Do Aussies really thank the bus driver, clap when a glass breaks, or say “cheers” for absolutely everything?
We asked ChatGPT to generate a list of Australian cultural behaviours, then sat down with three locals — Sam (37), Abby (29), and Grace (25) — to fact-check the list in real time.
Some made them laugh. Some hit a little too close to home.
Here’s what happened when AI met Aussie culture.
1. Saying hello to the cashier
Sam:
“I don’t just say hello. I’ll probably have a conversation and tell them how my day’s gone.”
Abby:
“It’s normal to have a two-to-three-minute chat.”
📝 Editor’s note: Confirmed. Aussies love a quick chat at the checkout — it’s part politeness, part performance.
2. Saying thank you when someone holds the door
Sam:
“It’s pretty odd if someone holds the door open for you and you don’t say thank you.”
Abby:
“That’s definitely a thing.”
📝 Editor’s note: “Cheers” might be doing more social heavy lifting than any other word in the country.
3. Saying “sorry” even when it’s not your fault
Abby:
“I apologise for everything.”
Sam:
“Yeah, I always say sorry, whether I’m in the right or wrong.”
📝 Editor’s note: The “sorry” reflex is real — even if it was clearly their fault.
4. Thanking the bus driver
All three:
“Yes. Always.”
📝 Editor’s note: It’s basically a sacred ritual. Say thanks — even if you get off through the back door.
5. Avoiding sitting next to someone on public transport
Sam:
“I will never sit next to someone unless I absolutely have to.”
Abby:
“If someone sits next to me when there’s a vacant seat, I can’t believe they’ve done that to me.”
📝 Editor’s note: Nothing unites Aussies like quiet, unspoken seat-based etiquette.
6. Forgetting your reusable bags and over-explaining it to the cashier
Sam:
“Yeah, even before I put anything on the checkout.”
Abby:
“Yeah, I always say it to my partner like, Ah, we’ve forgotten the bags again!”
📝 Editor’s note: This one hit hard. We’ve all done it — and overshared about it.
7. Sitting in the front seat of an Uber
Sam:
“Back seat. Every time. I don’t want the chat — I want peace.”
Grace:
“If I’m alone, I’ll usually sit in the front unless the driver gives ‘don’t sit here’ energy. But it’s totally vibe-based.”
📝 Editor’s note: Divisive. It depends on the city, the driver’s vibe, and how awkward you’re willing to feel.
8. Saying “cheers” for everything
Grace:
“It’s just… cheers. Thank you, goodbye, acknowledgment — it’s all ‘cheers.’ It’s not even about what you’re saying anymore — it’s just polite noise.”
Sam:
“It’s the Swiss Army knife of Aussie expressions.”
📝 Editor’s note: If Australians could only keep one word, it might be this one.
9. Yelling “taxi!” when someone breaks a glass
Sam:
“It means you’re ready to go home.”
📝 Editor’s note: Still alive and well in pubs and parties — especially if there’s a dad nearby.
10. Saying hi on bushwalks — but not too much
Sam:
“Yeah you should probably just nod or say hi. But, don’t ask someone what they are having for lunch.”
Abby:
“I don’t bushwalk.”
📝 Editor’s note: The bushwalking “hello” is brief, respectful, and absolutely a thing. But never linger.
Final thoughts
What started as a fun AI experiment turned into a surprisingly real cultural litmus test. ChatGPT didn’t get everything right — but it got a lot closer than we expected.