As the Lights Fade, Vivid Sydney 2026 Leaves the City Glowing

Vivid Sydney 2026, in numbers: 

  • The festival hosted 217 events, with 2,253 sessions across 89 locations
  • 6,000 attendees at Wonderverse, 460 free laser shows, 69 free demonstrations at the Food for Thought Stage, 73 free music performances, 16 firework displays, and 116 sold out events.
  • Vivid Sydney’s Local Business Program included 543 participants.
  • Vivid Sydney 2026 included 855 talent from 26 countries, including 159 Australians.
  • More than 80% of the festival is free to attend, including 100% of the Vivid Light Walk, Tumbalong Nights music program, and the Vivid Fire Kitchen.
  • More than 500 people from Australia and beyond had their lighting design heroed and lit up on the Sydney Harbour Bridge and surrounding 22 buildings as part of the ‘Our Connected City’ projection.
  • Vivid Food featured more than 240 food and beverage leaders across the festival, showcasing a diverse mix of culinary expertise and creative voices.
  • The Vivid Fire Kitchen saw more than 250,000 dishes and drinks purchased from 17 vendors, including 46,000 desserts and 18,500 unique chef dishes from the Fire Pit.
  • Visitors enjoyed more than 8,000 freshly shucked oysters from 14 NSW farmers as part of Vivid Food’s sold-out Oysters in the House event accompanied by 400 Litres of Hunter Valley Semillon from 8 producers.
  • Tumbalong Nights showcased more than 40 top artists from 12 countries across its free concert programming.
  • A total of 41 international acts made their Australian debut as part of Vivid Music and Vivid Minds.
  • The Sydney Opera House forecourt saw more than 15,000 visitors come to watch Cristal Palace, Vivid Sydney’s first major outdoor spectacle.
  • With nearly 40,000 tickets sold and 50% of attendees new to Vivid LIVE, this year delivered the strongest box office result since COVID-19 and its second-largest on record.
  • The Carriageworks program attracted more than 30,000 ticket bookings and generated a 38% increase in revenue compared with 2025.

Off the back of 23 nights of truly spectacular sights, events, and experiences, Vivid Sydney once again switches off its lights, closing out another stellar festival period as the world’s largest comprehensive arts festival.

Over three weeks from 22 May until 13 June, Vivid Sydney for 2026 took a revitalised and refreshed approach to its creative programming, with the addition of daytime events and installations to keep visitors occupied during their days.

The festival also returned to its rich heritage of curating and collaborating with some of Australia’s own acclaimed and upcoming talent, topped off with exceptional global creators, artists, and culinary heavyweights.

Building on the festival’s strong roots in the arts, Vivid Sydney this year brought with it some of the world’s most renowned names in food, arts, and music, including everyone from Yotam Ottolenghi and Chris Levine, to Chloé Zhao and Saint Levant, right through to Australia’s very own talent such as Matt Corby, Mark Best, and Mallrat. For some of which, Vivid Sydney marked their Australian debut.

NSW Minister for Jobs and Tourism, Steve Kamper said, “Vivid Sydney once again transformed winter in our city, drawing visitors from across Australia and around the world to experience Sydney at its most spectacular.

“More than just a light festival, Vivid creates unforgettable experiences that celebrate our city’s vibrant culture and innovative creative industries. More than 80 per cent of the program was free, over 500 Australians had their own lighting designs projected onto the Harbour Bridge, and the Vivid Fire Kitchen at Barangaroo became the beating heart of the festival.

“Vivid Sydney is a powerful driver of our visitor economy and a celebration of everything that makes this city great. I cannot wait to do it all again in 2027.”

Vivid Sydney Festival Director Brett Sheehy AO, “This year’s Vivid Sydney has been an extraordinary success, exceeding our expectations not only terms of sell out shows across the program, but also in the level of enthusiasm, connection, and delight we’ve seen across the city.

“What’s been particularly striking this year is the depth of engagement across the program, with visitors exploring more than ever. On average they attended 4.5 locations and spent around three hours immersed in the festival per visit.

“Especially thrilling has been the response to our 2026 initiatives – the inclusion of spectacular aerial performances, of sculpture and visual arts elements, of the relocated and hugely expanded Fire Kitchen, of our blockbuster laser and pyrotechnic shows, and of the growth in scale of all four pillars – light, music, minds and food.”

Motti and Smith Events Director Blake Smith said: “We turned up the heat this year in partnership with Vivid Sydney, co-producing Vivid Fire Kitchen in its new home at Barangaroo Reserve and the response was phenomenal. The Vivid Fire Pit became the heart of the precinct, bringing together 27 chefs each creating a signature dish, alongside guest chefs on the Food for Thought stage and a curated line-up of culinary vendors and bars, all delivered across 23 nights.

“Crowds came out in force to experience the free cooking demonstrations, live music and the energy of the Vivid Light Walk woven throughout the space. Food was undeniably the hero, with cooking over fire drawing crowds in and giving them every reason to return night after night.”

Vivid Sydney 2026 Program Highlights

Vivid Light

A focal point of Vivid Sydney, the Light Walk, was condensed into a 6.5km trail from Darling Harbour, all the way to Circular Quay. The Light Walk also brought together more than 90 artists from 14 countries, highlighting the global creativity and diverse perspectives at the heart of Vivid Sydney.

This year, 43 light projections and installations provided visitors with a whimsical way to engage with the festival, including giant a walkable piano, a seesaw that controls the sunrise, and the tallest installation that the festival has had in the program.

Angela Tiatia’Vaiola brought the Museum of Contemporary Art’s facade to life with her signature, vibrant motifs, while the Sydney Opera House was illuminated with the movement of the natural world in Yann Nguema’Opera Mundi.

In 2026, lasers made a spectacular feature in the Light program with prominent roles in Sky SymphonyMolecule of Light, and audience favourite TIME:WARPED; while they were the star of the show in Laser Lightfall. 

Vivid Music 

From breakout Australian talent to internationally renowned acts, the line-up at Tumbalong Nights reflected the diversity and energy of the festival, with standout performances from SHAUNSeun Kuti & Egypt 80The CongosMatt Corby and Eddy Current Suppression Ring attracting particularly high attendance. Ticketed events across City Recital Hall, Metro Theatre, and Oxford Art Factory saw unparalleled support for Saint Levant, Chanel Beads, and Clara La San.

Vivid LIVE at Sydney Opera House hosted monumental performances from more than 50 cutting-edge and legendary artists from around the globe, including 25 Australian acts and 17 from Greater Sydney. Vivid LIVE highlights included Mitski’s highly anticipated exclusive residency with Folk Bitch TrioJeff MillsErika de Casier with the Sydney Symphony OrchestraSALEMkwn, the powerful world premiere Gil Scott-Heron tribute by Brian Jackson and Yasiin Bey, and homegrown stars King StingrayDrifting Clouds and Party Dozen.

Carriageworks’ Vivid Sydney 2026 program was the cultural precinct’s most successful to date, bringing together hip hop and R&B icons, acclaimed local and international electronic music artists, First Nations celebration, contemporary performance and immersive dining experiences. Carriageworks’ program featured headline performances from Lil’ Kim, Ella Mai, Skin On Skin, Alison Wonderland, Porter Robinson, The Black Angels and more, alongside the free, all-ages Awesome Black Block Party headlined by Tasman Keith and Wire MCChunky Move’s cutting-edge U>N>I>T>E>D, and the sold-out Warakirri Dining Experience curated by SMH Good Food Guide Bill Granger Trailblazer Award recipient Sharon Winsor.

Vivid Minds

Vivid Minds hosted not one but two of the most recent Academy Award-winning film directors (Sean Baker and Chloé Zhao), a Pulitzer Prize-winning author (Jerry Saltz), New York Times-bestselling author (Roxane Gay) and Grammy nominee (Zane Lowe), reaffirming the festival’s commitment to creative excellence.

Minds also continued to diversify its program offering, complementing more traditional keynote talks and conversations with immersive and experimental means of conveying ideas, such as the technology-led polyvocal lecture A Sexual History of the Internet, and Wonderverse, which uses light, music and performance to teach children about the vastness of the universe.

In a festival-first, French aerial performers and musicians took over the Sydney Opera House forecourt for a long weekend of free outdoor performance of Cristal Palace – from the dizzying heights of a giant chandelier centrepiece.

The Midweek Minds series brought together leading minds from creative industries to deep-dive into the changing creative landscape, while events with the renowned Debbie Millman and Mindy Seu were hugely popular.

Vivid Food

With a refreshed focus for this year, Vivid Sydney delivered a bumper year of Food – its biggest yet.

Yotam Ottolenghi lead the program’s Regional Dinner Series with A Shared Table event, heroing the best of NSW’s produce. Six additional events in this series paired top regional NSW chefs with popular Sydney restaurants to develop produce-forward menus.

In its new location at Barangaroo Reserve, the Vivid Fire Kitchen took on its role of the unofficial festival hub with its own unique program across the 23 day period. More than 64 culinary talent were stationed within this mini-precinct centred around the Fire Pit and Flamemasters, complete with free demonstrations on the Food for Thought stage.

Events at Shell House included Wet, Cold + Delicious Tuna Dinner and Oysters in the House which gave diners a taste of NSW seafood, while Cult & Classic at The International was the inaugural wine-focused event.

Vivid Sydney Partners

Returning as Major Partners for 2026 were Kia, Samsung Electronics Australia and IREN. Kia marked its fifth consecutive year as a Major Partner, presenting Kia Refraction in Bligh & Barney Reserve.

Samsung activated for its fifth year as a partner with Sky Portal Studio, an immersive and interactive sculptural installation in First Fleet Park.

Lilly Australia joined as an Official Partner in 2026, celebrating its 150th anniversary and presenting a Vivid Minds panel, A New Horizon of Health.

Uber also came on board as an Official Partner, with dedicated pick-up and drop-off zones across the festival footprint. Dine Out with Uber Eats served as the presenting partner of the Food for Thought Stage within Vivid Fire Kitchen.

The festival’s 2026 Charity Partner was Foodbank NSW & ACT, which appeared at Tumbalong Park with its interactive Foodbank Truck Packer installation.

Vivid Sydney Supporting Partners included City of Sydney, Dexus, Event Engineering, Kennards Hire, Mandylights, Port Authority of NSW, Technical Direction Company, The P.A. People, and Transdev.

Program partners included Carriageworks, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and Sydney Opera House. Location partners included the Australian National Maritime Museum, City Recital Hall, Cockle Bay Wharf, Placemaking NSW, and the State Library of New South Wales.

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