Entertainment

The Best Teen TV Shows on Netflix

These shows will take you back to high school.

Sony Pictures Television
Sony Pictures Television
Sony Pictures Television

To find out which platform these shows are streaming on in Australia, head to flicks.com.au.

Ah, the teenaged years. Who can resist the allure of nostalgia for the days when wild hormonal fluctuations ruled every decision; when laughable, superficial beliefs could define personhood; when it felt like no one understood you despite the fact that you tried desperately to fit in and not say the wrong thing, for fear of mass reprisal that could end life as you knew it?

Yes, those were heady times, far different from the life you now lead. Fortunately, Netflix has made it easy for you to reminisce about the halcyon days of youth without ever leaving your couch. These are the best teen TV shows on Netflix.

MORE: The 100 Best TV Shows on Netflix

Scott Patrick Green/Netflix
Scott Patrick Green/Netflix
Scott Patrick Green/Netflix

American Vandal (2017–2018)

American Vandal, about teen documentarians who investigate the conspirators behind the high school pranks of a dick-drawing vandal and somebody nicknamed “the turd burglar,” is much more than two seasons of dick/poop jokes. After the first couple episodes of each season, the more immature material falls to the background, allowing the show to satirize high school, race and class, and today’s criminal justice system in a surprisingly meaningful way. To pull it off, the co-creators studied the techniques that made them so invested in such true-crime titans as Serial, Making a Murderer, and The Jinx. It’s parody, homage, addictive teen drama all wrapped in one-an underrated win for the streaming service that’s sadly been officially canceled going forward.

Anne With an “E” (2017–2019)

This Anne of Green Gables adaptation has one of the most ferocious fanbases on all of stan Twitter. If you’ve ever stumbled across it in your feed, it may be somewhat surprising, but the canceled-too-soon Netflix original from Moira Walley-Beckett (Breaking Bad) is worth all of the hype. Not only is it an impeccably shot 19th century period piece about author L. M. Montgomery’s beloved orphan Anne growing up on Prince Edward Island, few teen series are so poised in the way they address contemporary issues, let alone adapting them thoughtfully for the past.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Atypical (2017– )

Robia Rashid’s ambitious family dramedy centers on an 18-year-old on the autism spectrum named Sam (It Follows‘ Keir Gilchrist) who’s seeking a girlfriend and independence. The writers carefully employ therapy sessions and asides to shed light on autism, moves that are always more enjoyable than didactic. The humor sprinkled throughout rarely comes at the expense of its protagonist (N.B. great fun facts about penguins and Antarctica). And the show touts a message of inclusion and compassion, no matter the circumstances, to which all viewers can relate. It’s an emotional ride, one that might get off to a clunky start, but one that’s ultimately worth the investment, especially considering the bite-size runtimes and the heft that sucker-punches you at the end.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Big Mouth (2017– )

In Big Mouth, comedian Nick Kroll and friends (including John Mulaney, Jessi Klein, and Jenny Slate, among others) essentially hop into an animated time machine to play young, more insecure, and hornier versions of themselves as adolescent tweens beginning to date and watch porn, coming to grips with their emotions and sexuality. With a no-holds-barred approach to the horrors of puberty and the freeing format of animation, the show tends to really go there (see: Hormone Monsters voiced by Kroll and Maya Rudolph, singing Michael Stipe tampons, scary sex fantasies), forcing you to relieve the unbearable awkwardness of those middle school years.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (2018–2020)

Sabrina Spellman is a typical teenage girl, aside from the fact that she’s a half-witch and lives in a supernatural household with her two witchy aunts and her warlock cousin. The heroine, played by Mad Men‘s dynamic Kiernan Shipka, must find her footing in both the human world and her new world of witchcraft: once she turns 16, she must choose whether or not to sign her name in the Book of the Beast and over to the Dark Lord, who, unbeknownst to her, sees the increasingly powerful young witch as the perfect vessel for his most evil bidding. The series takes characters and inspiration from the Archie comics universe and even has Riverdale showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa at its helm, infusing it with the perfect amount of grotesque horror and sassy-sweet attitude, making it a must-watch teen drama.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Cursed (2020– )

Just about everyone is familiar with the story of King Arthur and how he had to pull that damn sword out of that pesky stone. Cursed is another take on that classic tale, but rather than from the perspective of Arthur and his trusty wizard Merlin, it imagines the origin story of a woman who only comes into play in the legend later on. The series follows Nimue (Katherine Langford of 13 Reasons Why), a sorceress, who’ll go on to become the Lady of the Lake, but for now is in pursuit of the sword of Excalibur herself and meets a young Arthur along the way. Created by the same names behind the comic source material, Tom Wheeler and Frank Miller (Sin City, 300), the genre show is one to pay attention to, as the big budget fantasy series has some serious sorcery in its production that’ll send you on your own quest of wanting more.

Alison Cohen Rosa/Netflix
Alison Cohen Rosa/Netflix
Alison Cohen Rosa/Netflix

Dash & Lily (2020– )

No show is as merry and bright as the holiday teen rom-com Dash & Lily-and it’s seriously lovely for it. Based on David Levithan and Rachel Cohn’s book Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares, the series follows the burgeoning romance between two NYC-based teens (Austin Abrams and Midori Francis), who’ve never met but serendipitously trade a notebook back and forth, sending each other on dares around the city during Christmastime. The holiday setting is only half the magic of this one, which is really a whimsical story of two young people learning to come into their own. It has the power to lighten up even the grumpiest of Scrooges.

Sony Pictures Television
Sony Pictures Television
Sony Pictures Television

Dawson’s Creek (1998–2003)

Oh, Dawson, isn’t growing up tough? This new millennium teen drama that aired over on The WB laid the blueprint for many of the coming-of-age series that followed with its earnest portrayal of adolescence. Even if the precocious teens of the fictional New England town of Capeside don’t always have it easy, or you’re filled with anxiety watching the will-they-won’t-they unfold between Dawson (James Van Der Beek) and his best friend Joey (Katie Holmes), it always feels a little bit like coming home tuning into this late ’90s/early aughts classic.

Ursula Coyote/Netflix
Ursula Coyote/Netflix
Ursula Coyote/Netflix

Daybreak (2019)

High school, with its cliques, popularity contests, and bullies, is tough. But if those years were set in a post-apocalyptic world with zombies running amok, we’d probably rather embrace the petty stuff instead. In Netflix’s Daybreak, zombies are the reality, making for a joyfully ridiculous premise for a series. An adaptation of the Brian Ralph comic, Daybreak follows a boy named Josh who’s looking for his girlfriend with a crew of other weird, lost teenage souls in the fallout of a zombie apocalypse. It’s all very pompous, imagining how the cheer squad, football team, and others might rally and respond to flesh-eating creatures, but that’s part of the fun, upping the ante of a typical, crude high school setting.

Lara Solanki/Netflix
Lara Solanki/Netflix
Lara Solanki/Netflix

Dear White People (2017– )

Justin Simien’s scorching send-up of post-racial America has transitioned smoothly from its film form to an ongoing series, with Logan Browning stepping in for Tessa Thompson. As in the movie, the streaming version follows a diverse group of students pushing back against discrimination at a mostly white Ivy League school. Contrary to what the trolls want you to believe, Simien’s work is not white-genocide propaganda; it’s an illuminating look at what equality means in the 21st century.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Degrassi: Next Class (2016–2017)

The most recent installment of the long-running Degrassi franchise documents the crazy lives of the students at Degrassi Community School. Just as dramatic as the Canadian series’ earlier installments, though updated to include more contemporary social issues, Next Class explores how young people deal with mental illness, identity, and the challenges of the digital age. Where some young adult series romanticize its core issues, Next Class refuses to do so and is a more raw representation of teen-dom because of it.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Derry Girls (2018– )

Teen shows are often good for some laughs, but few are as goddamn hysterical as Derry Girls. The Channel 4/Netflix co-production about Catholic schoolgirls in the ’90s living through the end of the Northern Ireland Troubles is all about their own, unfiltered teenaged troubles, and outright laugh-out-loud hilarious. The entire cast and their quirks are near perfect; after a quick binge, you’ll find there’s no other fictional crew you’d rather kick-back with.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Elite (2018– )

This teen drama centered on a wealthy private high school from Spain was a surprise hit when it first dropped on Netflix in 2018, and it’s easy to see why: a juicy murder mystery that runs through the entire season, obscene displays of wealth, and lots and lots of sex. On top of being a soapy whodunnit, Elite‘s issues-based side plots, dealing with topics like class inequality, xenophobia, and the stigma of HIV, are the running undercurrents that truly keep this show afloat. Even with subtitles, you’ll have binged through this quick series before you know it.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

The End of the F***ing World (2017–2019)

Somehow, a show about a teenager who’s convinced he’s a psychopath and wants to find his first human kill manages to come off as a charming love and coming-of-age story. The tone demands a lot of the audience: Can you empathize with the human struggle of a kid who wants to kill, kill, kill (and who actually, in flashbacks, does kill animals, including a very cute cat)? It’s a compelling premise that tackles the question with necessary nuance.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Everything Sucks! (2018)

Set in the ’90s, this underrated show tells the coming-of-age stories of one Oregon high school’s A/V and drama club members, embellishing the proceedings with plenty of pop culture references and slang from the era. The show is like if Freaks and Geeks was actually set in the ’90s and a lot cheesier, although has just as much heart as the cult classic it’s been compared to. There’s an apt amount of nerds-versus-theater-kid rivalry as the series follows one student’s attempt to shoot his first film, but at its core is a group of angsty, multifaceted adolescents dealing with trying to fit in, stand out, and come to terms with their sexuality. It’s a short, binge-worthy single season in which you should expect in-your-face nostalgia and a whole lot of youthful positivity even in a show whose namesake suggests it revels in a cynical teenage attitude.

The CW
The CW
The CW

The Flash (2014– )

While The CW’s Arrow teeters on the edge of self-parodying grimdark nonsense most of the time, the show’s DC Comics companion, The Flash, is a lighting-speed breeze. Glee alum Grant Gustin stars as the breaker of sound barriers, who finds himself battling everyone from freeze-gun-wielding mad men to sentient gorillas in an effort to uncover his mother’s equally speedy killer, and in later seasons, unpack the multi-dimensional logic enabled by other “speedsters.” For all its teen-friendly drama, The Flash never shies away from the comic book nonsense (he said lovingly) or the splash-page action. Finally, our campy superhero TV shows can look and feel like the movies.

The CW
The CW
The CW

Gilmore Girls & Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life (2000–2007 & 2016)

In case you haven’t heard, Netflix revived Gilmore Girls-so you can catch up with this wisecracking mother-daughter duo before watching the four-episode follow-up. The show takes place in the quirky small town of Stars Hollow and features a dynamic supporting cast so fully fleshed, you’ll feel like a local after your first hour. For extra credit, the Gilmore Guys podcast dissects the series episode by episode, providing a present-day watercooler for your thoughts on a 20-years-old show.

Fox
Fox
Fox

Glee (2009–2015)

With shows like Nip/Tuck, American Horror Story, and The People v. O.J. to his name, TV maven Ryan Murphy earned his reputation for spilling blood. But with Glee, Murphy and co-creators Brad Falchuk and Ian Brennan (Scream Queens) spill their guts, setting observations on gender, sexuality, relationships, disability, family, and teenhood to song. Those who saw the show’s 30-second ads during its six-season run know Lea Michele’s bubbly Rachel, the comical rivalry between music teacher Will Schuester (Matthew Morrison) and cheerleading coach Sue Sylvester (Jane Lynch), and the non-stop re-engineering of classic songs into pop a capella hits. But there’s more to Glee than jazz hands and major chords; when these kids belt “Don’t Stop Believin’,” they beam those notes through a social shitstorm of Murphy’s creation, and the journey is typically sweet.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Haters Back Off (2016–2017)

Haters Back Off plays as an origin story for YouTube sensation Miranda Sings (Colleen Ballinger’s internet persona), who has amassed millions of subscribers by caking on lipstick, dissing famous people, abusing the English language, and uploading tutorials on everything from dancing to making “TACO BELL POPCISCLES” [sic]. But Haters, co-created by Ballinger and her brother Christopher, focuses less on those vids and more on Miranda’s offline pursuit of fame-love, betrayal, and tragedy all making cameos along the way.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

I Am Not Okay With This (2020)

Don’t be mistaken: This series may feature kids (Sophia Lillis, Wyatt Oleff) from the It movies and come from showrunners of both Stranger Things and The End of the F***ing World, but I Am Not Okay With This is actually none of those things. The dramedy is another adaptation of one of TEOTFW author Charles Forsman’s graphic novels, though, about a teenaged girl named Syd who, on top of dealing with the recent loss of her father and struggling with her sexuality, somehow starts to experience superpowers. It borrows the nostalgic music cues and moodiness that made TEOTFW work, but on its own is a queer, tender story about how grief and anger can manifest in teenage girls. Telekinetically giving bullies bloody noses and destroying super markets aside, it’s the kind of relatable angst that you could be very okay with.

The CW
The CW
The CW

Jane the Virgin (2014–2019)

Yes, the title, the premise, the plotlines on this CW series are all ridiculous. But it’s a telenovela-it’s supposed to be over the top. What’s truly unbelievable about Jane is how many serious, controversial issues it makes palatable without moralizing (#ImmigrationReform). Somehow, a melodrama about an accidentally artificially inseminated virgin raising a baby while flitting back and forth between the vertices of a love triangle, which takes place in a world populated by drug lords, secret twins, evil professors, and a police department conspiracy, manages to strike the simplest emotional and comic beats week after week. Jane deserves praise for its bilingual storytelling, strong female relationships, and uncommon mastery of a narrator’s chyrons… but ultimately, we watch it because it’s just plain fun.

CBS Television Distribution
CBS Television Distribution
CBS Television Distribution

Moesha (1996–2001)

When it was released in the ’90s, Moesha was a much needed sitcom about a Black teenage girl finding her way in the world, and after all this time it’s remained one of the most beloved sitcoms to ever air on TV. Much of that is owed to the star power of R&B star/actress Brandy Norwood in the titular role, bringing a relatability to the high schooler as she navigates her widower father’s new marriage to her high school vice principal and the typical woes of adolescence. While many sitcoms border onto treacly when they fumble through tougher issues, Moesha handles those moments with grace and remains as necessary a watch today as it was when it first hit UPN.

Lara Solanki/Netflix
Lara Solanki/Netflix
Lara Solanki/Netflix

Never Have I Ever (2020– )

Mindy Kaling and co-creator Lang Fisher pull off a delicate but ultimately worthwhile balancing act with their teen comedy Never Have I Ever. The show is an exploration of its heroine Devi’s grief while also excelling as a sweet and goofy teen romance with plenty of boy drama to debate. Narrated with a hefty dose of absurdism by tennis great John McEnroe, Never Have I Ever follows Devi as she attempts to change her social status at school, even as she bats back the lingering sadness from the unexpected death of her father. Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, the previously unknown cast as Devi, is an absolute delight, and we’re still debating whether we’re Team Ben or Team Paxton Hall-Yoshida.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

On My Block (2018– )

As childhood friends Jasmine, Monse, Ruby, and Jamal enter high school in South Central Los Angeles, these kids have more to deal with than solely typical teenage drama. This heartfelt series about growing up in an underprivileged neighborhood is funny, endearing, and honest, exploring the group’s relationships and ups-and-downs of freshman year, while keeping their friends out of harms way and away from getting involved in gang activity. Bringing diverse perspectives to the screen, On My Block is a great young adult series about a community seldom represented.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

The Order (2019–2020)

Magic schools have been in vogue since even before Harry Potter took the whole world by storm, and the fantasy subgenre isn’t about to die out anytime soon. If you’ve already re-read and rewatched J.K. Rowling’s series too many times to count and are looking for something new, you might want to give Netflix’s The Order a shot. The show follows freshman college student Jack Morton while he navigates a world full of frightful creatures and hot-tempered bullies in his quest to join Belgrave University’s secret society, unearthing dark powers and even darker family secrets along the way. Oh, and also werewolves. Lots of werewolves.

Jackson Davis/Netflix
Jackson Davis/Netflix
Jackson Davis/Netflix

Outer Banks (2020– )

Centuries of colonization, wars, and storms means there are tons of shipwrecks in the waters off the East Coast just waiting for enterprising SCUBA divers to stumble across them. It’s one of these ships, laden with gold, that’s at the center of this teen drama series, which follows a group of high-school kids hunting for sunken treasure, while also trying to solve a mystery about one of the friends’ missing father. Mostly due to the constantly evolving plot, Outer Banks‘ 10 episodes move at a rapid clip, including a very fun fight onboard a fishing boat in a later episode where people are shooting harpoons and flailing at each other with enormous hooks, until the exciting final act. The subtext of it all-in finding the treasure and making themselves rich, aren’t the central characters becoming the thing they disdain the most?-is itself a worthwhile pursuit, but, for now, it’s more focused on turning a summery archipelago into a den of thieves. Fine by us!

The CW
The CW
The CW

Riverdale (2017– )

A modern CW take on the yuk-yuk teen comic Archie may sound like a shot of arsenic to prestige TV binge-watchers, but with a murder-mystery undercurrent, soap drama worthy of The O.C., and a sheen that looks like Twin Peaks by way of 300, Riverdale rises above everything you think you should be watching. Each young actor on the show is a discovery (OK, maybe not Arch himself, but this is why the comics always emphasized “& Friends”) and the fully packed episodes earn all the twists and turns. Watch Riverdale and you’ll be sifting through grocery store comic shelves in a week.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Sex Education (2019– )

Yes, the hard sell is right there in the title (sex!), but don’t let the red herring boobs in the first 15 seconds of this British series fool you: Sex Education primarily deals with the complex emotions that accompany physical desire. Helping to parse through those feelings are the mother and son duo, one a licensed sex and relationships therapist (Gillian Anderson’s Jean Milburn) and the other a gifted savant (Asa Butterfield’s Otis Milburn) who can coach his peers through their issues even though he himself has bedroom problems. Peering into the intimate lives of the ensemble cast of high schoolers, there’s something relatable, hilarious, and melancholy about each character without ever making them into a flattened type. And with the original score written by Ezra Furman, Laurie Nunn gave us a gem: This is easily one of our favorite Netflix originals.

CBS Television Distribution
CBS Television Distribution
CBS Television Distribution

Sister, Sister (1994–1999)

For many non-twins of the world, the idea of having a built-in best friend who was just like you was the ultimate fantasy. For ’90s kids everywhere, the comedy Sister, Sister made that wishful thinking that much more reasonable, about a pair of identical twins played by Tia and Tamera Mowry who were separated at birth and coincidentally reunited as teenagers. As family comedies go, this one, anchored by the lovable performances by the Mowry sisters, their parents, played by Tim Reid and JackĂ©e Harry, and even their pesky neighbor Roger (Marques Houston) (“Go home, Roger!”), is funny as it is wholesome, seeing two families come together to make one. One rewatch of an episode for nostalgia’s sake and you’ll be smiling ear to ear (and with the theme song stuck in your head).

Seacia Pavao/Netflix
Seacia Pavao/Netflix
Seacia Pavao/Netflix

The Society (2019)

Netflix’s summer 2019 sensation blends the anxious social politics into the modern day, introducing us to a group of high school students who suddenly and inexplicably find themselves without parents, siblings, or anyone else at all populating their small town. When a bus full of kids is whisked off to a woodsy retreat only to be brought back home a few hours later due to bad weather, the bus’ cargo soon find out that no one’s coming to pick them up. Everyone except them seems to have been erased from the world, and their town has been neatly cut off from outside society. It’s up to a bunch of high school students to form a pseudo-government, make sure no one starts killing anyone else, and, hopefully, figure out what the hell is going on.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

Stranger Things (2016– )

If you haven’t binged Netflix’s ’80s paranormal throwback… what gives? It’s all your friends can talk about every time a new season drops, and the recent Season 3 just as much of an adolescent exploration of hormonal, teenaged feelings as it is another go facing off with monsters from another dimension. You’ll come for the supernatural-meets-government-conspiracy plot and charming sci-fi references, but you’ll stay for the charismatic tweenage cast.

The CW
The CW
The CW

The Vampire Diaries (2009–2017)

Here’s the pitch: not one, but two hot vampire brothers. While it premiered back in 2009 at the sparkly peak of Twilight mania, this supernatural teen soap has more in common with co-creator Kevin Williamson’s witty ’90s work-Dawson’s Creek and Scream-than it does with Stephenie Meyer’s po-faced novels. Based on a series of books by YA writer L. J. Smith, the show brings you into the inner life of a newly orphaned high-schooler named Elena (Nina Dobrev) who gets pursued by sultry, good vamp Stefan (Paul Wesley) and his equally sultry, evil bro Damon (Lost‘s Ian Somerhalder). There’s love triangles, complicated mythology, crazy plot twists, and countless scenes where yokels get bit in the neck by pale guys with great hair. But its the wry, almost Buffy-like comic tone that keeps you coming back.

Netflix
Netflix
Netflix

13 Reasons Why (2017–2020)

Whether you’ve read the source material or not, Netflix’s most divisive drama will ensnare you. Brian Yorkey’s adaptation follows Clay (Dylan Minnette), a Liberty High student who receives seven cassettes defogging his crush’s mysterious rationale for suicide, followed by a second season that uses a series of Polaroids to expose the school’s secrets. Dramatic by nature but effective in execution, 13 Reasons Why unspools an addictive story while touching upon heavy issues like depression, driving under the influence, and sexual consent. It might seem over the top at times, but that’s the way high school was and is. The heartbreak is real.

The CW
The CW
The CW

The 100 (2014–2020)

How many post-apocalyptic shows starring attractive young people do we really need? Apparently, one more! The 100, which was adapted from a YA series by writer Kass Morgan, is about a team of teens sent down to bombed-out Earth from a colony floating in space. Inevitably, things go wrong: Warring factions emerge, hearts get broken, and, as is required by TV law, beloved characters are killed. Don’t let the show’s soapy veneer fool you; this is dark, thoughtful material in a slick, teen-friendly package.Need help finding something to watch? Sign up here for our weekly Streamail newsletter to get streaming recommendations delivered straight to your inbox.

Follow the Thrillist Entertainment editors on Twitter @ThrillistEnt.

Entertainment

Where to Celebrate Lunar New Year 2023 in Australia

And what it means to be in the year of the Rabbit.

where to celebrate lunar new year australia

Starting with the new moon on Sunday, January 22, this Lunar New Year ushers in the year of the Rabbit. We’ve put together a guide on celebrating the Lunar New Year in Australia.

What is special about the year of the Rabbit?

As you might know, each year has an animal sign in the Chinese Zodiac, which is based on the moon and has a 12-year cycle. This year, we celebrate the year of the rabbit, known to be the luckiest out of all twelve animals. It symbolises mercy, elegance, and beauty.

What celebrations are taking place and how can I get involved?

There are plenty of festivals happening all around the country which you can get involved with. Here they are per state.

New South Wales

Darling Harbour Fireworks
When: Every year, Sydney puts on a fireworks show, and this year, you can catch it on January 28 and February 4 at 9 pm in Darling Harbour.

Dragon Boat Races
When: Witness three days of dragon boat races and entertainment on Cockle Bay to usher in the Lunar New Year. The races will commence on January 27 and finish on January 29.

Lion Dances
When: Catch a traditional Lion Dance moving to the beat of a vigorous drum bringing good luck and fortune for the Lunar New Year. The dance performances will happen across Darling Harbour on Saturday, January 21, Sunday, January 22, and Sunday, February 4 and 5, around 6 pm and 9 pm.

Lunar New Year at Cirrus Dining
When: Barangaroo’s waterfront seafood restaurant, Cirrus, is celebrating the Year of the Rabbit with a special feast menu. Cirrus’ LNY menu is $128pp with optional wine pairing and is available from Saturday, January 21, to Sunday, February 5.

Auntie Philter
When: Hello Auntie’s owner and executive chef, Cuong Nguyen will be dishing out some of the most classic Vietnamese street foods with his mum, Linda. All of Philter’s favourites will be on offer, as well as Raspberry Pash Beer Slushies and other cocktails being served at the Philter Brewing rooftop bar on Sunday, January 22 and Sunday, January 29.

Victoria

Lunar New Year Festival
When: Ring in the Lunar New Year with food, music, arts, and more on Sunday, January 22, from 10 am to 9 pm.

Lunar New Year at the National Gallery of Victoria
When: Celebrate the year of the rabbit at the National Gallery of Victoria’s festival of art, food, and art-making activities for everyone from 10 am-5 pm.

Queensland

BriAsia Festival
When: From February 1-19, Brisbane will come alive with performances, including lion dances and martial arts displays. There will be street food, workshops, comedy and more.

South Australia

Chinatown Adelaide Street Party
When: Adelaide is set to hose a fun-filled day celebrating the Chinese New Year on Saturday, January 28, from 12 pm to 9 pm.

Western Australia

Crown Perth
When: Across January and February, Crown Perth hosts free live entertainment, including colourful lion dances, roving mascots, and drumming performances. The restaurants will also throw banquets and menus dedicated to the Lunar New Year.

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