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New to Sydney’s Tech Scene?

Sydney has one of the most active startup ecosystems in the Asia-Pacific, and almost all of it is open to anyone who shows up. You don’t need an invitation, a job in tech, or a startup idea. You just need to walk through the door.

Start here

These events are specifically designed for people who are new. No jargon, no assumed knowledge, no pressure.

Vibe Coding Lab Sydney: May Edition

Three hours to build whatever you want with supportive founders who've shipped real products, you'll leave with something working and momentum to keep going.

Sat 23 May · 12:30 pm·Free
Afternoon Networking Drinks #27

Saturday afternoon session where Sydney's UX designers gather for relaxed conversations over Japanese drinks, now with an optional dinner crew afterwards.

Sat 23 May · 3:00 pm·Free
TechBallin 5v5

Casual basketball with tech folks at Centennial Park, all skill levels welcome and you'll meet people beyond the usual networking format.

Sun 24 May · 10:30 am·Free
Coffee + Connect

Chat with experienced startup coaches about turning your idea into something real, relaxed coffee setting at the Innovation Centre.

Mon 25 May · 9:30 am·Free
Collaborative Art Workshop

Spend an afternoon building a massive sculpture with other founders, the kind of hands-on project that turns strangers into friends.

Mon 25 May · 2:00 pm·Free
See all beginner-friendly events →

The places to know

Stone & Chalk – Stone & Chalk operates the Tech Central Innovation Hub at 477 Pitt Street. It’s the nerve centre for Sydney’s startup ecosystem. Investor evenings, founder workshops, ecosystem mixers. If you’re trying to understand how the Sydney tech scene actually works, start here.
Fishburners – Fishburners is a community for early stage founders based out of the same hub. If you’re just getting started or still figuring out your idea, their weekly pitch nights are free, open to anyone, and regularly draw 200+ people. Good energy, low barrier to entry.
Build Club – Where the AI builders hang out. Fast-growing community that runs hands-on build sessions, poker nights, and collaborations with VCs like Blackbird and Folklore. Events pop up at venues across the city.
UTS Startups – University-backed but open to everyone. Runs accelerator programs, pitch nights, and workshops from their new hub on Broadway. Great entry point if you’re a student or early-career.
Cicada Innovations – Deep tech incubator in Eveleigh focused on quantum, biotech, medtech, and advanced materials. Their events are smaller and more technical, but the quality is exceptional.
See all Tech Central events →

Recurring events worth trying

Fishburners Pitch Night – Free, weekly, 200+ attendees. The flagship event of the ecosystem. Founders pitch live, audience asks questions, everyone networks after. Show up at 5pm, no registration needed.
Build Club AI Meetup – Monthly hands-on sessions where people building with AI share what they’re working on. Growing fast. Friendly to newcomers despite the technical focus.
Sydney Python (SydPy) – Last Thursday of every month. One of the longest-running tech meetups in Sydney. Welcoming to all levels, from beginners to core contributors.
Startup & Angels – Pitch and networking format. 4–6 founders pitch to a room of investors and operators. Good way to see how fundraising actually works.
Sydney Tech Meetup – Third Thursday of every month at Mountain Goat. Casual social gathering for anyone in tech. No talks, no agenda, just $5 beers and conversation. Perfect if structured events feel intimidating.
See all meetups →

Tips from someone who goes

Go alone. Seriously. You’ll meet more people when you don’t have a friend to hide behind. Everyone at these events was new once.

Start with free events. There are plenty. The paid workshops are often good, but don’t spend money until you know what kind of events suit you. Browse free events →

Talk to the organisers. They know everyone and they’re usually happy to make introductions. “I’m new, who should I talk to?” is the best opening line at any event.

Don’t try to go to everything. One event a week is plenty. Pick based on what interests you, not what seems most impressive. The best connections happen when you’re genuinely curious about the topic.

Follow up. If you meet someone interesting, send a LinkedIn message the next day. “Great meeting you at [event], would love to grab a coffee” has a surprisingly high hit rate in this community.

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