Australian Defence Force soldiers read aloud from letters and diaries at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra at 4:30 in the morning, when the majority of the nation is still asleep. not synopses. Highlights are not carefully chosen. Words about mud, cold, waiting, and friends who didn’t survive to the next morning were written home by men during the actual war. Nearly no one witnesses this aspect of Anzac Day, but it may be the most truthful.
Every year on April 25, Anzac Day is observed. In 2026, it will be 111 years since the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps landed at Gallipoli on the Turkish coast. The plan had been swift and decisive. Over 8,000 Australians were killed during the eight months of attrition that culminated in evacuation. Gallipoli was a military failure by any standard. However, something occurred there that became a kind of national narrative that both Australia and New Zealand have been telling themselves ever since. It was a quality of endurance, of refusing to give up even when the situation was obviously terrible.
Just one year after the landing, in 1916, the term ANZAC was officially recognized. The time between disaster and remembrance is remarkably brief. It seems as though the grief was so immediate and widespread that it required formal form before it could be dealt with at all. Held at first light, the hour of the initial landing, the dawn service started out as a small, unrefined gathering. It never quite lost that rawness as it expanded into something much bigger. It doesn’t feel like a public ceremony to stand in the dark before dawn and listen to the Last Post reverberate across a parade field. It seems more intimate than that.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Event Name | Anzac Day |
| Annual Date | April 25 (every year) |
| 2026 Date | Saturday, April 25, 2026 |
| 2026 Anniversary | 111th anniversary of the Gallipoli landings |
| Full Name of Corps | Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) |
| Historical Event Commemorated | Landing at Gallipoli, Turkey — April 25, 1915 |
| Officially Named | 1916 (one year after the landing) |
| Campaign Duration | Eight months; ended with Allied evacuation late 1915 |
| Australian Lives Lost at Gallipoli | Over 8,000 soldiers |
| Scope Today | Commemorates all who served and died in all wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations |
| Key Traditions | Dawn service, marches, two-up, rosemary, Anzac biscuits |
| Motto | “Lest We Forget” (from Rudyard Kipling’s poem Recessional) |
| Organizer (Australia) | Australian War Memorial, RSL branches nationally |
| Public Holiday Status | National public holiday in Australia and New Zealand |
| 2026 Monday Holiday | NSW, WA, and ACT observe Monday April 27; Victoria, QLD, SA, TAS, NT do not |

Here, tradition is specific and multi-layered. The rosemary, which is said to improve memory and grows wild in Gallipoli, was pinned to a lapel. Originally a practical solution—families sending food to soldiers needed something that wouldn’t spoil on the long sea voyage—the Anzac biscuit has evolved into a cultural artifact so protected that Australian federal legislation controls what can legally bear its name. The game of two-up, which is normally forbidden but is allowed on this particular day, is played in pub courtyards with the unique intensity of something that ties people to a custom that predates them.
The ceremony at the Australian War Memorial operates with an almost architectural precision that is difficult to ignore. ADF readings from wartime correspondence will kick off the 2026 program at 4:30 a.m. The actual Dawn Service takes place on the parade ground between 5:30 and 6 a.m. Air Chief Marshal Sir Angus Houston will speak at the National Commemorative Service at 9:30 a.m. At 4:30 p.m., the formal day is concluded with the Last Post Ceremony. The galleries open for free at 1pm between those bookends; no tickets are needed. The fact that the memory is publicly accessible rather than reserved, ticketed, or filtered is an important final detail.
New Zealand has its own parallel celebrations, and the Franklin district of Auckland is a good illustration of how the day appears at the local level: coastal suburbs and small towns congregate at cenotaphs before sunrise, share morning tea afterwards, and mix generations in a way that doesn’t happen on many other occasions. There, as everywhere else, the phrase is “whānau and community.” The original Anzac spirit was motivated by the same instinct: you are ultimately defending the people next to you.
This year has an intriguing side argument about the current state of public life. Since April 25 falls on a Saturday in 2026, the issue of whether employees should have a Monday public holiday instead has become a legitimate political discussion. Western Australia and New South Wales agreed. South Australia, Queensland, and Victoria declined. Business associations cautioned that the already narrow margins in the hospitality industry would be further squeezed by penalty rates on a second public holiday. Advocates for workers noted that falling on a weekend shouldn’t result in the loss of an entitlement. It’s still unclear if this debate represents a sound democratic argument about labor rights or if it shows that, for some, the day has shifted from somber observance to long-weekend management.
It is better to sit with the tension than to find a quick solution. Anzac Day has always been both a public holiday with all the associated logistical and commercial complexity and a truly felt national moment of grief and respect. Either way, the men at Gallipoli most likely wouldn’t have cared. The ceremony itself, the particular act of standing somewhere chilly and dark before dawn and listening to words written by people who didn’t know if they would survive the week, seems more difficult to argue against. It hasn’t been discussed or legislated. It simply keeps going.
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