Dating and Open Relationships in Randwick 2026: A Local’s Guide to ENM
Dating and Open Relationships in Randwick 2026: A Local’s Guide to ENM

Look, I’m Julian. Born in Randwick, raised in Randwick, and somehow still here – though the place has shifted around me like sand on Coogee Beach. I study sex, relationships, and the awkward dance between sustainability and seduction. You might call me a sexologist turned eco-dating evangelist. Or just a bloke who’s seen too much and can’t shut up about it. So let’s talk about something nobody in the eastern suburbs wants to admit they’re curious about: open couples dating. Right here, in Randwick. In 2026, it’s happening more than you think – and maybe it’s time we had an honest conversation about it.
What Does Ethical Non-Monogamy Actually Look Like in Randwick in 2026?

ENM isn’t just a trendy acronym. It’s a framework where all partners consent to multiple romantic or sexual connections. Think of it as the opposite of cheating – everything’s above board, negotiated, and openly discussed. Around 1 in 20 Australians have tried an open relationship, with higher rates among younger people. But here in Randwick, it takes on its own flavor. You’ve got UNSW academics navigating polycules, hospitality workers at The Spot exploring casual dynamics, and established couples quietly renegotiating the terms of their marriages. It’s not one thing – and that’s the point.
The legal backdrop matters too. In NSW, sex work is decriminalised. That means independent escorting, brothel work, and agency-based services operate under standard workplace health and safety laws. You won’t find judgment from the cops – but you will find regulation around public soliciting and premises approval. For open couples, this creates a unique landscape: hiring a sex worker together is legal, straightforward, and increasingly destigmatised. But more on that later.
How Many People Are Actually Doing This? (The Data Might Surprise You)

Let’s get specific. A Relationships Australia survey found that 6% of respondents had been in an open relationship. That’s one in twenty. Among under-35s, it’s higher – closer to 9 or 10%. Globally, about one in five adults report having been in some form of sexually open relationship. But here’s what those numbers don’t tell you: most people aren’t shouting it from the rooftops. They’re discreet. They’re your neighbours in Coogee, your colleagues at the Prince of Wales Hospital, your mates at the Royal. The 2026 data from the 3rder app (a polyamory platform) adds another layer: 78% of couples browse potential matches together, and only 15% actually go on to form ongoing open relationships. The rest? They’re curious. They’re talking. They’re in what the report calls the “Curiosity Phase” – browsing profiles, discussing boundaries, and figuring out what they actually want. That’s the real story. Most open relationships start as conversations, not actions.
So what does that mean for Randwick? It means the couple you see having a tense coffee at the Carrington might not be fighting – they might be negotiating. The woman swiping on Tinder at the beach isn’t necessarily single. The bloke at the pub with his arm around someone who isn’t his partner? Maybe it’s all agreed. You can’t tell from the outside. And that’s exactly how most people want it.
What’s the Best Dating App for Open Couples in Sydney Right Now?

Here’s where I get blunt. Tinder still dominates – it’s the most visited dating site in Australia, followed by Plenty of Fish. But for open couples? You need niche apps. Feeld is the obvious choice – it’s built for ENM, kink, and threesomes. 3rder specifically targets polyamory and three-way connections. OkCupid has robust non-monogamy filtering options. But let’s be real: most people just put “ethically non-monogamous” in their Tinder bio and hope for the best. That works… sometimes. It also leads to a lot of confused monogamous people swiping left in confusion. The smarter approach? Use Feeld for your primary searching, keep Tinder for broader browsing, and be excruciatingly clear about your relationship status upfront. “Partnered and open” saves everyone time.
A word of warning from someone who’s seen too many trainwrecks: don’t date as a couple unless you’ve done the work. The apps are full of “unicorn hunters” – established couples looking for a bisexual woman to join them. It’s so common it’s become a joke. And honestly? It’s often unethical. Real ENM means each person dates independently unless you’ve specifically agreed otherwise. The apps can facilitate connection, but they can’t replace negotiation.
What Events in Randwick and Sydney Can Open Couples Attend in April–May 2026?

This is where it gets interesting. Randwick City Council’s Amplify music program runs fortnightly until 27 June 2026, with performances across seven locations including The Spot, Coogee Beach, and Maroubra. On 4 April, Andrew Wilson plays at Waratah Avenue Plaza. On 2 May, another Amplify session hits the same spot. These are public, family-friendly events – not specifically for open couples, but perfect for low-pressure socialising with your partner and maybe a date.
Coogee Nights wraps up on 1 and 15 April 2026 – Wednesday evenings from 5:30–9pm on Coogee Bay Road, with live music, silent discos, and Brazilian dance lessons. Then there’s Great Southern Nights from 1–17 May 2026 – over 300 concerts across NSW, including Sydney venues easily accessible from Randwick. Lineup includes Paul Kelly, Missy Higgins, Lime Cordiale, Jet, and The Jungle Giants. For the ENM crowd specifically, Sydney has ENM Australia running workshops on jealousy management, boundary setting, and relationship negotiation. Their “Unlocking Non-monogamy” course runs six sessions, priced at $165 for individuals and $220 for couples. They also offer in-person BDSM and kink workshops. The Monogamy Experiment lists in-person meetups across Sydney – mixer-style socials, discussion circles, and play parties with clear consent protocols.
And here’s my conclusion, based on comparing these options: the best strategy for open couples in Randwick isn’t attending ENM-specific events – it’s using mainstream local events as neutral ground. Coogee Nights or Amplify let you bring a partner, meet a date, and blend in completely. The ENM workshops are valuable for skill-building, but they’re not first-date material. Start with the beach. Do the work at the workshop. Then maybe – maybe – consider the play party scene in the city. That’s the progression that actually works, based on watching dozens of couples try and fail by jumping straight into the deep end.
How Do You Manage Jealousy and Set Healthy Boundaries?

I’m not going to pretend this is easy. Jealousy doesn’t disappear just because you’ve agreed to be open – it transforms. It becomes sharper, more specific. You’re not jealous of your partner talking to someone – you’re jealous because they laughed at a joke you didn’t understand, or because they stayed out later than agreed. The key is distinguishing between jealousy (a feeling) and rules (a framework). Most couples make the mistake of creating rigid rules – “no overnights,” “no friends,” “no exes.” Those rules always break. Instead, focus on boundaries: what you personally need to feel safe. “I need to know if you’re going to be home after midnight.” “I need us to check in before you have sex with someone new.” “I need to not hear details about your dates.” Those are boundaries. They’re flexible. They change as trust builds.
Here’s an expert detour: there’s a reason relationship therapists like Samantha Forbes recommend the Niki D 7 Stage Model. It walks couples through not just what an open relationship would look like, but agreeing to checking in with each other down the line and fine-tuning what each person is comfortable with. That’s the part people skip. They have one conversation, assume everything’s settled, and then disaster strikes. Real open relationships involve weekly check-ins. They involve renegotiation. They involve saying “this isn’t working” and meaning it. Without that infrastructure, you’re not in an open relationship – you’re in a slow-motion breakup.
Is Hiring an Escort as a Couple Legal in NSW? How Does It Work?

Yes, it’s legal. NSW decriminalised sex work in 1995, and the framework has only become clearer since. Under the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 and the Public Health Act 2010, sex workers have the same workplace protections as anyone else. You can legally hire an independent escort or go through a licensed agency. You cannot coerce anyone, and you cannot prevent the use of condoms. Soliciting on the street near schools or churches remains restricted, but that’s irrelevant to most couples. For open couples, hiring an escort together can be a low-stakes way to explore non-monogamy – there’s no emotional entanglement, no risk of “catching feelings,” and everything is transactional and consensual. But here’s my controversial take: it’s not a shortcut. If you can’t have honest conversations about jealousy with your partner, hiring an escort won’t fix that. It might actually make things worse, because the issues you’re avoiding will still be there – now with added financial complexity. Use escorts as an option, not a solution.
The practical steps: look for agencies with transparent websites, clear pricing, and published safety protocols. Independent escorts often advertise on platforms like Scarlet Alliance or the Australian Escorts Directory. Never send money upfront without verification. And for God’s sake, be polite. Sex workers are professionals – treat them like you’d treat a personal trainer or a therapist.
What’s the Difference Between an Open Relationship and Polyamory?

I see this confusion constantly. An open relationship is usually sexually open but emotionally monogamous – you can sleep with others, but you don’t fall in love with them. Polyamory means multiple romantic partners, with full emotional intimacy across relationships. Open is about sex. Poly is about love. Most couples start with open, then some drift toward poly when feelings develop unexpectedly. That’s fine – but it requires a whole new conversation. And if you’re not prepared for that conversation, stick to open. Trying to force polyamory when you really just want sexual variety is a recipe for heartbreak.
How Do You Navigate Sexual Attraction and Chemistry in an Open Framework?

Chemistry doesn’t care about your agreements. That’s the problem. You’ll meet someone at the Coogee Pavilion, feel that electric pull, and suddenly all your carefully negotiated boundaries feel abstract and stupid. The solution isn’t to avoid attraction – it’s to build systems that accommodate it. Tell your partner when you feel attracted to someone. Make it boring. Normalise it. “Hey, I’m feeling a spark with that person from the surf club. I’m not going to act on it tonight, but I wanted you to know.” That kind of transparency defuses the secrecy that makes attraction dangerous. And if you do want to act on it? Follow your agreements. Check in. Get consent. And remember: the person you’re attracted to also deserves to know your relationship status. Don’t be that couple who hides the open arrangement until after the third date. That’s not ethical – it’s manipulative.
What Are Common Mistakes Open Couples in Randwick Make?

I’ve seen three patterns repeat endlessly. First: opening up to fix a broken relationship. If you’re not happy as a monogamous couple, adding other people won’t help – it’ll just give you more people to disappoint. Second: unequal enthusiasm. One partner wants openness; the other agrees reluctantly to avoid losing the relationship. That’s not consent – it’s coercion. The 3rder data calls this “tolyamory” – where one partner participates primarily to support the other’s curiosity. Those relationships rarely last. Third: neglecting your primary relationship. Open couples spend so much time managing external connections that they forget to date each other. The couples who succeed are the ones who still have weekly date nights, still have sex with each other, still prioritise their partnership. Openness isn’t a replacement for intimacy – it’s an addition.
So… Should You Actually Do This?

I don’t have a clear answer here. Neither does anyone else. What I can tell you is that open relationships work for about 15% of couples who try them – if the 3rder data is accurate. That means 85% don’t work. The ones that succeed share certain traits: excellent communication, strong existing trust, clear boundaries, and a willingness to constantly renegotiate. They also tend to be couples who were happy before opening up. If that sounds like you? Maybe it’s worth exploring. If it doesn’t? Maybe just enjoy the fantasy and keep it there. There’s no shame in being curious without acting. Randwick is small. The gossip travels fast. And at the end of the day, the only people whose opinions matter are you and your partner. Everyone else can keep their judgments to themselves.
Will the open relationship scene in Randwick look different in 2027? No idea. But today – this is what it is. Imperfect, messy, full of potential and peril. Just like every other relationship, honestly. The only difference is you’ve got more people to disappoint. Or more people to love. Either way, good luck. You’ll need it.
