From sequinned drag shows to gothic theatre, wine festivals, art takeovers, and boutique escapes—Auckland’s spring season promises culture, cocktails, and chic staycations.
Spring in Tāmaki Makaurau doesn’t ease in quietly. It arrives in sequins, humming a show tune, with a glass of pinot in hand and a taste for the dramatic. Suddenly the nights are longer, the harbour sparkles just that little bit brighter, and the city is buzzing with reasons to head out. One evening you’ll be under The Civic’s starlit ceiling as Anita Wigl’it belts her heart out in Priscilla Queen of the Desert. The next, you’re swirling Syrah at Winetopia, or leaning forward in your seat as you watch Mary: The Birth of Frankenstein cast gothic shadows across the ASB Waterfront Theatre. Throw in the All Blacks, chocolate and coffee indulgence, edgy art at Eden Park, and hotel rooms that beg for a weekend staycation, and you’ve got a season that insists on a little glamour.
A Taste of Drama

The Viaduct is made for theatre and wine in equal measure. On 3-4 October, Winetopia takes over the Viaduct Events Centre. This is New Zealand’s largest wine celebration, where you can sip your way through hundreds of varietals, join cheeky masterclasses, and discover a winemaker or two who will absolutely convince you to switch allegiances.

This pairing is perfectly anchored by the Sofitel Auckland Viaduct Harbour, a sleek hotel perched right on the water. From here, everything is walkable. Before curtain time, wander to Baduzzi on North Wharf for handmade pasta and Italian soul food. Or slide into a table at Bivacco at Viaduct Harbour, where glossy interiors and a killer cocktail list are matched only by marina views that twinkle as evening sets in.
Choose your Auckland evening: the drama of Mary’s imagination, or the swirl of wine glasses at Winetopia. Either way, the Viaduct serves it with style.
Glitter and Grit
From 12 September to 4 October, Priscilla Queen of the Desert camps it up at The Civic. With drag star Anita Wigl’it at the wheel, sequins shimmer, pop anthems soar, and a story of love and self-expression unfolds under The Civic’s starry ceiling. It’s spectacle, sass and sentiment in one outrageous package.

Base yourself at the Horizon by SkyCity, just a short stroll away. Here, five-star rooms spill you directly into the buzz of the central city, and SkyCity’s dining precinct is on your doorstep. Pre-show, slide into a booth at Fed St Deli, where elevated comfort classics hit the spot, or lean into The Grill, one of Auckland’s most polished steakhouse experiences.

When the curtain drops, the night doesn’t have to end. A short wander will land you at Caretaker, Auckland’s most revered cocktail bar. Behind an unmarked door, bartenders mix bespoke drinks based on your mood, your taste, or even your wildest whim. It’s the perfect way to keep the glamour alive a little longer. Save a little energy for the morning though, and dive into Wētā Workshop Unleashed at SkyCity, a cinematic playground of fantasy creatures and film sets that offer a gritty, surreal counterpoint to Priscilla’s glitz.
Chic Corners
Not all weekends need centre-stage drama. Some are about finding the city’s stylish corners and letting them reveal themselves one boutique and one plate at a time.
The Hotel Britomart, with its five Green Star sustainability creds and design-forward details, is the ultimate base for a boutique escape. Step outside and you’re in the middle of cobbled Britomart, a precinct buzzing with independent boutiques, galleries and dining.

Spend the day browsing Fabric, a fashion insider’s favourite with international and local labels curated like a gallery. As evening sets in, you’re spoilt for dining choices. Kingi, inside the hotel, celebrates sustainable seafood with inventive flair, while just steps away, Ghost Street beckons underground with bold Chinese flavours in a dramatic subterranean space.

The beauty of this pocket of Auckland is that it’s both intimate and connected. From here, you’re minutes from the ferry terminal, the Viaduct, and the city’s cultural heart. But you may just decide to stay tucked into this chic quarter and make Britomart your entire night out.

Big Stages, Bigger Energy
Sometimes you need your culture loud, vast and unapologetic. Eden Park obliges.
From 18–21 September, the stadium is reimagined for Art in the Park, where some of New Zealand’s top artists take over the concourses and stands, turning sport’s cathedral into an open-air gallery. Wander, browse, and maybe even buy, all in the charged atmosphere of a venue more used to roars than whispers.
A week later, on 27 September, those roars return. The All Blacks face Australia in one of rugby’s fiercest rivalries, filling Eden Park with energy that’s impossible to replicate anywhere else. High stakes, high drama, and a crowd united by anticipation — it’s Auckland at its loudest.
For something sweeter, head to the Viaduct Events Centre for the Chocolate and Coffee Festival, on 27–28 September. Here, artisan roasters and chocolatiers gather to tempt, caffeinate and delight. It’s the perfect palate cleanser after the intensity of the rugby or the boldness of the art.
Choose your Auckland day: canvases, tackles, or truffles. All three deliver drama, just in different flavours.

Make It a Season
Spring in Auckland is less a calendar and more a mood. It’s a swirl of sequins under The Civic’s ceiling, a glass raised at Winetopia, a fashion find in Britomart, and the sound of Eden Park erupting as the All Blacks cross the line. It’s indulgent plates by the harbour, a hotel room you won’t want to leave, and a nightcap at Caretaker that feels like it could go on forever. Mornings begin with either a flat white or a fantastical monster at Wētā Workshop Unleashed, because why not?
Whatever combination you choose — Sofitel Viaduct Harbour with Baduzzi and Mary, Horizon by SkyCity with steak and Priscilla, or Hotel Britomart with Ghost Street and boutiques — Auckland this spring is a city that insists on being experienced, not just visited.