Fundraising ideas for grassroots clubs

Youth football

The Australian Sports Fundraising Foundation (ASF) has been consistently supporting initiatives and ways for clubs to elevate their fundraising capabilities to gain the best results in engagement and economic support.

Recently, the ASF has introduced 21 ways in which clubs and sporting groups can adapt their fundraising to achieve their goals.

The nature of grassroots sports (especially football) means that funding has been required for clubs in getting and maintaining the necessary equipment and basic amenities.

Fundraisers are also times when the club can solidify its connections with their participants and maintain the positive culture that is crucial to the survival of these clubs.

According to the ASF, clubs typically raise an average of $13,250 through this platform.

The ASF’s Fundraising Platform is also a key tool clubs use to streamline their fundraising efforts and is the only way to accept tax-deductible sports donations in Australia.

Below is a shortened list of fundraisers which can be better utilised in a football environment:

Trivia Nights or Talent Shows are great fundraisers for afternoon/night slots at the club. You can set up team registrations and place it after training to increase player attendance.

Consider offering prizes and venues from local businesses to boost participation and engagement with the local community.

Another option is a Club Cinema Night, choosing films through social media polls to increase engagement with club members. Its adaptability means it could be hosted indoors during winter or create an outdoor cinema experience in nicer weather.

These events can be enhanced through extra fundraising ideas such as catering with themed food fundraising like Wine Tasting or BBQs.

Consider potluck options and involve local food suppliers.

Or if you have a good club venue with a liquor licence, running a bar can provide additional revenue and keep the costs down.

Having day-based activities is also a good way to get people back at the club and supporting the community.

Sports Days where clubs host traditional sports day activities like egg-and-spoon races and tug-of-war competitions are great engaging activities for all age groups.

 Coaches’ Games also allow coaches and staff to engage in the sport they love. Including parent teams can also add entertainment, and the ASF expresses its popularity with younger club members.

Offering club merchandise as prizes is also a great reward.

Car Boot Sales, Merch Shop and Swap or even Auctions can be exciting events that allow people to give back to the club through supporting other club members and the local community.

People or even the club can sell spare items, club merchandise or even retro kits for added benefit.

Clubs should use rare items for the auctions or prizes and accept donations and sponsorship from local businesses.

Clubs can charge sellers a hosting fee and collect entry donations from browsers for the event.

Going beyond the club environment and engaging with local sponsors, councils or businesses is also a viable option.

Holiday celebrations are perfect times to add in fundraising opportunities. For example, an Easter Egg Hunt or Christmas-themed Event on the club grounds.

 A Fun Run or Community Chore-a-thon is a great way to get local councils involved and encourage healthy social activities. Keep entry fees affordable to encourage participation and accept donations.

Barefoot Bowls and other sporting venues are cornerstones of communities and a good place to partner for a relaxed social event.

Include entry for fundraising and allow the venue to cater. These are great ways to engage the local venues with the club and increase social togetherness.

These events could even be placed in a themed Club Calendar featuring coaches, players, or sponsors. Include important club dates and upcoming events to encourage participation.

It’s important to point out that these activities will take time and effort. Juggling everyday life and club events is a difficult and time-consuming process and proper organisation from the clubs is key.

While these initiatives and options are great ways for clubs to participate in fundraising, it should not take away from a growing issue within the grassroots scene.

Government programs through grant systems, both federal and state-run, should still be central programs to provide clubs and footballing federations the support they need for larger projects and developments.

Football’s rising popularity has presented clubs with very difficult situations where the demand is too high for the capabilities of the clubs.

The price to play football these days is a large sum. For many participants in grassroots and even NPL levels, paying over $400 to register to play is a struggle, let alone encouraging these people to also participate in fundraising.

Therefore, creating enjoyable and engrossing events is key to getting engagement and achieving positive funding.

With this, the value for local businesses to host or sponsor these events is a fantastic publicity option.

As life presents tough challenges for all, these gatherings can deliver the hope and togetherness necessary to savour positive outlooks, unite local communities and harness the larger Australian sporting culture.

To check out more from the Australian Sports Foundation read here.

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JH Allan Reserve in Keilor East to undergo lighting upgrades

After strong backing from the community and Football Victoria, Moonee Valley City Council confirmed the green light for upgrades to proceed later this year.

Resounding support

Ahead of the council meeting on Tuesday 24 March, Football Victoria and five Moonee Valley Council clubs created a petition backing lighting improvements at JH Allan Reserve.

What followed was an astounding 624 signatures – a demonstration of the power of united, community support. As a result, main tenants Moonee Ponds United SC and four addition clubs (including Essendon Royals FC, Avondale FC, FC Strathmore and the Moonee Valley Knights) will all benefit from the developments.

“As one of the only facilities within Moonee Valley not shared with other codes, ensuring that JH Allan Reserve meets the needs of our participants is crucial for Football Victoria,” said FV Head of Government Relations and Strategy, Lachlan Cole.

“It was fantastic to see participants and officials from those five clubs come together, support this project, and unite to speak on behalf of their needs. And it was even more heartening to see the wider football community throw their support behind the development by signing the petition.”

 

A long-awaited verdict

The decision comes as a huge step forward for the local football community, arriving after an extended process of consultations and surveys.

In September 2022, Moonee Valley City Council endorsed the Moonee Valley Soccer Strategy, which sought to identify potential upgrades at JH Allan Reserve.

Furthermore, during the community consulation between March and April 2023, 365 people participated in a survey regarding the developments. In the end, 65% of responses supported or strongly supported the installation of sports lighting at the ground.

It is therefore clear that, for much of the community, this was a cause worth fighting for. Over three years since the initial endorsement from Moonee Valley City Council, JH Allan Reserve is now set for a vital upgrade.

Final thoughts

More importantly, however, are the current and future athletes who will feel the benefit from these developments.

Football participation is growing and will continue to do so, in Moonee Valley, Victoria and Australia as a whole. That is why developments like this are so vital.

They are not merely nice to have, but are fundamental to supporting future footballers in the community by providing them with the facilities and environment to play.

Football SA Commits $100,000 to Referee Fuel Subsidy as Cost-of-Living pressure Mounts

Football South Australia has announced a fuel subsidy scheme for match officials across its semi-professional competitions, allocating up to $100,000 for the remainder of the 2026 season in response to rising fuel costs that the governing body says are threatening the delivery of fixtures across the state.

The subsidy, effective immediately, covers referees officiating across the RAA National Premier League, Apex Steel Women’s National Premier League, Apex Steel Women’s State League, HPG Homes State League 1 and State League 2. The subsidy spans senior, reserves and under-18 competitions across both men’s and women’s football.

Under the metro scheme, reimbursements will be tiered against the average Adelaide unleaded petrol price recorded each Friday, applying to all matches played in the following seven-day period. Officials will receive $30 per match day when the average price sits at $3.25 or above, $25 between $2.75 and $3.24, and $20 between $2.35 and $2.74. No subsidy applies below $2.34. For regional matches, referees travelling to Port Pirie, Barossa and Whyalla will see their per-kilometre reimbursement rise from 88 cents to $1.26 when petrol prices exceed $2.35.

All subsidy payments will be funded directly by Football SA, with no cost passed to competing clubs.

The Economics behind the Whistle

Fuel prices in South Australia, as across much of Australia, have been running at elevated levels against the backdrop of an ongoing imperialist war on Iran that has sent shockwaves through global oil markets. Iran’s targeting of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant proportion of the world’s oil supply passes, has disrupted shipping and contributed to price surges that are being felt at service stations in Adelaide as acutely as anywhere.

For match officials, who are overwhelmingly volunteers or low-paid part-time workers travelling to multiple venues across a season, those price surges are not an abstraction. They are a direct financial disincentive to take on appointments, particularly in outer metropolitan and regional areas where travel distances are significant and the cost of attending a game can approach, or exceed the payment for officiating it.

The consequences are cancelled fixtures, forfeited points, disrupted seasons and players who stop turning up to clubs that cannot guarantee them a game.

“This initiative recognises the critical role match officials play in delivering competitions,” CEO Michael Carter said in the announcement, “and aims to reduce the impact of travel costs across the 2026 season.”

A Structural Problem, a Seasonal Solution

The subsidy applies only to the 2026 season. Football SA has been careful to frame it as a response to current conditions rather than a permanent structural change. The $100,000 allocation is described as subject to fuel prices remaining at current levels, with the final amount invested likely to vary as the weekly threshold calculations play out across the season.

That framing is honest about what the scheme is and isn’t. It does not resolve the underlying question of whether referee payments in community and semi-professional football are adequate relative to the demands placed on officials. It remains a question that transcends the current fuel price environment and will outlast it. What it does is buy time and goodwill in a moment when both are in short supply.

Sport, and football in particular, depends on a volunteer and semi-volunteer workforce that is increasingly being squeezed by the same cost-of-living pressures affecting every other part of Australian life. When the price of petrol rises, the people who feel it first are not the players or the clubs, it’s the officials, the committee members and the volunteers who make the infrastructure of community sport function.

Football SA’s decision to absorb that cost rather than pass it to clubs is a recognition that the referee pipeline is fragile in ways that are not always visible until it breaks. The SAPA review into South Australian football, released earlier this month, identified referee development and retention as one of the most pressing structural challenges facing the game in the state, recommending greater investment in recruitment and suggesting affiliation fee subsidies for clubs that bring new officials into the system.

Friday’s announcement does not go that far. But in a season already defined by uncertain economic and geopolitical circumstance, the levy sends a clear enough signal about where Football SA’s priorities lie.

The fuel levy will be calculated each Friday using average Adelaide prices listed on Fuel Price Australia, with payments made to officials on the regular weekly schedule.

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