The Everything Electric expo organisers, from the Fully Charged Show Youtube channel, have confirmed the popular home energy and EV show will be returning to Sydney in March 2025 with a second event in Melbourne at the end of the year.
Everything Electric Australia (NSW) will be held at the Sydney Showground between Friday, March 7 and Sunday March 9, 2025. Another show will be held at the Melbourne Showgrounds from Friday November 14, to Sunday November 16, 2025.
The shows have proved popular both in Australia and overseas, and 17,000 people attended Everything Electric in Sydney earlier this year.
“Our Sydney events have exceeded all expectations, and with the remarkable momentum behind electrification in Australia, expanding to Melbourne was a natural progression,” Everything Electric CEO Dan Caesar said in a blog post.
“From thousands of test drives to home energy solutions, micromobility, commercial vehicles, and more, we’re excited to bring a full range of innovations to the Australian market through this event.”
Everything Electric offers visitors a unique opportunity to experience and test drive a large range of electric vehicles and micromobility solutions such as e-bikes and scooters, plus talk to home electrification and energy efficiency experts.
The expo will also showcase some of the newest electric vehicles on the market and potentially some unreleased vehicles as well, given the MG4 was first unveiled at Fully Charged Live back in 2023.
Visit the Everything Electric Australia website to read more about these events and purchase your tickets beforehand.
Tim has 20 years experience in the IT industry including 14 years as a network engineer and site reliability engineer at Google Australia. He is an EV and renewable energy enthusiast who is most passionate about helping people understand and adopt these technologies.
Please bring this show to Brisbane
Why is it not online, with free online attendance, and, online presentations in addition to online exhibitors?
Rootstech is held annually, as an international expo about family history research, in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, with free online attendance, and with online presentations (search for rootstech 2024 or rootstech 2025), enabling international participation, and, enabling international online attendance.
If the Everything Electric event was similarly held online, in addition to the physical presence, with free online attendance, showcasing goods and services, would be opened up to a far greater audience, which would benefit the exhibitors, including the commercial providers of goods and services, and, could both enhance the dissemination of information, and, increase prospective sales.
The means to provide the event both online and physically, concurrently, exist, and, the failure to so provide the event both online and physically, concurrently, as is done with other expo’s, is a deficiency in the event management.
And, providing the event both online and physically, concurrently, would mean that it is not limited to one or two states, and, in that, could provide for participation, as exhibitors, of more regional goods and service providers, outside the one or two cities to where the event currently is limited (by the deficiency in the imagination of the event management).
In case anyone is interested in viewing the web site for Rootstech, the URL is
https://www.familysearch.org/en/rootstech/
So Australia’s biggest city finally gets an event.
Appropriate sarcasm!
How do you think WA feels when every happens on the East coast and we miss out again.
But we have finally found something that Sydney is good for, it has saved us in the west from a royal tour from a foreign King and Queen.
We shall be forever great full for small mercies!
I tried very hard to ignore it… consider yourself lucky!
Quite agree with John
And, we have the BEV’s that are available in the eastern states, but not in WA. It is kind of like the BEV’s are unable to make the journey across the Nullabor (even being transported as new vehicles for sale), especially that demonstration cybertruck wooss thing that could not make it across theNullabor under its own power, and had to be transported on the back of a tow truck, because it was not robust enough to be driven.
It seems also, that what BEVs do actually make it to the wild west, incur a fee for distance for transporting them across, costing a couple of thousand AUD extra, in WA, over eastern states prices.
Sydney could arbitrarily declare that the edge of its metro area includes Newcastle and Wollongong, and regain its status as Australia’s most populous city.
But why would we want to do that?
Truth Missile seems to not understand that Newcastle, Sydney and Wollongong is where the term NSW comes from. If you live outside these areas, you are considered a nobody and therefore not important (rest of Australia).
Did you mean best city 😏
I was slightly underwhelmed by EE this year… it had more vehicle exhibitors than the first edition (FCL) in 2023 which was good to see (Audi, BMW, Hyundai, Genesis, Peugeot and Renault debuted in 2024), but still lots of notable absences, including BYD – which was very surprising considering they were there in force at FCL 2023.
The panelists were better this year than last, but I thought the non-BEV exhibitions were slightly weaker.
I’m still deciding whether I will go to the 2025 show or not.