Australian Open / Melbourne Park

Australian Open Tennis.

The first Grand Slam of the year, planned like a travel event: sessions, hotels, timing and access shaped before you book.

Melbourne

Melbourne Park, Victoria

Grand Slam

First major of the year

Sessions

Day, night, finals week

Travel

Hotels, flights, access
Session-first planning

Pick the feel of the tournament.

The Australian Open is not one fixed travel product. A day-session city break, a night-session hospitality trip and a finals-week visit ask for different hotels, ticket checks and timing.

01

Day session rhythm

Build around daytime tennis, city time and a lighter Melbourne schedule.

02

Night session energy

Evening matches, hospitality planning and hotel location matter more.

03

Finals-week focus

Sharper availability checks, higher demand and more precise travel timing.

04

Melbourne stay

Flights, rooms, group needs and recovery time shape the full package.
Melbourne Park

Melbourne Park becomes the itinerary.

The old site positions the Australian Open as the first Grand Slam of the year and one of the Southern Hemisphere major sporting events.
First Grand Slam

Held annually at Melbourne Park, before the French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open.

Two-week trip logic

The tournament runs across a broad January window, so session choice changes the whole stay.

What Wendy needs from you

Four details that change the trip.

Session style
Day, night, first week, finals week, a single match day or a broader tennis holiday.

Access level
Arena preferences, ticket category, hospitality and any extras where current options allow.

Hotel approach
Location, rooming, transfers, arrival timing and whether Melbourne itself is part of the trip.

Budget direction
A range is enough. It helps Wendy avoid unsuitable options before checking availability.
Ready to check current tennis options?

Send the session style, travel window and group size.

Wendy can then check suitable Australian Open ticket, hotel and travel package options based on what is actually current.