Newtown Street Party
Photograph: Supplied | Newtown Street Party
Photograph: Supplied | Newtown Street Party

March events in Sydney

Ring in the first month of autumn with a cracking line-up of exhibitions, shows and cultural festivals

Avril Treasure
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Summer may be over for another year, but the good times keep on rolling. And TBH, March is one of my favourite months in Sydney – the weather is still warm, daylight saving is still here, and the water is the perfect temperature. Plus, there’s lots of fun happening.

Kick-start the month with the annual All About Women celebration at the Sydney Opera House. There are still a handful of tickets left. YTG!

One of my favourite food events of the year is happening right now – late-night food market Lakemba Nights. It’s on during the sacred month of Ramadan, when Muslims break their fast after sunset. Head to Lakemba now until March 15, dress modestly – and come hungry.

Australia’s largest contemporary arts festival, the Biennale of Sydney, returns this March for its 25th edition – and it’s completely free. And you can check out our guide to the best shows to see in Sydney this month.

Plus, the AFC Women’s Asian Cup 2026 kicks off in March. Go the Tillies!

Plus, despite summer being over *by name*, there's still going to be plenty of time to frolic through the city's best beaches, splash around at one of Sydney's most beautiful swimming spots, and head off the beaten track at one of the city's most stunning secret beaches.

Scroll on for the best things this month. Happy March!


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

Stay outside this March at one of Sydney's best (and easiest) day hikes, and book a night or two at one of the most gorgeous glamping sites in NSW.  

The best events to catch this month

  • Music
  • Ultimo
Sydney’s fave foodie playground is about to step up its entertainment offering. The new Sydney Fish Market’s New Wave Concert Series kicks off this Feb, transforming the architecturally impressive foodie mecca into a harbourside stage for three golden-hour Saturdays. From 5pm-8pm for the next three Saturdays, visitors can pair fresh seafood with live performances from some of Australia’s brightest emerging talent. The best news? It’s completely free – meaning more cash left over for sashimi.RELATED READ: These are our fave waterfront restaurants in the city Across the three-night series, we can expect a mix of genres: February 21 brings big country-folk energy, February 28 leans into indie dream-pop, and the March 7 line-up will feature a fusion of R&B, jazz and indie pop. Headliners include powerhouse rock duo Big Wheels, disco-funk faves Bread Club, and indie-pop angel Yorke. Each gig will be steered by Ifeoma (Ify) Peace Obiegbu, the South West Sydney-based creative, poet and storyteller with a knack for making every mic moment feel electric (you might know her from her stint as host of FBi’s Up For It!, where she spent two years championing local talent).If you ask us, it’s the perfect excuse to eat oysters in the open air and people-watch as the sun drops over Blackwattle Bay. As you’d expect, there’s no need to book or register – just rock up with an appetite between 5 and 8pm.RELATED READ: These are our fave things to eat at the new Sydney Fish Market Stay in the...
  • Things to do
  • Food and drink
  • Lakemba
For people of Islamic faith, Ramadan is the most sacred month of the year. During this time, Muslims fast from dawn to dusk. But once the sun sets, iftar begins – a fast-breaking feast that runs late into the night, bringing family and friends together to enjoy an array of rich treats and moreish morsels. To coincide with this time of year, Sydney’s popular month-long celebration Lakemba Nights is back, running every Thursday to Sunday from February 19 to March 15, 2026. RELATED READ: The 5 must-try dishes at Sydney's Lakemba Nights Ramadan markets. What time does Lakemba Nights during Ramadan open and close? From 6pm until 2am, Thursday through to Sunday, more than 60 local businesses will transform Lakemba’s Haldon Street into a vibrant, global food bazaar with traditional cuisine from Indonesia, Burma, Pakistan, India, Lebanon, the Cocos Islands, Syria and more. Time Out tip: We recommend getting there early, around 6pm, and making a beeline straight for the busiest stalls (they're the ones with fences up for lines!). It’s not only Sydney’s Muslim communities that comes together during Lakemba Nights – people of all backgrounds are welcome to flock to sample the fare of pop-up kitchens and food trucks lining Haldon Street. What started as a single street barbecue back in 2012 has grown into what many consider one of Australia's best places to celebrate the ancient tradition, with the event from previous years drawing in more than one million people across the...
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  • Things to do
  • Food and drink
  • Marrickville
Whether you're a local or just love to stop by, Marrickville is a melting pot of things to see and do (and eat). With its Greek and Vietnamese influences, live music venues and breweries, there’s no denying the friendly inner west suburb is one of the coolest neighbourhoods in the world.  With an influx of families and foodies moving in, here’s your chance to meet the neighbours (or seriously consider joining them) as The Yard Party takes over Marrickville Timberyards on March 22 with a fun-filled community celebration.  From 10am to 2pm, you can head on down for delicious local food vendors, lively entertainment and fun for the whole fam – that includes your furry friends too. Entry is free but if you register you might just snag one of the 1,000 free food vouchers up for grabs. There’ll be plenty of other freebies on the day including scoops from Messina Gelato.  The Yard Party is also your chance to get a first look at the redevelopment of the Timberyards, which are currently undergoing construction to build a new housing and community hub with 115 affordable housing units in the heart of Marrickville.  Head down to The Yard Party from 10am to 2pm on March 22 and be sure to sign up for your chance to score a free food voucher here.  
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  • Shopping
  • Sydney
Dear gentle readers, if you’ve ever imagined being Her Majesty Queen Charlotte’s diamond of the season, then here’s your chance. While a trip back to Regency-era London isn’t on the cards, Pandora is set to bring the world of Bridgerton to life with an immersive pop-up at Queen Victoria Building from February 3 to March 8. Alongside the pop-up comes a swoon-worthy 14-piece collection inspired by the Netflix hit series, giving fans the chance to take a little piece of finery home – and you might even spot your new jewellery in the hotly anticipated fourth season, of which the first part lands in late January.  Drawing on the lavish universe of Shonda Rhimes’ period romp, the Pandora and Bridgerton Rules to Love By collection reimagines classic Regency-era jewellery through a modern lens. Crafted in 100 per cent recycled sterling silver and 14k gold plating, the range will feature pearls, bows and crystal accents in pastel shades, including lilac wisteria (a Bridgerton staple). There’ll be everything from ear climbers to necklaces, adorned with hand-finished flowers that nod to the secret love messages of Regency romance.  Watch the Pandora QVB space transform to a salon gorgeous enought to make all the ladies of the ton jealous. The QVB's romantic architecture is already a step back in time, but now the Pandora store will be adorned with wisteria wallpaper and flourishing wall mouldings. Don't miss the regal ceiling-to-floor drapery that's perfect to snap a pic in front...
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  • 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...
  • Things to do
  • Educational venues
  • Millers Point
A dazzling blood moon eclipse is coming our way on Tuesday, March 3 – and the Sydney Observatory is inviting you to its watch party. From 8-11.30pm, the Observatory will host a stellar (get it?) event: Lunar Eclipse Live: Sydney to Nagoya. In a very cool international collaboration, our Powerhouse Museum is teaming up with Nagoya City Science Museum in Japan to livestream the eclipse. You’ll be able to compare Sydney’s view with Nagoya’s in real time – and, yes, the moon really does look a little different depending on where you’re located. You’ll get a chance to peer through telescopes at the Observatory to watch the moon slip into Earth’s shadow and turn a dramatic shade of red for 58 mesmerising minutes. Peak eclipse is set to hit at 10.33pm, when the moon will glow its deepest crimson above Sydney Harbour. This is the last total lunar eclipse until December 2028 – so it’s kind of a big deal. It's your chance to chat with the legends from the Sydney City Skywatchers and professional astronomers. It’s relaxed, it’s outdoors and it’s completely free. Bring a picnic blanket or camping chair, rug up and settle in for a cosmic show. Just keep an eye on the forecast – if the clouds roll in, the moon might play hide and seek. While the event is free, you do need to book your spot 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: Love nature? Check out these cool...
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  • Things to do
  • Talks and discussions
  • Sydney
  • Recommended
Former New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern. Author Zadie Smith. Podcaster and author Yumi Stynes. Opera star Deborah Cheetham Fraillon. Journalist Emily Maitlis. Novelist Laila Lalami. These are just a few of the fun, fearless females taking over the Sydney Opera House for the annual All About Women festival, on March 8, 2026. The annual festival of feminist ideas marks International Women’s Day with a stellar line-up of over 30 guest speakers and storytellers who will engage in incisive yet inclusive conversations and commentary on gender, culture and equality. Now in its 14th year, the festival will run from 10am to 7.30pm across multiple venues at the Opera House. The day-long event dives into the conversations shaping our world, from gender and power to culture, identity, money and modern love. Expect Jacinda Ardern to reflect on "radical empathy" and redefining leadership. Yumi Stynes will tackle the mental load of long-term relationships. Chanté Joseph and Dr Lisa Portolan will unpack dating, digital romance and "heterofatalism". There’s a sharp look at medical misogyny with Summer May Finlay and Zoe Wainer. While Laila Lalami will explore AI, surveillance and belonging in her eerily timely novel The Dream Hotel. You’ll also find practical empowerment in MoneyGirl, a financial literacy workshop designed to build confidence and control, plus vibrant discussions on ageing unapologetically, and the lived experiences of Arab-Australian women navigating identity and migration....
  • Things to do
  • Food and drink
  • Woolloomooloo
Make your next Sunday session sparkle with a brunch that screams summer. Taking place on the rooftop of the gorgeously decked out Woolly Bay Hotel, Ovata Sundays promises a whole heap of bubbles and banging tunes.  While you’d be hard pressed to find a decent all-inclusive brunch in Sydney for less than $100, let alone less than $80 – Ovata Sundays delivers on value and good vibes. For just $75, you’ll score a dedicated spritz menu (including a citrusy number and a classic Hugo spritz), Ovata sparkling wine (including the newly launched Ovata by Oakridge Sparkling Rosé) and fresh canapés for an hour and a half – all while a DJ is mixing it up on the decks from 3pm to 5pm.  For nibbling on, there will be pork san choy bow, wagyu sandos, citrus-cured salmon bites and jamon croquettes – don’t mind if we do. If you’re feeling a bit more peckish there are other deliciously paired items you can add-on like South Coast rock oysters and tempura Yamba prawns. Plus, if you like what you’re drinking, you can score special deals on glasses and bottles of Ovata by Oakridge wine on the day.  Rather a mid-week bevvy? Arturo’s is putting on spritz specials from 4.30pm to 5.30pm on Wednesdays to Sundays. Get the crew together for Ovata Sundays on Arturo’s Rooftop from February 15 to April 19 (excluding March 29). Seatings are $75pp – bookable on the hour from midday – and you can lock yours in here.
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  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Sydney
If you've ever wondered what would happen if a kid's drawing of their wildest dream utopia suddenly came off the page and into real life, you're in luck, because that's pretty much what's happening right now beneath the Art Gallery of NSW.  Artist and professional disruptor Mike Hewson has taken over the weird subterranean world of The Tank with his one-of-a-kind new exhibition, Mike Hewson: The Key's Under the Mat, where for the first time ever, all the main lights in the normally pitch-dark Tank will be switched on, revealing a weird wonderland of interactive art pieces and play equipment that have to be seen to be believed. We're talking: A steam room with stained glass windows that you can actually sit in, a functioning sauna with bespoke church pews, five actual operating public barbeques that you can cook on, rushing water to play in (seriously, bring your swimmers), a working laundry,  and a free-to-use recording studio, plus a whole plethora of bright and delightful surprises that are all about getting community together, to do cool stuff, for free. Basically, break your imagination and delete all adult expectations. This is unlike anything we've ever seen.  Kids who aren't afraid of some risk are also one of Hewson's big targets with this show (although parents, rest easy, the floor is specially made out of recycled soft rubber that's rated for use in public playgrounds), with the space also home to a wild children's playground. Intrepid kidlets can test their...
  • 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...

Have a pint in the hills

  • Pubs

They pack the pubs tightly inside the 2010 postcode. You've got craft beer temples with gleaming banks of taps ready to cater to even the most esoteric thirst; there are tried and tested stalwarts for a cold beer and a Swans game; or you can upgrade your dinner in high-end dining rooms.

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