The National Trust of Australia is calling on event organisers to register for inclusion in the 2026 Australian Heritage Festival, an opportunity to drive visitation, engage new audiences, and gain exposure.
The Australian Heritage Festival is the nation’s largest community-driven heritage event. The annual celebration of natural, built, cultural and Indigenous heritage positions participants at the heart of celebration that has been bringing heritage to life since 1980.
Free to organisations of all forms and sizes – from tourism businesses to not-for-profit and community groups, councils, conservation groups, museums, galleries, libraries, spiritual places and others – the 46th Australian Heritage Festival will launch to the public on World Heritage Day 18 April and run until 18 May 2026.
Events and activities can be newly developed for the Australian Heritage Festival or registered as existing offerings, so long as they run during the month-long Festival and commemorate the rich and diverse heritage that makes NSW a compelling destination year-round.
Free and ticketed attractions
Covering metropolitan and regional areas of the state, the 2026 Festival calendar will ultimately feature a mix of free and ticketed attractions; including tours of all kinds, classes and workshops, concerts and performance art, exhibitions, family fun days, First Nations ceremonies, dining experiences, special markets and food fairs, talks and forums, online-based activities and much more.
“The Festival is designed not only to connect communities but also, to provide support and recognition to the many worthwhile organisations across our state that bring heritage to life,” National Trust of Australia chief executive officer Debbie Mills said.
“We’re calling on event organisers to join us in marking the ever-changing story of who we are in NSW. History is not fixed in the past; it is a constantly evolving living force that shapes our present and guides our future.
“By breathing new life into the places, objects, and traditions of the past, we can imagine where they might take us next. Spanning Sydney’s historic streets to regional towns and sacred Indigenous sites, we’re inviting people to explore the stories that have influenced our communities and to consider how each generation reinterprets our heritage.”
