Roller Derby Grants in Australia: Funding for Leagues, Equipment, and Development

Roller derby is a full-contact team sport on quad (four-wheel) roller skates — two teams race around an oval track, with a 'jammer' scoring points by lapping opposing 'blockers'. Roller Derby Australia governs the sport. Roller derby has a distinctive feminist and counter-cultural identity, very high women's participation, and a strong LGBTQI+ community presence. This guide covers the key funding sources.

Roller Derby Australia

Roller Derby Australia is the national governing body:
- Affiliated with the Women's Flat Track Derby Association (WFTDA) global structure
- National championship events
- League affiliation and standards
- Para derby and junior derby programmes

Contact Roller Derby Australia and your state body for access to national programme investment.

Sport Australia and state sport agencies

Sport Australia funds roller derby through Roller Derby Australia:
- National programme investment
- Participation growth for the sport

State sport agencies fund community roller derby:
- NSW Office of Sport: Roller derby league development
- Sport and Recreation Victoria: Roller derby as community sport
- Queensland, WA, SA: State sport grants

Women's sport — a primary funding angle

Roller derby is predominantly a women's and gender-diverse sport:
- Sport Australia: Women in sport participation investment — roller derby is genuinely women-led
- State sport agencies: Female participation grants
- Women's roller derby is the dominant form — men's (MRDA) and co-ed leagues are smaller

The women-led, feminist character of roller derby makes it well-aligned with women-in-sport grant priorities.

LGBTQI+ inclusion

Roller derby has an exceptionally inclusive LGBTQI+ culture:
- Many leagues explicitly welcome gender diversity
- Trans and non-binary inclusion is a feature, not an afterthought
- LGBTQI+ community funders: Some community foundations fund LGBTQI+ sport and recreation
- The inclusive culture is a genuine strength for diversity-focused grant applications

Gaming grants — ClubGRANTS and community trusts

Gaming grants fund roller derby leagues:
- NSW ClubGRANTS: Equipment and programme grants
- State gaming trusts: Equipment and development

Typical gaming grant applications for roller derby:
- Quad roller skates for club loan fleet
- Protective equipment: Helmets (dual-certified), wrist guards, knee pads, elbow pads, mouth guards
- Training aids: Cones, agility equipment
- League uniforms (jerseys/shorts)

Equipment for roller derby

Roller derby requires specific equipment:
- Quad roller skates: Four-wheel derby-specific skates (not inline) — $200–$600+
- Helmet: Dual-certified (bicycle + ASTM roller derby) — essential and regulated
- Wrist guards: Compulsory safety equipment
- Knee pads: Derby-specific knee protection
- Elbow pads: Additional protection
- Mouthguard: Compulsory for contact
- Shorts and jersey: League uniform

Starting kit per skater costs $400–$800. Club loan fleets reduce barriers for new skaters.

Flat track — venue requirements

Flat track roller derby is played on any smooth, flat indoor surface:
- Roller rinks: Purpose-built rinks are ideal but rare
- Basketball courts: Common venue for roller derby scrimmage and practice
- Warehouse spaces: Alternative venues
- Community halls with smooth floors: Accessible for training

Many leagues hire basketball courts or community halls — venue hire is a significant ongoing cost.

Junior derby (JRDA)

Junior Roller Derby Association (JRDA) governs junior derby:
- Junior leagues for skaters under 18
- Modified contact rules for younger participants
- Junior national events

Para roller derby

Para roller derby is growing:
- Paralympics Australia: Not yet a Paralympic sport but disability inclusion in roller derby
- State disability sport organisations: Para sport investment

Community fundraising culture

Roller derby leagues often have strong fundraising cultures:
- Bouts (games) as community events and fundraisers
- Merchandise sales
- Crowdfunding
- Community events

This self-reliance is a strength — leagues often have existing community fundraising before seeking formal grants.

What funders look for in roller derby applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Skaters by gender, age, and skill level
- Women's participation: The overwhelmingly female and gender-diverse membership
- LGBTQI+ inclusion: The inclusive character of the league — a genuine strength
- Equipment specifics: Skates and safety gear — justified per league size
- Junior derby: Young people in the sport
- Venue access: Confirmed indoor venue with smooth floor
- Community events: Bouts as community fundraisers — evidence of public engagement
- League governance: Financial health, affiliation to Roller Derby Australia


Tahua's grants management platform helps roller derby leagues manage grant applications across multiple funders, tracking equipment, inclusion, and participation outcomes that funders value.

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