Lawn Bowls Grants in Australia: Funding Clubs, Greens, and Community

Lawn bowls is one of Australia's most popular community sports — particularly for older Australians — providing physical activity, social connection, and a reason to leave the house. Australian bowling clubs are important community institutions: they run licensed clubs, host social events, and provide a hub for their local communities beyond sport. Grant funding supports green maintenance, club facilities, equipment, and programs that keep bowling clubs viable and attract new participants.

Lawn bowls in Australia

Australian bowls landscape

  • Bowls Australia has approximately 500,000 registered players
  • Thousands of clubs across suburban, regional, and rural areas
  • Strong social culture alongside sport: club bars, bistros, and events
  • Primarily older participants, though youth programs are growing
  • Barefoot bowls: major growth driver, attracting younger Australians
  • Indoor bowls: growing, particularly in cold climates
  • Pennant (inter-club) competition: the backbone of club bowling

Bowls' community value

  • Social connection for older Australians (reduces isolation and loneliness)
  • Low-impact physical activity appropriate for ageing bodies
  • Club culture: meals, events, and community
  • Affordable participation compared to many other sports
  • Many clubs provide services to local communities beyond sport

Challenges for bowling clubs

  • Declining traditional membership (older demographics dying out)
  • Financial pressure (reduced liquor revenue; cost increases)
  • Green maintenance costs
  • Attracting younger members
  • Club infrastructure ageing

Government bowls funding

Australian Sports Commission / Sport Australia

Community sport grants.

State sport agencies

Sport development and club support.

Local government

Some facility and green maintenance support.

Bowls Australia funding

Bowls Australia

National governing body:
- Club development programs
- Junior bowls development
- Get into Bowls campaigns

State bowls associations

  • Bowls NSW, Bowls Victoria, Bowls QLD, etc.
  • Club grants through state associations

Types of funded bowls programs

Green maintenance

  • Green resurfacing and renovation
  • Irrigation systems
  • Mowing and maintenance equipment
  • Drainage improvements

Club facilities

  • Clubhouse maintenance and renovation
  • Disabled access improvements
  • Kitchen and social facility upgrades

Equipment

  • Club bowls sets for hire
  • Delivery aids for players with disability
  • Scoreboards and technology
  • Bowls mats (for indoor bowls)

Junior and youth programs

  • Junior bowls introduction
  • School programs (bowls has school curriculum links)
  • Barefoot bowls for young adults
  • Youth competition development

Barefoot bowls

  • Barefoot bowls infrastructure
  • Event management for barefoot events
  • Marketing to younger demographics

Inclusive bowls

  • Bowls for people with disability
  • Delivery aids and adaptive equipment
  • Bowls in aged care settings

Women's bowls

  • Women's competitions and programs
  • Women in club leadership

The barefoot bowls revolution

Barefoot bowls — informal, social bowling without formal dress requirements or club membership — has transformed bowls' demographics:
- Major corporate, party, and social events use barefoot bowls
- Many younger Australians have tried bowls through barefoot events
- Revenue from barefoot events has kept some clubs financially viable
- Barefoot players occasionally convert to traditional membership

Grant applications for barefoot bowls infrastructure — separate greens, event facilities, marketing — acknowledge this trend and help clubs bridge the gap between social and traditional bowls.

Grant application considerations

Green quality is essential

Poor greens drive players away. Applications for green maintenance address the most fundamental factor in club viability and member experience.

Healthy ageing value

Bowls for older Australians provides physical activity and social connection that health funders value. Applications that frame bowls as healthy ageing infrastructure — with data on the health and social benefits — can access health and aged care funders alongside sports funders.

Club viability

Some bowling clubs are genuinely at risk of closure. Applications that address structural sustainability — new programs, revenue diversification, facility improvement — are addressing the existential challenge facing many clubs.

Youth attraction

The tension between serving current (older) members and attracting younger members is real. Applications with credible strategies for attracting younger participants without alienating existing members are more compelling.


Tahua's grants management platform supports bowls funders and community sport organisations — with member tracking, green utilisation data, program reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help bowls funders demonstrate their investment in community bowling clubs across Australia.

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