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Top TikTok Hashtags in Australia (April 2026) - DiscoTok blog post

Top TikTok Hashtags in Australia (April 2026)

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Written by DiscoTok Team
11 min read
#trending hashtags#creator tips#TikTok Australia#DiscoTok#TikTok trends April 2026#hashtag strategy#Australian TikTok

Here are the top 10 trending TikTok hashtags in Australia today (30 April 2026), with views and video counts. Get practical ideas to turn each trend into a post that performs.

Today’s (30 April 2026) trending TikTok hashtags in Australia are: #gym, #ad, #onthisday, #michaeljackson, #travel, #basketball, #euphoria, #nba, #school, and #booktok—each showing strong momentum based on current views and video volume. Below, you’ll find what each hashtag signals, what to post, and how to use it strategically so your content matches what Aussie viewers are already watching.

Australia’s Top Trending TikTok Hashtags (30 April 2026)

If you’re picking hashtags based on both reach (views) and opportunity (video count), today’s list has a mix of evergreen communities (like #gym and #travel) and high-intent spikes (like #ad and #euphoria). That combination is ideal for creators: you can post something timely while still building long-term audience pillars.


1) #gym — 9.6M views, 2,186 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

#gym is a consistent performance category, but when it trends harder than usual, it often signals a wave of:

  • new routines and “reset” content
  • transformation check-ins
  • gym humor and relatable POVs
  • short, educational form tips (form checks, cues, misconceptions)

Content ideas that match the feed

  • “3 mistakes I made when I started lifting” (fast cuts + captions)
  • Aussie gym etiquette POVs (peak hour machines, re-racking, towel culture)
  • Routine breakdowns: Push/Pull/Legs in 20 seconds
  • Mini challenges: “7 days of pull-ups” or “April wrap-up PRs”

Hashtag strategy

Use #gym as your broad discovery tag, then pair it with intent tags in your caption (not necessarily more hashtags) like “beginner,” “home workout,” “strength,” or “cut/bulk” language. Keep the first 2 seconds visual: barbell close-up, timer beep, or before/after frame.

Creator tip

If you’re selling coaching, programs, or supplements, keep your content educational-first. The algorithm rewards watch time more than hard selling.


2) #ad — 24.1M views, 181 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

This is the biggest reach tag today by views, but with a low video count—which usually indicates fewer posts are capturing a lot of attention. #ad spikes when audiences are watching:

  • creator brand deals
  • product demos with strong hooks
  • “TikTok made me buy it” style reviews
  • transparent sponsorship disclosures

How to use #ad without losing retention

People don’t scroll because it’s an ad—they scroll because it’s a boring ad. Format your sponsored content like entertainment:

  • Start with the problem: “My hair kept frizzing in humidity…”
  • Show the payoff early (first 3 seconds)
  • Keep disclosure clear but not disruptive

High-performing formats

  • Before/after (skincare, cleaning, fitness, food)
  • 3 reasons I’m keeping this (fast, structured)
  • Day-in-the-life with product naturally embedded
  • My honest rating (even if positive, make it feel balanced)

Creator tip

Because #ad has 24.1M views across only 181 videos, a well-edited, high-retention sponsored post can punch above its weight—especially if you nail the hook and keep it under 20–30 seconds.


3) #onthisday — 4.2M views, 7,648 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

#onthisday is nostalgia + storytelling. It’s also one of the easiest trends to participate in because you can pull from:

  • camera roll memories
  • old drafts
  • past milestones
  • “this day last year” glow-ups

Content ideas

  • “On this day, I almost quit…” (career/fitness/study arc)
  • Then vs now (relationship, pet, home renovation)
  • Throwback to my first day in Australia (for expats/international students)
  • Old school clips (sports, dance, theatre, first job)

How to stand out in a crowded tag

With 7,648 videos, competition is high. Your edge is specificity:

  • add a clear date and location in captions (e.g., “Sydney, April 2023” style—without making the post feel outdated)
  • include a micro-lesson: what you’d do differently now
  • use on-screen text to guide viewers through the story

Creator tip

Hook with the outcome first: “This was the day everything changed.” Then rewind.


4) #michaeljackson — 11.4M views, 437 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

MJ content trends when dance, performance, and music nostalgia collide. Expect:

  • dance recreations
  • “how to do the lean” breakdowns
  • outfit recreations (fedora, loafers, glove styling)
  • vocal and beat edits

Content ideas that perform

  • Dance tutorial: one move in 15 seconds
  • MJ-inspired fit check (thrifted Aussie finds)
  • Street performance clips (with permission + good audio)
  • Duets/stitches reacting to impressive choreography

Audio and editing notes

Even when you can’t use a full track, creators often rely on:

  • recognizable beats
  • footwork close-ups
  • crisp timing edits (cuts on the beat)

Creator tip

If you’re not a dancer, lean into reaction + education: “Why this move looks easy but isn’t,” or “3 details that sell the illusion.”


5) #travel — 7.0M views, 1,492 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

Travel is always big in Australia, but trending moments often align with:

  • long weekend planning
  • shoulder-season destination guides
  • budget itineraries and hidden gems

Content ideas for Aussie audiences

  • “48 hours in Melbourne” (food + transit + one viewpoint)
  • Budget breakdown (exact costs: flights, coffee, accommodation)
  • Solo travel safety tips (especially for first-timers)
  • Regional gems: coastal drives, national parks, small towns

How to structure a high-retention travel TikTok

  • Start with the best shot first (beach, skyline, waterfall)
  • Use a countdown format: “3 stops you can’t miss”
  • Add practical overlays: prices, times, distance, best month to go

Creator tip

Pair #travel with a clear niche positioning in your bio (budget, luxury, family, accessible travel). The hashtag gets you discovered; your niche gets you followed.


6) #basketball — 9.3M views, 488 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

Basketball trends in Australia often mirror global highlight culture, but local creators win by mixing:

  • drills
  • pickup game moments
  • training progress
  • Aussie basketball community references

Content ideas

  • “1 drill that fixed my handle”
  • Mic’d up defense POV (keep it clean and comedic)
  • Shooting form check (slow-mo + overlay cues)
  • Local court reviews (lighting, rims, busiest times)

Creator tip

If you’re posting highlights, make the first clip your best play. Viewers decide in under a second whether the clip is worth it.


7) #euphoria — 12.4M views, 194 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

#euphoria is a vibe tag: cinematic edits, makeup looks, emotional storytelling, and aesthetic transitions. The low video count with high views suggests a trend spike—a great time to post if you can match the mood.

Content ideas

  • Euphoria-inspired makeup (glitter tears, bold liner)
  • Cinematic “night out” montage (neon, grain, slow shutter)
  • POV storytelling: “When the party ends and reality hits”
  • Outfit transitions with dramatic lighting

How to nail the aesthetic

  • Use consistent color grading (cool blues/purples)
  • Add film grain lightly
  • Keep cuts synced to the beat
  • Use close-ups (eyes, jewelry, textures)

Creator tip

Don’t over-hashtag this. Let #euphoria be the “signal,” and keep your caption emotionally specific. Specificity increases saves and shares.


8) #nba — 9.1M views, 433 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

NBA content crosses into:

  • highlight edits and reactions
  • hot takes and debates
  • player comparisons
  • “what would happen if…” scenarios

Australian audiences often engage with NBA content during big news cycles and high-stakes games—so fast posting matters.

Content ideas

  • 30-second debate: “Is X top 5 right now?”
  • Reaction stitches to clutch moments
  • Explainers: “Why this play works” (simple telestration overlays)
  • Aussie angle: local watch parties, time-zone struggles, jersey culture

Creator tip

If you’re doing commentary, put your conclusion first: “This is the most underrated skill in the league.” Then justify.


9) #school — 6.4M views, 1,015 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

#school trends across comedy, study motivation, and relatable routines:

  • teacher/student POVs
  • lunchbox and uniform content
  • exam prep and productivity
  • “things nobody tells you” school life tips

Content ideas

  • POV: “When the bell rings and everyone teleports”
  • Study setup: desk reset + 3 tips
  • Locker/bag essentials (budget-friendly)
  • Teacher humor: “What students think I do after class”

Safety and audience note

If you’re under 18 or filming in a school environment, prioritize privacy:

  • avoid showing school names/logos
  • don’t film other students without consent
  • keep location details vague

Creator tip

School content performs when it’s hyper-relatable and fast. Use captions heavily—many viewers watch without sound.


10) #booktok — 4.9M views, 2,750 videos

What this trend means in Australia right now

BookTok remains one of TikTok’s strongest micro-communities. Even with moderate views today, the community behavior is powerful: comments, saves, and long caption engagement.

Content ideas

  • “Books I finished this month” (April wrap)
  • Trope-based recs: enemies-to-lovers, found family, cozy mystery
  • Reading vlogs: café reading in Sydney/Melbourne/Brisbane
  • Spicy scale / tears scale (clear, quick rating system)

How to grow faster in BookTok

  • Pick a lane: romance, fantasy, literary, nonfiction, manga
  • Use consistent series formats: “If you liked X, read Y”
  • Ask a direct question at the end: “Do you want the happy or tragic version?”

Creator tip

Because there are 2,750 videos in this tag today, the best way to stand out is a recognizable format and strong on-screen text (title + trope + 1-line promise).


Featured TikTok Video: @meme — “#meme” (0 views)

Even though the featured video currently shows 0 views, it’s still worth watching (and learning from) because it represents a common early-stage TikTok reality: distribution hasn’t happened yet, but the concept might be scalable.

Why this featured video is worth watching (and what creators can learn)

1) Meme formats are trend accelerators

A single meme template can be repurposed across multiple hashtags above:

  • #school (relatable classroom POV)
  • #gym (painfully true workout moments)
  • #nba / #basketball (reaction memes to plays)
  • #travel (airport chaos, budgeting, “expectation vs reality”)

2) Low-view posts can become high-view posts later

TikTok often tests content in waves. If the video has:

  • a clear punchline in the first 1–2 seconds
  • readable on-screen text
  • a loop-friendly ending
    …it can still get picked up later.

3) What to look for when you watch it

Use it as a checklist:

  • Is the hook immediate?
  • Is the meme understandable without sound?
  • Does it loop cleanly?
  • Could the same format be adapted to one of today’s trending tags?

If the answer is “yes,” the video is valuable—not because of current views, but because it can become a repeatable format you can iterate on.


Emerging Trends to Watch in Australia (Next 7–14 Days)

Based on today’s hashtag mix, here are realistic near-term directions:

1) Performance + lifestyle hybrids

Expect more crossover content like:

  • #gym + #school (student fitness routines)
  • #travel + #booktok (reading spots, “books for this destination”)

2) Aesthetic storytelling rising again

The spike in #euphoria suggests creators are leaning into:

  • cinematic edits
  • emotional POVs
  • stylized makeup/fashion transitions

3) Sports commentary staying hot

With #nba and #basketball both trending, quick-turnaround commentary, reactions, and “explainer” edits should keep performing—especially when creators add a unique Aussie voice.


Practical Creator Tips: How to Use These Hashtags Today

Use a “1 broad + 1 trend + 1 niche” approach

Example stacks (without overloading hashtags):

  • #gym + #onthisday + “beginner lifting”
  • #travel + #euphoria + “night markets itinerary”
  • #nba + #michaeljackson + “halftime dance edit” (creative crossover)

Prioritize hook, then hashtags

Hashtags help discovery, but retention drives distribution. Before posting, confirm:

  • your first frame is visually clear
  • the value is obvious (laugh, learn, feel, or be impressed)
  • captions are readable on mobile

Match your format to the hashtag’s intent

  • #ad: problem/solution, demo, proof
  • #onthisday: story arc, before/after, lesson
  • #euphoria: mood, visuals, cinematic pacing
  • #booktok: tropes, lists, strong opinions
  • #nba/#basketball: reaction, debate, breakdown

Post timing and iteration

If a tag has high views but low video count (like #ad, #euphoria), post faster and test 2–3 variations:

  • different hooks
  • different lengths (12s vs 25s)
  • different first shots

Conclusion: What to Post Next (Action Plan)

If you want the simplest plan for today in Australia: pick one of these trending hashtags, create a video that matches its native style, and optimize for retention first. For fast opportunity, look at #ad (24.1M views, 181 videos) and #euphoria (12.4M views, 194 videos); for steady community growth, build series content around #gym and #booktok. Then, use the featured @meme post as inspiration to develop a repeatable meme format you can adapt across multiple trends.


Quick Reference: Today’s Hashtag Metrics

  • #gym — 9.6M views, 2,186 videos
  • #ad — 24.1M views, 181 videos
  • #onthisday — 4.2M views, 7,648 videos
  • #michaeljackson — 11.4M views, 437 videos
  • #travel — 7.0M views, 1,492 videos
  • #basketball — 9.3M views, 488 videos
  • #euphoria — 12.4M views, 194 videos
  • #nba — 9.1M views, 433 videos
  • #school — 6.4M views, 1,015 videos
  • #booktok — 4.9M views, 2,750 videos
#meme

Key Takeaways

  • #ad and #euphoria are high-view, lower-volume tags—great for creators who can move fast and nail the hook.
  • #gym, #travel, and #booktok are reliable communities where series content can build long-term followers.
  • #onthisday is crowded, so specificity (dates, lessons, outcomes) is what makes posts stand out.
  • Sports tags (#nba, #basketball) reward quick reactions, strong opinions, and simple breakdowns.
  • The featured @meme video is a reminder that repeatable meme formats can scale even if a post starts at 0 views.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the top trending TikTok hashtags in Australia today?

On 30 April 2026, Australia’s top trending hashtags are #gym, #ad, #onthisday, #michaeljackson, #travel, #basketball, #euphoria, #nba, #school, and #booktok.

Which trending hashtag is the best opportunity right now?

#ad (24.1M views, 181 videos) and #euphoria (12.4M views, 194 videos) show high views with lower video volume, which can mean more room to stand out.

How many hashtags should I use on TikTok?

Use a few high-signal hashtags (often 1–3) that match your content, then focus on a strong hook and watch time—those usually matter more than hashtag quantity.

How can I make #onthisday content that doesn’t feel generic?

Add a specific lesson, a clear “then vs now” contrast, and on-screen text that explains the story in the first 2–3 seconds.

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