
Brisbane City Council has confirmed that all Translink buses, trains, CityCats, ferries and light-rail services will be free from 8 p.m. on 31 December until 5:30 a.m. on 1 January. The initiative, backed by an extra 630 bus services, is designed to move up to 500,000 revelers expected for the Lord Mayor’s New Year’s Eve fireworks and drone shows along the river. Free travel does not extend to Airtrain airport services but covers the entire South-East Queensland network.
Authorities will impose rolling road closures from 29 December, including Victoria and Kangaroo Point Bridges and key CBD arteries. Access to South Bank parking garages and the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre will be restricted. The council is urging residents and visitors—many of whom will be interstate or international tourists—to finalise travel plans early and use journey-planner apps to avoid gridlock.
If you’re among the international visitors hoping to ring in the New Year by the Brisbane River, VisaHQ can streamline the process of securing an Australian tourist visa or eVisitor authorisation well before you board the plane. Their online platform (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) simplifies the paperwork by guiding applicants through requirements, fees and processing times, leaving you free to focus on fireworks logistics instead of bureaucracy.
For mobility managers overseeing year-end assignee moves or short-term projects in Brisbane, the closures could affect airport transfers and corporate apartment check-ins. Companies should arrange earlier flights or overnight accommodation for transferees arriving on 31 December and warn them that rideshare surge pricing is likely once the fireworks finish.
The free-fare scheme dovetails with Queensland’s broader push toward contactless smart-ticketing, which went live across Brisbane services in March 2025. Transport analysts will monitor whether the fare holiday speeds boarding and reduces fare-evasion enough to justify repeating the initiative during other major events.
Event organisers highlight that crowd-control fencing and bag checks will be in place at South Bank and Howard Smith Wharves, adding further queuing time. Travellers with tight New Year’s Day flight connections should allow extra transit and security time at Brisbane Airport, where passenger volumes are forecast to spike 18 per cent compared with last year.
Authorities will impose rolling road closures from 29 December, including Victoria and Kangaroo Point Bridges and key CBD arteries. Access to South Bank parking garages and the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre will be restricted. The council is urging residents and visitors—many of whom will be interstate or international tourists—to finalise travel plans early and use journey-planner apps to avoid gridlock.
If you’re among the international visitors hoping to ring in the New Year by the Brisbane River, VisaHQ can streamline the process of securing an Australian tourist visa or eVisitor authorisation well before you board the plane. Their online platform (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) simplifies the paperwork by guiding applicants through requirements, fees and processing times, leaving you free to focus on fireworks logistics instead of bureaucracy.
For mobility managers overseeing year-end assignee moves or short-term projects in Brisbane, the closures could affect airport transfers and corporate apartment check-ins. Companies should arrange earlier flights or overnight accommodation for transferees arriving on 31 December and warn them that rideshare surge pricing is likely once the fireworks finish.
The free-fare scheme dovetails with Queensland’s broader push toward contactless smart-ticketing, which went live across Brisbane services in March 2025. Transport analysts will monitor whether the fare holiday speeds boarding and reduces fare-evasion enough to justify repeating the initiative during other major events.
Event organisers highlight that crowd-control fencing and bag checks will be in place at South Bank and Howard Smith Wharves, adding further queuing time. Travellers with tight New Year’s Day flight connections should allow extra transit and security time at Brisbane Airport, where passenger volumes are forecast to spike 18 per cent compared with last year.






