Arguably the climax of the entire Bible is the final vision of hope unveiled in the book of Revelation, most fully in chapters 21-22. This paper will explore, from a biblical-theological perspective, the nature of the new creation as sketched out in Revelation—new creation as place, as people, as provision, as absence, and ultimately as an unhindered experience of God’s relational presence. The aim of this essay will be to add biblical-theological clarity and depth to Scripture’s portrayal of our final redemption, a topic often misconstrued in wider Christian circles.