There's Paris and Phoenix, Ruby and Tomasina plus Amelia, Maximilian and Oliver.
The Fitzpatrick and Marshall twins and the White triplets are expected to cause quite a stir when they step through the gates of Springwood Public School for their first full day on Thursday.
Staff say numbers are up at the school, with 70 children starting kindergarten this year, an intake which has more than doubled since principal Mehmet Mehmet took over four years ago.
The students will be sorted into one of the "three-and-a-half kindy teachers" classes tomorrow Mr Mehmet said.
"Because we didn't quite have four classes, we have a K/1 composite," he said, adding the children had been assessed over several half day "transition" visits earlier this week to work out where they fit best.
"We haven't had triplets in my time here, but I've taught triplets at another school. You need to remember [with twins and triplets] they are individual ... they are not all academically the same but they usually like to stay together to do their group work."
The parents have mostly asked for their children to be in the same class.
"It's a big change for them, they've only been going to preschool one day a week. I think this year it's going to make the adjustment easier," said the triplets' mum, Kacie White, of Springwood,
Mr Mehmet said a twin or triplet was "an instant friend".
"We find a lot of them do decide to keep them together at first but by Year 2 or 3 they develop their own friendships and personalities and it's better for them socially.
Dad, Joshua Marshall, said his girls had "very different personalities, one's a real tomboy... but they don't like it when they're apart".
But the Fitzpatricks are bucking that trend and have asked for their two to be separated.
"Paris likes to finish his puzzles for him," said Dad, Rob Fitzpatrick. "We thought it's a new beginning for them, separate classes will mean they lead their own paths."
All the children were keen to spend more time with their Year Six "buddies".
"They will help us and show us where everything is in the school," said five-year-old Oliver White, who will share his buddy Brodie with his brother Maximilian.
Both sets of twins have two older brothers at the school who will also show them the ropes, their fathers said.
"They keep asking me why the boys are going to school, they're annoyed by the delay," Mr Marshall said.
A tea and tissues program would be in operation tomorrow morning with kindi parents also encouraged to make new friends.
"The first five weeks it's not a heavy curriculum, it's more about routine and making sure they don't eat all their lunch at recess. They come visit me in my office and they get to know where the sick bay is if they lose a tooth," Mr Mehmet said.
"It's more parent training - to learn to let them go," he said.
Triplets mum, Kacie White, said she may need that box of Kleenex.
"They're excited and ready. I'm the one who needs the talking to and will need consoling" she said.