Visit the Memorial

Visitors require a free timed tickets to enter the Memorial and attend the daily Last Post Ceremony at 4:30pm.

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Development project

Our Continuing Story

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11 November

Remembrance Day 2024

The National Ceremony will return to the Parade Ground of the Australian War Memorial. Tickets are required to attend this event.

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Touring Exhibitions

Our current touring exhibitions include ACTION! Film & War, Ink in the Lines and Art in Conflict.

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DIGITAL VOLUNTEERING

Learn about Transcribe

Visit the Transcribe website

DAILY AT 4:30PM AEDT

Last Post Ceremony

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Home

Commemorative Entrance opened to the public

The Commemorative Entrance has re-opened to the public for the first time since 2021.

All visitors will now enter the Memorial through this entrance, accessible from the east and west grounds.

 

Book your free ticket to enter
Learn about the development

Plan your visit

The Australian War Memorial is open to the public.

Visitors require timed tickets to enter the Memorial, and also to attend the daily Last Post Ceremony at 4:30 pm in the Commemorative Area.

Access to the Memorial entrance and visitor carpark is via Fairbairn Avenue. 

Book your free ticket
School and school aged group bookings

Remembrance Day 2024

On Monday 11 November at 10.40 am, the Remembrance Day National Ceremony will return to the Parade Ground of the Australian War Memorial.

Tickets are required to attend this event.

Find out more

Transcribe

The Memorial has launched a new online platform, Transcribe. Help preserve Australia's history by transcribing records from the National Collection.

Visit the Transcribe website

Indigenous service

Explore a selection of resources related to the wartime experience of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Please be advised that the following pages contain the names, images and objects of deceased people.

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FEATURED ARTICLES
  1. The Memorial is seeking permission from the copyright holders to publish the collections listed below.

  2. Jeannie Lister came across three silk embroidered postcards that caught her eye. With her love of embroidery and an interest in family history, she immediately recognised them as First World War souvenirs sent home by soldiers on the front lines.

  3. In 1914 the Australian government placed a call for volunteers to fight a predominantly European war in the interests of the British Empire. Indigenous Australians answered that call in numbers. In doing so, they faced challenges other Australian volunteers did not.

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