From partying all night to a refreshing morning dip: Revellers from Bondi to Surfers Paradise shake off their sore heads to watch the first sunrise of 2023 – but some aren’t ready to end the fun just yet
Hundreds of Aussie revellers are still partying hours after the biggest New Years Eve celebrations in recent years.
More than a million packed Sydney Harbour for the city’s world famous midnight fireworks with similar scenes across the country.
Not everyone was ready to call it a night will many partying long into the night.
Hundreds are still celebrating on Sunday morning after they headed Sydney’s iconic Bondi Beach to enjoy the the first sunrise for 2023.
As some slept off their big night, others stripped down and headed into the surf for a refreshing early morning dip.
Many revellers rang in the first sunrise of 2023 with a refreshing dip at Bondi Beach
Other revellers preferred to take in the sunrise from the sand after a long night
Bondi was packed with beachgoers as NYE celebrations continued well after sunrise
Revellers were out in force to make up for time lost in the last three years, as celebrations were dampened by the black summer bushfires in 2020 and the Covid-19 pandemic the following two years.
Partygoers made their way into the nation’s CBDs in droves to ring in 2023 in style – with local and state government organisers putting on celebrations bigger and better than ever before.
Crowds in the nation’s focal point Sydney hit around the million mark, as thousands queued up well in advance earlier in the day to vie for a spot on the steps of the iconic Opera House.
More to come
Revellers were still packing on the PDA hours after the clock struck midnight
Advertisement