35 dynamic careers in hospitality and tourism to fall in love with
This Australian career guide covers 35 jobs and careers in hospitality and tourism, including what each role involves and how to get there.
It’s common to fall into a tourism and hospitality career and then decide it’s worth staying in for the long-term. There’s something about an industry built entirely around making people feel welcome, fed, comfortable and looked after that has a way of sticking.
The career options are far broader than most people realise when they first start looking. Restaurants, hotels, bars, bakeries, cruise ships, resorts, travel companies, tourism organisations are just some that spring to mind immediately. And they all need skilled professionals to keep the experience running smoothly. Behind every great experience is someone who chose this industry and decided to get really good at it.
Australia is one of the best places in the world to build a hospitality or tourism career. The industry is growing quickly and the geographic variety on offer is vast. You could be running a boutique pastry shop in Brisbane one year and heading up the food and beverage operation at a five-star Bali resort the next, as you build experience.
This guide covers 35 careers across commercial kitchen, patisserie, front-of-house service, hospitality management, tourism and events, including what each role involves and which Acknowledge Education course can get you there.
Why hospitality and tourism careers in Australia and around the world are thriving
Hospitality and tourism is one of those industries where the work is as varied as the people doing it. You could be running a boutique hotel in the Whitsundays, managing an Australian hatted kitchen in Melbourne, coordinating events in Singapore or guiding adventurous tours through the Northern Territory.
There are plenty of entry-level jobs in hospitality to get you started and many opportunities to progress in your career. This is an extraordinarily healthy industry. Tourism directly contributed AU$81.1 billion to Australia’s GDP in 2024–25, with total international tourism consumption reaching $211.1 billion.
That influx of people and spending money means jobs are growing to match. Australia recorded 702,800 tourism jobs in 2025, up 4.6% from the previous year. That means one in every 23 filled jobs in Australia belongs to tourism. Meanwhile, international visitor spending hit $39 billion in 2025, up 22% from 2024 levels and setting a record milestone for the country.
For anyone thinking about where to build a long-term career, few industries combine this level of growth with the kind of geographic freedom and progression opportunities. There are few limits when the world is quite literally your workplace.
Main sectors in hospitality and tourism
This industry is all about creating special moments for people when they’re not at home or work. Every time you had a meal that blew your mind or stayed at a hotel that felt like home the moment you walked in, there was a hospitality or tourism professional behind those moments.
The industry covers more ground than most people realise when they first start exploring it. These are the main sectors in hospitality and tourism:
Food and beverage service: Restaurants, cafes, bars and catering companies employ the largest slice of the hospitality workforce. Careers here cover everything from front-of-house service through venue management.
Commercial kitchens and culinary arts: Professional kitchens run on skill, speed and creativity. This sector includes apprentice cooks all the way through to executive chef positions in world-class restaurants.
Patisserie and baking: A specialist discipline within the culinary world. Patisserie and baking careers include artisan bakery roles up to high-end pastry chef positions in hotels and fine dining restaurants.
Hotels and accommodation services: One of the most structured career pathways in the industry, with clear progression from guest services and front desk roles through to hotel management.
Tourism and travel operations: Tour operators, travel agencies, destination management companies and national parks all employ tourism professionals who design and lead experiences for domestic and international visitors.
Events and guest experience management: Corporate events, weddings, festivals and venue hospitality are all under this umbrella. These roles require tons of coordination and event management, so they’re ideal for super organised people.
Careers in commercial kitchens and culinary arts
Professional kitchens run on a clear hierarchy, and that structure creates one of the most transparent career ladders in any industry. You can walk in as a kitchen hand with zero experience and, with the right training and ambition, work your way up to running a kitchen of your own.
The demand for people to fill these roles has never been stronger. Around 128,300 chefs are currently employed in Australia, with that number needing to grow by 15.1% by 2034.
These are the most common kitchen careers in Australia:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Kitchen hand | Keeps the kitchen clean, stocked and moving so the chefs can focus on cooking | Restaurants, cafés, hotels, bars | |
Commis chef | Preps ingredients and supports the team while getting experience | Restaurants, hotels | |
Line cook | Owns a station during service and gets food out on time | Commercial kitchens, restaurants | |
Chef de partie | Runs their section independently and takes responsibility for quality and output | Restaurants, hotels, resorts | |
Sous chef | Manages the kitchen day to day, leads the brigade and keeps everything running when the head chef isn’t around | Hotels, fine dining, large venues | |
Executive chef | Leads the entire culinary operation, designs menus, controls costs and sets the standard for everyone below them | Hotels, resorts, large restaurant groups |
Specialised culinary careers
The kitchen career doesn’t stop at the restaurant pass. These specialist roles take culinary skills into settings that are a little less conventional and a lot more interesting:
Catering chef: You’ll design and execute menus for large-scale events, corporate functions and private clients.
Banquet chef: Large hotels and event venues rely on you to coordinate meal service for conferences and weddings without breaking a sweat.
Cruise ship chef: Your kitchen just happens to be floating somewhere between Australia and the Mediterranean. The work is demanding but the views are unbeatable.
Resort chef: Destination resorts run multiple restaurants simultaneously, giving you variety and the chance to work in some spectacular locations.
Personal chef: You cook exclusively for private clients or high-net-worth households, setting your own menus and working without a brigade breathing down your neck.
Food truck chef: You run the whole show, from menu design to service.
Baking and patisserie careers
Patisserie is one of those disciplines where you need the precision of a surgeon but the creativity of a painter. The craft is deeply satisfying for the right person and there’s tons of demand for skilled patissiers.
These are the most common roles in baking and patisserie:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Bakery assistant | Keeps the kitchen prepped so the pastry team can focus on the craft | Bakeries, cafés | |
Junior pastry chef | Supports the pastry team with dessert prep | Restaurants, hotels | |
Pastry chef | Designs and executes pastries and baked goods to a consistently high standard | Hotels, bakeries, restaurants | |
Chocolatier | Creates handcrafted chocolate products and confectionery with a strong focus on presentation | Chocolate shops, luxury hotels | |
Cake decorator | Designs and decorates celebration cakes, working closely with clients to bring their vision to life | Bakeries, patisseries | |
Head pastry chef | Leads the entire pastry operation, manages the team and sets the creative direction for the dessert menu | Fine dining, hotels, resorts | |
Bakery manager | Oversees daily bakery operations, manages staff, controls costs and keeps quality consistent across the board | Artisan bakeries, cafés | |
Dessert menu developer | Works with culinary teams to create and test new dessert concepts that hit the brief on flavour and presentation | Restaurant groups, food companies | |
Artisan baker | Specialises in handcrafted bread and baked goods using traditional techniques | Artisan bakeries, farmers markets | |
Bakery owner | Runs their own bakery business, combining pastry expertise with the commercial and operational skills to make it profitable | Independent bakeries |
Front-of-house hospitality careers
Every memorable dining experience comes down to the people delivering it. Front-of-house hospitality is where personality, professionalism and care for all guests come together, and the opportunities in this sector are huge. Over 55,730 cafés and restaurants were open for business in Australia as of 2024, up 34% from 2017. Every single one of them needs front-of-house staff.
Restaurant service careers
Restaurant service is the most visible side of hospitality and the most common entry point into the industry. These roles are great for social butterflies who love to be around others but who also know how to stay calm under pressure.
Many roles in restaurant service require a Responsible Service of Alcohol (RSA) certification before you can start work which has different regulators for each state and territory. It’s a short course, widely available and worth completing early.
Here’s how restaurant service roles break down.
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Server | Takes orders, delivers food and drink and makes guests feel welcome | Restaurants, cafés, bars | RSA certification |
Waiter or waitress | Provides attentive table service and handles guest requests with a smile | Restaurants | RSA certification |
Food runner | Gets dishes from the pass to the table quickly so the kitchen’s hard work lands hot | Restaurants | |
Host or hostess | Greets arriving guests, manages reservations and sets the tone for the entire dining experience | Restaurants, hotels, bars | May need RSA certification, depending on venue. |
Bar and beverage service careers
Bar and beverage roles attract people who love the social energy of hospitality and want to build real craft alongside it. A great bartender or sommelier can become one of the most valued people in any venue. RSA certification is required for most roles that involve serving alcohol.
These are the main bar and beverage careers:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Bartender | Prepares and serves drinks and builds relationships with regulars | Bars, restaurants, hotels | RSA certification |
Barista | Makes espresso-based drinks and creates the kind of coffee experience that keeps customers coming back daily | Cafés | |
Bar supervisor | Oversees bar staff, manages stock and steps in wherever the team needs support | Bars, hotels, restaurants | RSA certification |
Sommelier | Helps guests select wines and pairs beverages with the menu | Fine dining restaurants | RSA certification |
Guest service careers
Guest service roles are the backbone of any hotel or accommodation venue. These positions suit people who love helping others and thrive in fast-paced environments:
Concierge: You’ll be the go-to person for guests who need restaurant recommendations, transport bookings, local knowledge and anything else that can make their stay exceptional.
Guest service agent: Handles check-ins, check-outs and everything in between.
Receptionist: Manages front desk operations and keeps the admin side of guest services running smoothly.
Customer service officer: Supports guests across a range of requests and complaints, resolving issues quickly and professionally.
Guest relations manager: Builds relationships with VIP guests and repeat visitors, anticipating their needs before they even have to ask.
Night auditor: Oversees front desk operations during overnight shifts and reconciles daily financial transactions for the property.
Porter or bell attendant: Helps guests with luggage and escorts them to their room.
Careers in hospitality management
Hospitality management is where a love for the industry meets the business skills to run it properly. This sector is growing fast and the jobs are there to match. Australia’s Travel and Tourism sector supported 1.6 million jobs and contributed $297 billion to the national economy in 2024, with WTTC forecasting that figure to climb to 2.1 million jobs and $406 billion contribution by 2035.
The management pathway starts in supervisory roles before progressing into full operational leadership. Here’s where most people begin:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Guest service assistant | Supports front desk operations and handles guest requests | Hotels | |
Restaurant supervisor | Oversees front-of-house staff during service and manages rosters | Restaurants | |
Bar supervisor | Manages beverage service teams and monitors stock levels | Bars, hotels |
Senior hospitality leadership roles
Senior leadership roles in hospitality come with real responsibility, strong salaries and the satisfaction of shaping an entire venue’s culture and performance. These positions reward people who’ve built solid operational experience and are ready to lead at a higher level.
The senior roles this career path leads to include:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Restaurant manager | Runs all aspects of restaurant operations, from staffing and budgets through guest experience and supplier relations | Restaurants | |
Food and beverage manager | Oversees all dining and bar outlets in a property, managing teams, costs and quality | Hotels, resorts | |
Front office manager | Leads the front desk team, manages room inventory and assists guests | Hotels | |
Accommodation manager | Oversees housekeeping and guest services across the full property | Hotels, motels, resorts | |
Area manager | Manages multiple venues or properties at the same time | Hotel groups, hospitality chains | |
General manager | Takes full accountability for a venue or property’s commercial performance and guest experience | Hotels, resorts, large venues |
Careers in tourism and travel
Australia is one of the world’s most sought-after destinations, and the industry supporting those visitors is growing at a pace that’s creating real career opportunities across the country. International visitor numbers reached 8 million trips in 2025, with total visitor spending hitting $13.8 billion in the September quarter alone, up 20% on the same period the year before. The people planning and managing those experiences are in serious demand.
Travel and tourism careers
Tourism careers suit people who are curious about the world and love creating experiences for others. The roles cover things like frontline customer service and strategic destination management, and many of them come with the added benefit of seeing Australia and the world in the process.
These are just some of the tourism careers that could be yours:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace | Relevant course |
Travel agent | Researches and books travel itineraries for clients, giving them expert advice on flights and accommodation | Travel agencies, online booking platforms | |
Tour operator | Designs and delivers guided tour experiences for domestic and international visitors | Tour companies, national parks | |
Tourism coordinator | Supports the planning and delivery of tourism programmes and manages bookings | Tourism operators, councils | |
Tourism product developer | Creates new tourism experiences and packages that appeal to target markets and meet destination strategy goals | Tourism boards, travel companies | |
Tourism manager | Oversees tourism operations, manages teams and drives the commercial performance of tourism products and services | Resorts, tourism organisations | |
Transport company manager | Manages transport logistics for tourism operations so passengers move between destinations on schedule | Coach companies, ferry operators |
Event and hospitality experience careers
Events are one of the most fun corners of the hospitality industry, and the numbers show just how important the sector has become. Business events alone contributed $20.9 billion to the Australian economy in 2023, including $10.4 billion spent on food, drink and accommodation. Add weddings, festivals, sporting events and exhibitions to that picture and you’ve got an industry that runs on skilled and unflappable people.
Here’s a look at the main careers in events and hospitality:
Role | What they do | Typical workplace |
Event coordinator | Manages the logistics of events from initial planning through to pack-down, keeping every moving part on track | Event companies, hotels |
Wedding planner | Works closely with couples to design and deliver their perfect day, coordinating vendors and venues at the same time | Event businesses, independent practice |
Conference organiser | Plans and manages corporate conferences, seminars and business events, handling everything from speaker schedules to AV setup | Hotels, convention centres |
Event supervisor | Oversees on-the ground staff during events, solves problems in real time and makes sure service standards hold up under pressure | Venues, event companies |
Event operations manager | Manages the full operational delivery of large-scale events, coordinating suppliers, venues, staff and budgets across the board | Event management companies, hotels |
Caterer | Plans and executes food and beverage service for events of all sizes, sometimes managing both kitchen and front-of-house teams | Catering companies, independent businesses |
Exhibition organiser | Coordinates trade shows and expos, managing exhibitor relationships and visitor experiences | Exhibition centres, industry associations |
FAQ
What careers can you pursue after studying hospitality?
Hospitality qualifications lead to roles in commercial kitchens, patisserie, front-of-house service, hotel management, tourism operations and event coordination. Graduates can move into restaurant management, food and beverage management and general manager positions with experience and nationally recognised qualifications.
Can hospitality careers lead to management roles?
Yes, hospitality careers can lead to management roles and the pathway is clear. Many hospitality managers started in entry-level service or kitchen roles and progressed through supervisory positions into full operational leadership. Qualifications like the Advanced Diploma of Hospitality Management can help you land a managerial role faster.
Can hospitality professionals work overseas?
Hospitality skills travel well. Chefs, hotel managers and event professionals can find work on international cruise ships, resorts and restaurants around the world. Australian qualifications align with international frameworks through the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF), making them recognised and respected by employers around the world.
The world is waiting for you
Hospitality and tourism is one of the few industries where your career can take you anywhere, literally. The demand is real, the pathways are clear and the experiences you’ll have along the way are unlike any other profession.
Explore Acknowledge Education’s hospitality and tourism courses and take the first step today.