sun, 2022). While those productions connected Australian audiences with enduring American classics, Purpose offers a voice unmistakably of the present, one grappling with the complexity of living in a world that is hyper-aware of itself.  The play premiered on Broadway in the 2024-25 season, winning the 2025 Tony Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. It's rare for Australian audiences to encounter work with such immediacy; more often, international successes arrive years after their debut. Its programming signals that new artistic director Mitchell Butel may be shaping a tenure characterised by currency. At a moment when conversations around race, human rights, identity, politics...
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  • Things to do
  • Sydney
The Sydney Harbour Concours d’Elegance is back for its eighth year, bringing rare, classic and ultra-luxury vehicles to the Southern Hemisphere’s most glamorous automotive showcase. To celebrate its return, organisers are adding a brand-new (and completely free) opening event to the program. On February 26, head to Bennelong Lawn for a sneak peek at 30 of the world’s finest cars, set against the sparkling backdrop of Sydney Harbour. Drop by between 10am and 12pm to admire the display, then catch the cars as they depart in convoy over the Harbour Bridge at 1pm en route to Cockatoo Island, where the main event runs from February 27 to March 1. Want more than just a preview? Time Out readers can score 20 per cent off tickets to the three-day event on Cockatoo Island by using the code 6XP6K6X2 at checkout. Across the weekend, expect everything from vintage classics to cutting-edge supercars and hypercars, plus the latest in energy-efficient vehicles. There’s also a curated wine and cheese experience each day, and on the final day an international panel of experts will crown the prestigious Best in Show. To secure your discounted tickets, head here. 
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