Sydney, Australia
Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.
Overview
Harbour city break
Beach and coast
Ferries and the harbour
Museums and galleries
Modern Australian food
Day trips and nature
History
Culture
Practical Info
Sydney works as a constellation of zones around its harbour rather than as a single dense centre. The harbour core — Circular Quay, the Opera House, The Rocks, the Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney Harbour Bridge — is the postcard half-day and the natural first orientation. Walking from the Quay through The Rocks (Sydney's oldest neighbourhood, sandstone warehouses turned bars and weekend markets), under the Bridge approach, around Walsh Bay and back along the Botanic Garden cliff path to Mrs Macquarie's Chair (the classic Opera-House-with-Bridge photo angle) takes about three hours and frames the city's geography. Beyond the core, Sydney spreads in three big directions: eastern beaches (Bondi the famous one, plus the 6km Bondi-to-Coogee coastal walk past Tamarama, Bronte, Clovelly), northern beaches (Manly via the 30-minute ferry from Circular Quay, then the path along Shelly Beach or up the coast to Dee Why and Avalon), and inner suburbs that hold the city's everyday food and culture life — Surry Hills (cafés and small bars), Newtown (King Street's vintage shops and restaurants), Paddington (Saturday markets, terrace houses, art galleries), Potts Point and Darlinghurst. Sydney's ferries are not just sightseeing; they are real transport, often beating road traffic for harbour crossings, and the Manly ferry remains one of the world's great commuter routes. Public transport runs on the Opal card (or contactless bank card), and a single tap covers train, bus, ferry and light rail. Sydney Airport (SYD) is unusually close to the centre — about 9 km — connected by the T8 Airport Line train to Central Station in 14 minutes (an airport-station surcharge applies, total around AU$22). The city's calendar peaks twice: Sydney Festival in January, and Vivid Sydney (late May–mid-June) when the Opera House sails and harbour bridges become projection canvases. A practical 4-day structure: day 1 harbour core; day 2 Bondi to Coogee and the eastern beaches; day 3 Manly and the northern side via ferry; day 4 inner-suburb food and the Art Gallery of NSW, or a Blue Mountains day trip (2 hours west by train). Visitors from Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Spain, France and Italy require an Electronic Travel Authority (ETA, AU$20, 12-month validity, 3 months per visit) — apply via the official ETA app or government site before booking flights, since approval can take days.
Discover Sydney
Transport & airports
Official planner and timetable for Sydney Trains, Sydney Buses, Sydney Ferries and Sydney Light Rail. Opal card and contactless bank-card tap-on covers all modes; daily fare cap around AU$18.80 weekdays.
Flight information, terminal maps and ground transport for Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport — 9 km from the CBD, served by the T8 Airport Line train to Central in 14 minutes (with airport-station surcharge).
Tourism & destination guides
Official tourism portal for Sydney and New South Wales — events, itineraries, neighbourhood guides and accommodation.
Guided climbs to the top of the Sydney Harbour Bridge arch — pre-dawn, day, twilight, night and Vivid sessions; about 3.5 hours, AU$300+. Pylon Lookout museum at the south pylon is a paid alternative for non-climbers.
30 hectares wrapping the harbour east of Circular Quay — free entry, self-guided trails, the Calyx (rotating large-scale plant installation), and Mrs Macquarie's Chair viewpoint.
Culture & festivals
Official site for performances and tours of the UNESCO World Heritage Opera House. Multilingual guided tours including German, French, Mandarin, Korean, Japanese and Spanish.
National-tier collection covering Australian, European and Asian art; free general admission, paid international exhibitions; the Yiribana Gallery of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art is a key draw. Sydney Modern extension opened late 2022.
Australian and international contemporary art at Circular Quay in a 1930s art-deco building; free general admission, paid touring exhibitions.
7 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.