Gender Reveal vs Baby Shower: What's the Difference and Should You Have Both? (2026)
The complete Australian guide to gender reveals vs baby showers — timing, etiquette, costs, and whether to have one, the other, or both.
By the Gender Reveal Ideas Australia team · Last updated: 24 May 2026 · Backed by 7,350+ verified Google reviews and 70,000+ Australian families
If you're pregnant and Googling "do I need a gender reveal or just a baby shower" — you're asking the right question. Most Australian families today end up having both. But many don't know exactly how they differ, when to schedule each, or who pays for what.
This is the complete gender reveal vs baby shower breakdown for Australian families in 2026. We'll cover what each event is for, when to schedule them, costs, etiquette, and whether you should combine or separate them.
What's in this guide
- The core difference (in one sentence)
- Different purposes, different vibes
- When to have each — Australian timeline
- Guest list differences
- Cost comparison — Australia 2026
- Etiquette — who pays, who hosts, who attends
- Should you combine them?
- Decision matrix — which is right for you
- Products you actually need
- Gender reveal vs baby shower FAQ
The core difference (in one sentence)
📋 The simplest way to remember it: A gender reveal is about discovering the baby's sex (the moment). A baby shower is about celebrating the baby and helping the parents prepare (the gifts).
Different purposes, different vibes
The two events sit at completely different points emotionally:
| Feature | Gender Reveal | Baby Shower |
|---|---|---|
| Core moment | Discovering pink or blue | Celebrating the baby |
| Emotional peak | The reveal (30 seconds) | Gift opening + conversation |
| Length | 1-2 hours | 2-4 hours |
| Typical size | 10-30 people | 20-50 people |
| Photo-driven | Yes (one key moment) | Less so (more candid) |
| Gifts expected | No | Yes |
| Activities | Reveal + photos + food | Games + food + gifts + cake |
| Best venue | Backyard, beach, park | Living room, café, function room |
When to have each — Australian timeline
Gender reveal timing (20-28 weeks)
The gender is typically determined at the 18-20 week morphology scan. So the gender reveal happens any time from week 20 to week 28 — early enough that mum still has her energy, late enough that the news has had time to sink in for the parents.
Sweet spot: week 22-24. Bump is showing, mum feels good, the moment has the right emotional weight.
Baby shower timing (28-36 weeks)
The baby shower happens later in pregnancy — once the arrival feels real but before mum gets too uncomfortable to enjoy it. Australian baby showers are typically week 28 to week 36.
Sweet spot: week 32-34. Bump is unmistakable, due date is close enough to feel exciting, mum can still stand up without herculean effort.
Guest list differences
The two events typically have different guest lists, though they overlap:
Gender Reveal guests (10-30)
- Parents-to-be
- Both sets of grandparents
- Siblings + their partners
- Closest friends (3-8)
- Older children of the family
- Best friends from each side
Baby Shower guests (20-50)
- Everyone from the gender reveal
- Extended family (cousins, aunts, uncles)
- Work colleagues
- Mums-group friends
- Neighbourhood friends
- Distant friends invited to be courteous
Cost comparison — Australia 2026
| Cost item | Gender Reveal | Baby Shower |
|---|---|---|
| Venue | $0 (home/beach) - $200 | $0 - $500 (function room) |
| Decorations | $30 - $80 | $80 - $250 |
| Reveal product | $35 - $400 | $0 (not the focus) |
| Cake | $50 - $150 | $80 - $250 |
| Food + drinks | $80 - $300 (BBQ/finger food) | $150 - $800 (catered or made) |
| Photography (optional) | $200 - $450 | $200 - $400 |
| Typical total | $200 - $1,200 | $400 - $2,000 |
Etiquette — who pays, who hosts, who attends

Gender reveal etiquette
- Hosted by: Usually the parents themselves (intimate, personal). Sometimes a close friend or sibling.
- Paid by: The parents-to-be typically pay for their own gender reveal in Australia.
- Gifts: Not expected. Guests bring themselves and their guesses.
- Dress code: Either pink-or-blue "vote your guess" (popular) OR neutral white/cream for photos.
- Photos: Photo-driven event. Phones are encouraged. Some families ask everyone to film simultaneously to capture the moment from multiple angles.
- The keeper of the secret: Usually one trusted person (a close friend, the photographer, a baker) knows the gender and sets up the reveal.
Baby shower etiquette
- Hosted by: Traditionally a close friend, sister, mother or mother-in-law. Co-hosting is common.
- Paid by: The host pays for venue, food and decorations. Parents-to-be do NOT pay for their own baby shower (traditionally).
- Gifts: Required. Most Australian baby showers use a gift registry (Baby Bunting, Big W, Amazon AU).
- Dress code: Usually neat-casual or "smart casual baby colours" (pastels).
- Games: Expected — guess the bump size, baby food taste test, baby photo match, etc.
- Thank-you cards: Mum sends thank-you cards within 2-4 weeks. Some skip this; etiquette still expects them.
Should you combine them?
✓ Combine when
- Budget is tight
- Family lives far apart and can only travel once
- You want a single big event
- The parents-to-be prefer fewer events
- You're a second-time parent and the baby shower is a smaller "sprinkle"
✓ Separate when
- You want the gender reveal to be intimate
- You want the baby shower to be larger
- You want two distinct memories
- You have time and budget for both
- You want the gender reveal to be a true surprise (smaller groups are easier to keep the secret around)
Decision matrix — which is right for you
Do both (separate events)
The default for most Australian families. Two events, two memories, no compromise. Gender reveal at 22-26 weeks (intimate, 15-25 people). Baby shower at 32-36 weeks (bigger, 30-50 people). Different groups, different vibes.
Gender reveal only
If this isn't your first baby, you might skip the full baby shower (already have most gear) and just do the gender reveal. Many second-time families do a "baby sprinkle" instead — a casual mini-shower with consumables only.
Baby shower only
Some parents skip the gender reveal entirely — either because they want to be surprised at birth, or because they don't enjoy the spotlight moment. A traditional baby shower without the reveal works perfectly.
Combined event
The "reveal-and-shower" hybrid. Hosted at 24-28 weeks. Reveal moment happens during the shower. Gifts are given. Photos are taken. One big event covers both. Saves time and money.
Products you actually need
For a gender reveal:
- Powder cannons — the classic Aussie reveal moment, $35 each, biodegradable.
- Mega Blaster Powder Extinguisher — premium 30-second continuous spray for cinematic photo and video reveals.
- Smoke bombs — perfect for outdoor reveals and photography.
- TNT Self Hire detonator — the wow-factor reveal for larger gatherings.
For both a gender reveal AND a baby shower (decorations + cake):
- "Oh Baby" acrylic cake topper — works for both events.
- Burn-away cake topper — combines the cake-cutting tradition with a surprise reveal.
- Gender reveal decorations — balloons, banners and party styling.
Gender reveal vs baby shower FAQ
What is the difference between a gender reveal and a baby shower?
Can you have both a gender reveal and a baby shower?
When should you have a gender reveal vs a baby shower?
Who pays for a gender reveal vs baby shower?
Is a gender reveal a baby shower?
Are gender reveals still in style in Australia in 2026?
Should a gender reveal be a surprise to the parents?
How long is a gender reveal vs a baby shower?
Are gifts expected at a gender reveal?
Can dads be at a baby shower?
What's the difference between a baby shower and a sprinkle?
Is it ok to combine the gender reveal with the baby shower?
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