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Sunrise and sunset / Australia / Sydney

Sunrise and sunset times in Sydney, Australia

Updated for Tuesday, June 2, 2026. This page combines a live solar snapshot, the next 7 and 30 days of trend data, seasonal context, and city-specific planning notes for harbor views, beach culture, and southern hemisphere seasonality.

Lat -33.87Lng 151.21Australia/Sydney5.3M residents

What makes this Sydney page useful

Most sunrise tools stop after printing a sunrise minute, a sunset minute, and maybe a golden-hour badge. That is not enough if you are actually making a decision. In Sydney, the useful question is how daylight behaves around a real city rhythm: harbor views, beach culture, and southern hemisphere seasonality. Today the city gets 10h 2m of daylight, and compared with 30 days ago it is losing about 39 minutes. That single trend matters more than a generic explanation because it changes when commuters leave home, when runners choose safe light, and when photographers can rely on warm directional sun.

Sydney sits in the New South Wales coast and experiences a humid subtropical pattern, so daylight interacts with weather, heat, haze, and local routines in a very specific way. A resident planning rooftop solar, a traveler building a dinner itinerary, and a portrait photographer looking for a stable evening slot all need different framing around the same solar data. That is why this page includes tables, a trend chart, and interpretation instead of raw output.

Seasonal contrast is especially important here. The gap between the June and December solstice daylight totals is roughly 4h 31m. That means the useful version of “best time for sunset” changes across the year. In periods with longer daylight, the opportunity window broadens and twilight remains usable for longer. In shorter-light periods, the planning margin tightens, so the next 7-day table becomes the better tool for real decisions.

Next 7 days in Sydney

DateSunriseSunsetSolar noonDaylight
Jun 26:56 AM4:58 PM11:57 AM10h 2m
Jun 36:57 AM4:57 PM11:57 AM10h 1m
Jun 46:57 AM4:57 PM11:57 AM10h 0m
Jun 56:57 AM4:56 PM11:57 AM9h 59m
Jun 66:57 AM4:56 PM11:56 AM9h 59m
Jun 76:57 AM4:55 PM11:56 AM9h 58m
Jun 86:57 AM4:55 PM11:56 AM9h 58m

Sydney daylight duration trend

The line below shows how usable daylight changes across the next 30 days.

Shortest: 9h 54mLongest: 10h 2m

30-day sunrise and sunset table

This 30-day table is the planning layer most API-only pages skip. It helps users spot trend direction, not just today’s number.

DateSunriseSunsetDaylightChange from today
Jun 26:56 AM4:58 PM10h 2mBaseline
Jun 36:57 AM4:57 PM10h 1m-1 min
Jun 46:57 AM4:57 PM10h 0m-2 min
Jun 56:57 AM4:56 PM9h 59m-2 min
Jun 66:57 AM4:56 PM9h 59m-3 min
Jun 76:57 AM4:55 PM9h 58m-4 min
Jun 86:57 AM4:55 PM9h 58m-4 min
Jun 96:57 AM4:54 PM9h 57m-5 min
Jun 106:57 AM4:54 PM9h 56m-5 min
Jun 116:58 AM4:53 PM9h 56m-6 min
Jun 126:58 AM4:53 PM9h 56m-6 min
Jun 136:57 AM4:53 PM9h 55m-6 min
Jun 146:57 AM4:52 PM9h 55m-7 min
Jun 156:57 AM4:52 PM9h 55m-7 min
Jun 166:57 AM4:52 PM9h 54m-7 min
Jun 176:57 AM4:51 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 186:57 AM4:51 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 196:57 AM4:51 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 206:57 AM4:50 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 216:56 AM4:50 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 226:56 AM4:50 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 236:56 AM4:50 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 246:56 AM4:50 PM9h 54m-8 min
Jun 256:55 AM4:50 PM9h 54m-7 min
Jun 266:55 AM4:49 PM9h 54m-7 min
Jun 276:55 AM4:49 PM9h 55m-7 min
Jun 286:54 AM4:49 PM9h 55m-7 min
Jun 296:54 AM4:49 PM9h 55m-6 min
Jun 306:54 AM4:49 PM9h 56m-6 min
Jul 16:53 AM4:49 PM9h 56m-6 min

Seasonal comparison for Sydney

A city page should help users understand whether today is early, late, bright, or compressed relative to the rest of the year. In Sydney, today’s daylight total is 10h 2m. Thirty days ago, the city had 10h 41m. Six months ago, the pattern looked very different at 14h 15m. That tells you how quickly the local light environment is moving, which is exactly what matters for habit planning.

The two annual anchors are the June and December solstice pages. Around June 21, Sydney reaches about 9h 54m of daylight. Around December 21, it drops to about 14h 24m. The wider that spread, the less useful a one-size-fits-all routine becomes. Users need context, not a widget.

Planning around local daylight

For photography, Sydney is most predictable when you combine the daily timing with the direction of change. If sunsets are moving later, you can safely schedule after-work shoots with less risk of missing the best light. If the city is losing daylight, the better strategy is to plan tighter and arrive earlier. The page works the same way for solar installers checking midday windows, commuters trying to keep outdoor exercise in daylight, and families comparing weekday and weekend routines.

Because Sydney is shaped by harbor views, beach culture, and southern hemisphere seasonality, local interpretation matters. A raw solar API cannot tell users whether the city rewards early starts, late dinners, rooftop views, waterfront timing, or heat-aware scheduling. An authoritative page should bridge that gap, which is why this section exists at all.

Frequently asked questions

What time is sunrise in Sydney today?

Today's sunrise in Sydney is 6:56 AM local time, with civil dawn starting at 6:29 AM.

What time is sunset in Sydney today?

Today's sunset in Sydney is 4:58 PM local time, and evening golden hour starts at 3:58 PM.

How much daylight does Sydney get right now?

Sydney gets about 10h 2m of daylight today, and that is losing about 39 minutes compared with 30 days ago.

Why does the daylight pattern change so much in Sydney?

Sydney sits in the Southern Hemisphere at latitude -33.87, so Earth’s axial tilt changes both sunrise timing and total daylight throughout the year.