What Is A Gender Reveal Party? Complete Australian Guide for First-Time Parents (2026)

Quick answer A gender reveal party is a celebration where the baby's gender is announced to family and friends, typically at 18-20 weeks of pregnancy. In Australia, the most popular reveal moments use powder cannons ($35), smoke bombs ($32), Mega Blaster extinguishers ($149), or sports-themed balls ($45-$89). The host (or a friend) is the only one who knows the result, with everyone else finding out during the reveal moment.
Mallu Campisi
By Mallu Campisi, Co-Founder of Gender Reveal Ideas Australia · Mother of five · @mallucampisi
Last updated: Tuesday, May 26, 2026 · Family-owned since 2010

What Is A Gender Reveal Party? Complete Australian Guide for First-Time Parents (2026)

A complete beginner's guide to gender reveal parties in Australia — what they are, how they work, when to have one, what to use, and what to expect.

By the Gender Reveal Ideas Australia team · Last updated: 24 May 2026 · Backed by 7,350+ verified Google reviews and 70,000+ Australian families

Featured in ABC · Sunrise · 9News · Sea FM · The Bulletin

Just found out you're expecting? Heard friends mention "gender reveal" and wondering what they're talking about? This is the complete beginner's guide.

We'll cover exactly what a gender reveal party is, how they started, why they're huge in Australia, when to have one, how much they cost, what products to use, and the etiquette that comes with hosting one. If this is your first baby — or your first time hearing about this tradition — you'll have everything you need by the end of this guide.

What is a gender reveal party — pink or blue smoke against blue sky
A modern Australian gender reveal — the pink-or-blue moment Australian families have made a tradition since 2015.

What is a gender reveal party?

A gender reveal party is an event where parents-to-be announce whether their baby is a boy or a girl. The "reveal" happens through a dramatic photogenic moment — usually involving the colour pink (for a girl) or blue (for a boy).

The reveal can happen through:

  • A cake cut to show pink or blue filling inside
  • A powder cannon that bursts pink or blue powder
  • A smoke bomb that releases pink or blue smoke
  • A balloon filled with pink or blue confetti
  • A sealed envelope opened together
  • Sports balls (golf, footy, soccer) that release powder when hit or kicked

The actual "reveal" lasts only 5-30 seconds — but the build-up, the gathering, the photos, the food and the celebration around it can stretch for hours.

A brief history of gender reveals

Gender reveal parties as we know them today started in the United States in 2008. A parenting blogger named Jenna Karvunidis posted a cake-cutting reveal video to her blog — pink inside meant a girl. The post went viral and within a few years, the format had spread across the US.

By 2015-2017, the tradition had reached Australia, brought home by Aussie families who'd seen it on social media, in movies, or at friends' parties overseas. The Kardashian-Jenner family did a series of high-profile gender reveals in 2017-2018, which accelerated the trend globally.

In 2026, gender reveal parties are a mainstream Australian tradition — about as common as a baby shower.

📚 Fun fact: The original blogger who started the gender reveal trend (Jenna Karvunidis) has since publicly said she's "not surprised" the tradition exists but does urge families to focus less on stereotypes and more on the celebration of a new baby.

How a gender reveal actually works

The standard format goes like this:

Group of Australian friends and family celebrating gender reveal moment with pink smoke rising
The moment everyone gathers for — pink or blue, in front of the people who love you most.
  1. The parents discover the baby's gender at their 20-week morphology scan. They can choose to find out OR have the sonographer write it on a sealed card.
  2. Someone is "the keeper of the secret" — a trusted friend or family member (or the photographer) who knows the gender and arranges the reveal product accordingly.
  3. The party is hosted at home, a backyard, a beach, a park, or a function room. Guests (10-30 people) arrive and mingle.
  4. The reveal moment happens in front of everyone — usually with phones filming. The parents discover (or share) the gender via the chosen reveal product.
  5. Cake, food and photos follow. The party continues for 1-3 hours.
  6. Photos and videos are shared on social media, with grandparents who couldn't attend, and saved for the family memory book.
Australian gender reveal products — smoke bombs and cannon bundle for the reveal moment
The two most-used Australian gender reveal products — slow-flowing Smoke Bombs (left) for photo sessions, and Cannon Bundle (right) for the dramatic burst moment.

Gender reveals in Australia 2026 — the stats

300,000Babies born in Australia per year (ABS)
~50-60%Of expecting parents do some reveal
10.5%Asia-Pacific annual growth rate
22-26Weeks pregnant when most reveal

Australia is one of the fastest-growing gender reveal markets globally. Around 150,000-180,000 Australian families host some form of gender reveal each year — making it as common as wedding receptions or 21st birthdays in the Aussie celebration calendar.

When to have a gender reveal

The standard window is weeks 20-28 of pregnancy:

  • Week 20-22: Right after the morphology scan reveals gender. Some families rush to host the reveal immediately.
  • Week 22-26 (sweet spot): Bump is visible, mum still has energy, news has had time to sink in.
  • Week 26-28: Slightly later — gives more time to plan and coordinate guests' calendars.
  • After week 28: Rare to do a gender reveal — most families pivot to baby shower planning instead.

How to find out the gender

Option 1: 20-week morphology ultrasound (most common)

This is the standard Australian path. At 18-22 weeks, you'll have a detailed morphology ultrasound. The sonographer can identify the baby's sex with around 95-98% accuracy at this stage. You can choose to be told directly OR ask them to write it on a sealed card.

Option 2: NIPT (Non-Invasive Prenatal Test) — earlier

NIPT is a blood test available from week 10 of pregnancy. It primarily screens for chromosomal conditions but also identifies sex. Costs $400-$700 in Australia and is often not bulk-billed. Some families do NIPT primarily for medical screening and the gender info is a bonus.

Option 3: Wait until birth ("Team Green")

Some families choose not to find out the gender at all. About 30-40% of Australian parents are "Team Green" — they wait until birth. If you're Team Green, you skip the gender reveal entirely.

What products do you use?

Here are the most common products Australian families choose for their reveal moment:

How much does a gender reveal cost?

The honest range — most Australian families spend $200 to $800 on a gender reveal. Breakdown:

Component Budget range
Reveal product (cannon/smoke/balloon) $35 - $400
Decorations + balloons $30 - $80
Cake (or DIY) $50 - $150
Food and drinks (BBQ or finger food) $80 - $300
Photography (optional but popular) $200 - $450
Outfits + hair/makeup $80 - $300
TYPICAL TOTAL $200 - $800

Budget reveal: $100-$200 (DIY cake + balloons, no photographer). Premium reveal: $1,000+ (TNT setup + professional photographer + venue).

Australian gender reveal etiquette

Who pays?

In Australia, the parents-to-be typically pay for their own gender reveal. This differs from baby showers, which are traditionally hosted (and paid for) by a close friend or family member.

Who hosts?

Usually the parents. Sometimes a sister, mother-in-law, or close friend handles the logistics, but the event is "the parents' moment".

Gifts

Not expected at a gender reveal — that's what the baby shower is for. Some families ask guests to bring a small "guess" item (something pink or blue) but it's optional.

Dress code

Two options:

  1. "Vote your guess" — guests wear pink or blue depending on what they think the baby will be. Creates the visual "team boy vs team girl" divide. Popular for fun photos.
  2. Neutral white/cream/pastel — keeps focus on the reveal moment and looks great in photos. Increasingly popular among Australian families who prioritise aesthetics.

Photography

Phones are encouraged. For pro-level tips, read our gender reveal photoshoot guide.. Many families ask everyone to film simultaneously to capture the moment from multiple angles. Professional photographers are common but optional.

What to bring as a guest

  • Yourself, in pink or blue if requested
  • A small "guess" item if asked (a wrapped pink or blue token)
  • Phone fully charged for filming
  • NO baby gifts (save those for the baby shower)

Gender reveal vs baby shower

People often confuse the two. Here's the difference:

Feature Gender Reveal Baby Shower
Core purpose Reveal pink or blue Celebrate baby + give gifts
Timing 20-28 weeks 28-36 weeks
Hosted by Parents Family/friend
Paid by Parents Host
Guests 10-30 20-50
Length 1-2 hours 2-4 hours
Gifts No Yes

Most Australian families do both — gender reveal early, baby shower later.

A first-timer's reveal day checklist

  • Confirm the gender with sonographer (or NIPT) — written on a sealed card
  • Pick the "keeper of the secret" — one trusted person
  • Order reveal product 1-2 weeks in advance (allow for shipping)
  • Choose venue (backyard / beach / park / function room)
  • Check weather forecast for outdoor reveals (especially wind)
  • Send invites 2-3 weeks before
  • Order or bake cake (with sealed envelope to the baker)
  • Decorate venue 2-3 hours before guests arrive
  • Test camera angles + plan who films
  • Charge all devices
  • Eat lunch (don't reveal on an empty stomach)
  • Have a backup indoor plan if outdoor venue and weather turns

Gender reveal FAQ

What exactly is a gender reveal?
A gender reveal is an event where parents-to-be announce whether their baby is a boy or a girl, usually with a dramatic and photogenic moment. The reveal typically happens through a coloured product — pink or blue cake filling, smoke, powder cannons, balloons, or sealed envelopes. Most reveals are designed to be filmed or photographed.
When did gender reveal parties start?
Gender reveal parties became popular in the United States in 2008, after a parenting blogger named Jenna Karvunidis posted a cake-cutting reveal video that went viral. The trend spread internationally over the next decade. Australia adopted gender reveals around 2015-2017 (see gender reveal party history), and they're now a mainstream Australian pregnancy tradition.
Are gender reveal parties popular in Australia?
Yes — extremely. Around 50-60% of Australian expecting parents do some form of gender reveal event. Australia is part of the fastest-growing region globally (Asia-Pacific, 10.5% annual growth) for gender reveal products and parties.
When do you have a gender reveal party?
After the 20-week morphology scan, when the baby's gender can be clearly identified. Most Australian families schedule the reveal between weeks 20-28 of pregnancy. Sweet spot is weeks 22-24 — bump is showing, mum feels good, the news has had time to sink in.
How do you find out the gender for a gender reveal?
Three options: (1) Ask the sonographer at your 20-week scan to write the gender on a sealed card. Give the card to a trusted person who buys the reveal product. (2) Request a written report from your maternity provider. (3) Some Australian clinics offer a "non-invasive prenatal test" (NIPT) as early as week 10, which reveals gender along with chromosomal screening.
How long does a gender reveal party last?
Most Australian gender reveal parties last 1-3 hours total. The actual reveal moment is just 30 seconds, but the gathering includes pre-reveal mingling, photos, food and post-reveal celebration. Some families combine the reveal with a BBQ that runs 3-4 hours.
How much does a gender reveal party cost in Australia?
Most Australian gender reveal parties cost $200-$800 total. Breakdown: reveal product $35-$400, decorations $30-$80, cake $50-$150, food and drinks $80-$300, optional photography $200-$450. Budget reveals can be done under $100. Premium events with TNT-style products + photographer can reach $1,000+.
Are gender reveal parties safe?
Yes, when you use products designed for the purpose. All commercial gender reveal cannons, smoke bombs and powder products sold in Australia are non-toxic, non-flammable and eco-friendly. Avoid DIY fireworks, dry ice without supervision, or any explosive setup — multiple international news stories have covered gender reveals gone dangerous when families used unsuitable materials.
Should parents-to-be know the gender before the reveal?
Up to you. Three approaches: (1) Parents don't know — the most emotional version, both discover with the guests. (2) Parents know, guests don't — common when parents want to share the news with family. (3) Everyone except one parent knows — less common, can create tension if not handled well.
Can same-sex couples do a gender reveal?
Absolutely. Gender reveals are about the baby's sex, not the parents'. Same-sex couples in Australia host gender reveals at the same rates as heterosexual couples — the only difference is sometimes the "who hands the sealed card" tradition shifts slightly.
What if I don't want to know the gender at all?
You don't have to do a gender reveal. Some Australian families choose to wait until birth (called "Team Green"). Around 30-40% of Aussie families don't find out gender until delivery. If you're Team Green, simply skip the gender reveal — a baby shower at 30-36 weeks is the alternative tradition.
Is a gender reveal the same as a baby shower?
No. A gender reveal is specifically about discovering the baby's sex — typically earlier in pregnancy (20-28 weeks) — see our full gender reveal vs baby shower comparison with a smaller crowd. A baby shower celebrates the upcoming baby and includes gifts — typically later (28-36 weeks) with a bigger crowd. Most Australian families do both as separate events.
Are gender reveals controversial?
Some progressive perspectives argue that gender reveals reinforce binary gender stereotypes (pink-for-girls, blue-for-boys). Others argue they're just a fun way to celebrate a baby's arrival. There's no right answer — it's a personal choice. In Australia, the practice continues to grow in popularity despite ongoing cultural debate.
What's the best gender reveal idea for a small intimate party?
For groups of 5-10 people, the best options are: cake reveal (sentimental, controlled, indoor-friendly), sealed envelope (most emotional, free), or balloon box (photogenic, easy to set up). Skip large outdoor cannons for small groups — they need a crowd to feel right.

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