All of New South Wales will be under stay-at-home restrictions from 5pm Saturday 14 August.
The Greater Sydney lockdown has been extended to at least the end of September.
For rural and regional communities the lockdown will last until at least 28 August.
Curfews and exercise time limits have also been introduced in the 12 Sydney LGAs of highest concern.
The areas of concern are Bayside, Blacktown, Burwood, Campbelltown, Canterbury-Bankstown, Cumberland, Fairfield, Georges River, Liverpool, Parramatta, Penrith and Strathfield.
From Monday, 23 August, those local government areas of concern will be under curfew from 9pm to 5am (except for authorised workers, emergencies or medical care)
Exercise there will be limited to one hour a day.
From midnight Monday, 23 August, face masks will also be mandatory outdoors, except when exercising, when you leave home across the state, including in regional NSW.
Garden centres, office supply stores, hardware stores and pet supply stores must close except for click and collect in those areas.
Childcare workers and disability support workers who live or work the areas of concern must have their first vaccine dose by 30 August.
Authorised workers from the LGAs who work outside their area can only work if they get their first vaccination by the 30 August, or if their workplace has rapid antigen testing.
From next Saturday authorised workers from the areas of concern, or those entering to work will also need a permit.
Everyone must stay at home unless they have a reasonable excuse to leave. They also cannot have visitors in their home from outside their household, including family and friends.
People still can have one visitor at one time to fulfil carers’ responsibilities or provide care or assistance, or for compassionate reasons, including where two people are in a relationship but do not live together.
All hospitality venues must be closed to the public, including pubs, restaurants and cafes, except for takeaway.
Every employer across NSW must require their employees to work from home unless it is not reasonably practicable. It is a reasonable excuse to leave your home for work – but only if it is not practicable to work from home.
NSW Health urges people to continue to present for testing with even the mildest of cold-like symptoms.
There are more than 440 Covid-19 testing locations across NSW, many of which are open seven days a week. To find your nearest testing clinic, visit here.
Special rules remain in place for the affected local government areas in Greater Sydney.
For further information, please see nsw.gov.au/covid-19/rules.
The NSW government announced substantial increases in fines for people found breaching restrictions. From Monday 16 August penalties now include:
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$5,000 on-the-spot fine for breaching self-isolation rules;
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$5,000 on-the-spot fine for lying on a permit (already a criminal offence);
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$5,000 on-the-spot fine for lying to a contact tracer (already a criminal offence);
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$3,000 on-the-spot fine for breaching the two-person outdoor exercise/recreation rule; and
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$3,000 on-the-spot fine for breaching rules around entry into regional NSW for authorised work, inspecting real estate and travelling to your second home.
Here are the current Covid restrictions in place in New South Wales and ACT.