Squash Grants in Australia: Funding Courts, Clubs, and Racquet Sports

Squash is one of the world's most physically demanding sports — and one that has faced significant infrastructure challenges in Australia as court numbers have declined over recent decades. Yet squash remains a valuable sport: high intensity exercise, accessible to all ages, and well-suited to time-poor adults seeking efficient fitness. Grant funding supports court maintenance and development, club programs, junior squash, and the events that sustain squash communities.

Squash in Australia

Australian squash landscape

  • Squash Australia: approximately 200,000 players
  • Declining court numbers nationally (from peak in 1990s)
  • Strong regional presence
  • Racquetball: related sport sharing some facilities
  • World squash rankings: Australia has produced world champions
  • Fitness squash: growing health-focused participation

Squash's health case

Squash has been identified in research as one of the healthiest sports:
- Forbes list: squash consistently cited as top sport for health
- High cardiovascular intensity
- Flexibility and coordination demands
- Social: doubles and group formats

Challenges for squash

  • Court closures: many commercial squash centres have closed
  • Court maintenance: glass walls, court surfaces, lighting are expensive
  • Participation decline in some demographics

Government and governing body funding

Sport Australia

Community sport grants.

State sport agencies

Squash development funding.

Squash Australia

Club development; junior programs; court development.

Types of funded squash programs

Court development

  • Court construction in facilities
  • Court resurfacing and maintenance
  • Glass wall installation
  • Lighting improvements

Club operations

  • Equipment and racket programs
  • Club administration support
  • Tournament and ladder organisation

Junior squash

  • Junior club programs
  • School squash programs
  • Junior representative pathways

Health programs

  • Fitness squash programs
  • Squash for health events
  • Social and recreational squash

Grant application considerations

Court survival

Squash courts are closing across Australia. Applications for court maintenance or development address a structural challenge to the sport's survival.

Health value

Squash has a genuinely strong health case. Applications that frame squash as health infrastructure — particularly for time-poor adults — can access health funders alongside sport funders.

Junior development

Without junior players, squash faces long-term decline. Applications for junior programs in schools and clubs address the sport's sustainability.


Tahua's grants management platform supports squash funders and community sport organisations — with participant tracking, court utilisation data, program reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help squash funders demonstrate their investment in Australia's squash communities.

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