Family enjoying some food on the jetty at Camp Cove in Watsons Bay, Sydney
Photograph: Supplied | Destination NSW
Photograph: Supplied | Destination NSW

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.

Autumn is in full swing, and I'm personally loving the cooler mornings and warm days. Plus, the ocean is lovely for swims at Sydney’s best beaches.

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, explore the best shows in Sydney right now. And if you feel like dancing, hit up these 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
  • Pyrmont
Crisp autumn days are made for drinking in gorgeous Sydney harbour views while you drink a glass of wine, don’t you think? And that’s exactly what you'll be doing at the 2026 Pyrmont Festival. Returning to Pirrama Park on May 23-24 for its 14th year, this much-loved free festival transforms the waterfront into a lively community celebration of food, wine and fun. What can you expect? How about more than 30 wineries, breweries and distilleries from across NSW giving Sydneysiders the chance to sip and sample their way through regions like the Hunter Valley, Orange, Mudgee and the South Coast without leaving the city. Expect standout pours from Petersons Wines, Hungerford Hill, Tamburlaine Organic Wines, Cuppit's Estate, Hungerford Hill, Tulloch Wines and Robert Stein, alongside craft brews from White Bay Beer Co and spirits from Finders Distillery. And the food truck line-up is just as tempting. Feast on everything from paella by Sofrito Paella and pillowy pasta from The Gnocchi Way to woodfired sandwiches from Eat Ozzo (one of our Time Out Food & Drink Award nominees) and sweet treats from the iconic Famous Berry Donut Van. There’ll also be artisan produce stalls selling cheeses, salami, honey, olives, chocolates and other gourmet goodies to take home. Pyrmont Festival keeps the atmosphere buzzing with live music across two stages, art and health workshops, plus kids’ entertainment in the form of a bouncy castle, face painting and even mini golf. Best of all, it’s...
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  • Art
  • Galleries
  • Sydney
  • Recommended
Australia’s most popular arts event is back in action for 2026, with the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes bringing a fresh batch of painterly expressions to the walls of the Art Gallery of NSW from May 9 to August 16.  They call it “the face that stops the nation”, and the Archibald Prize has indeed been courting controversy and conversation for more than a century now. This popular portrait prize is always filled with famous faces, with artists from all over Australia (and also New Zealand) capturing the spirit of the times through paintings that capture the likeness of the personalities that define their communities. Melbourne-based artist Richard Lewer is the winner of the Archibald Prize 2026 – he won over the judges with a stunning portrait of Pitjantjatjara Elder, senior artist and ngangkari (traditional healer) Iluwanti Ken. RECOMMENDED: A beginner's guide to the Archibald Prize. The winner of the 2026 Packing Room Prize was announced a week earlier, with the Packing Room Pickers (a.k.a. the Art Gallery staff who receive, unpack and hang the entries) selecting Sean Layh's striking painting of actor Jacob Collins as their favourite Archibald portrait this year.  Meanwhile, the Wynne Prize awarded the best landscape painting of Australian scenery or figurative sculpture to Yolŋu artist Gaypalani Waṉambi, and the Sulman was awarded to Lucy Culliton for the best genre painting, subject painting or mural project.  The annual finalists exhibition is a real must-see,...
  • Things to do
  • Talks and discussions
  • Sydney
Architecture lovers, rejoice! Museum of History NSW’s Sydney Open is back for another year, kicking off its 2026 program early with Sydney Open Symposium.  While Sydney Open offers up a chance to take a stickybeak in the landmark buildings that make up the city’s skyline, Sydney Open Symposium dives deeper, with a series of talks and panel discussions.  Running from May 23 to 24, the two-day event will explore the past, present and future state of housing in NSW. Across day one, five talks will run between 10am and 3pm with topics ranging from housing materials to suburbia and whether people or policy create real solutions for housing. Notable speakers include comedian Tim Ross, partner at SJB Adam Haddow, host of The Sydneyist, Dr Elizabeth Farrelly, Wiradjuri Architect and Managing Director at Nguluway Design Inc, Craig Kerslake, Caroline Pidcock and co-founder of Second Edition Amy Seo. For those keen to see theory in practice, add a private house tour to your ticket. Across day two, a curated selection of exemplary residential designs will be available to view – from small-footprint apartments to sustainable projects. Highlights include the renovation of a 1920s waterfront Rose Bay property and the transformation of a historic shop corner in Marrickville. General tickets are $50 with an additional $15 for a house tour but get in quick as places are strictly limited. Find the full program here. 
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  • Film
  • Sydney
Few songs embed themselves into the cultural DNA quite like Jeff Buckley’s cover of “Hallelujah”. While younger generations are discovering his talent through TikTok, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Amy Berg, who grew up on the grunge and punk of the ‘90s, revisits his life in a tender new documentary It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley. Pieced together through curated footage of the late singer-songwriter both onstage and off, the documentary is told in large part by the women in his life. We hear from his single mother, Mary Guibert, his good friend Aimee Mann, his former girlfriend Rebecca Moore, and his longtime partner Joan Wasser, who each offer emotional memories and thoughtful insights.  What’s undeniable through their recounts is Buckley’s talent, as Time Out reviewer Elizabeth Weitzman writes: “The punk angel with the four-octave range also had a rare and remarkable mimetic gift – which made him an unusually skilled interpreter of other artists, from Nina Simone to MC5 to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.”  Whether you know him for the myth forged by his untimely death – echoing that of his musician father, Tim Buckley – or for his elegiac take on Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” a rendition that has moved millions, It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley offers another side of the story. “Fans, of course, will fiercely argue that Buckley has so much more to offer. And in the strongest compliment to Berg’s affectionate portrait, she makes a similarly convincing case, with ample and tender grace.”...

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