Golf Grants in Australia: Funding Community Golf Clubs and Inclusion Programs

Golf has an image problem in the grants world — perceived as a sport for the privileged. But community golf in Australia is a different story: many clubs in regional and outer suburban areas serve working-class communities, and golf provides significant health and social benefits for older Australians who play regularly. Grant funding for golf focuses on community access, junior development, women's programs, Indigenous inclusion, and the facilities that sustain clubs serving their communities.

Golf in Australia

Community golf in Australia

  • Approximately 1,500 golf clubs across Australia (Golf Australia)
  • 1.3 million Australians play golf (registered and unregistered)
  • Golf's health benefits are increasingly documented (walking, social, cognitive)
  • Regional and rural golf clubs are often significant community institutions
  • Many clubs are financially precarious — declining memberships, aging facilities

The inclusion challenge

Golf has historically been expensive and exclusive:
- Green fees and membership costs
- Equipment costs (clubs, bag, shoes, balls)
- Dress codes and club culture that deter newcomers
- Limited representation of women, young people, and CALD communities

Golf's benefits

  • Walking 18 holes is significant physical activity (8-10km)
  • Social connection and community (particularly for older Australians)
  • Mental health: outdoor activity, social engagement, strategic thinking
  • Golf for seniors: low-impact sport suited to ageing bodies
  • Health benefits for people who play regularly and consistently

Government golf funding

Australian Sports Commission / Sport Australia

Community sport grants including golf.

State sport agencies

Some golf development funding.

Local government

Public golf course maintenance; some club grants.

Golf governing body funding

Golf Australia

National governing body:
- Club development grants
- Junior golf programs (Golf Rookies)
- Women's golf programs

PGA of Australia

Golf professional development; some community programs.

State golf associations

  • Golf NSW, Golf Victoria, Golf Queensland, etc.
  • Club grants through state bodies

Types of funded golf programs

Club development

  • Course maintenance equipment
  • Clubhouse improvements
  • Financial sustainability programs
  • Club administration support

Junior golf

  • Golf Rookies and introductory programs
  • Junior competition development
  • Junior equipment access
  • School golf programs

Women's golf

  • Women's programs and competitions
  • Female-friendly club environments
  • Women's coaching development
  • Encouraging women into golf administration

Indigenous golf

  • Golf programs for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth
  • Indigenous golf pathways
  • Community golf in remote areas

Accessibility and inclusion

  • Golf for people with disability
  • Adaptive golf equipment and programs
  • Golf for people with physical limitations

Seniors golf

  • Programs for older Australians
  • Walking golf (maintaining walking culture)
  • Social golf programs for seniors

Public golf

  • Public course improvement
  • Pay-and-play access
  • Range facilities for entry-level golfers

Golf as health infrastructure for seniors

The health case for golf among older Australians is growing:
- Regular walking on a course provides significant aerobic activity
- Social connection through golf reduces isolation
- Golf is one of few sports that can be played well into old age
- Golf courses provide green space and nature connection
- Cognitively: rules, strategy, and social interaction support brain health

Grant applications that articulate golf as health infrastructure for older Australians — not as an elite sport — can access healthy ageing funders alongside sports funders.

Grant application considerations

Demonstrating community value

Golf clubs need to demonstrate that they serve their broader community, not just an exclusive membership. Applications with evidence of community programs, open access, and inclusive membership are more credible.

Declining membership

Many clubs are facing declining membership and financial pressure. Applications that address this structurally — new participation programs, alternative revenue, community use of facilities — are more credible than those simply seeking operational subsidy.

Junior pipeline

Without junior players, golf clubs face long-term decline. Applications for junior programs — particularly those targeting young people from non-golf backgrounds — address the sport's most significant sustainability challenge.

Women's inclusion

Golf has historically excluded women from full membership and participation. Applications demonstrating genuine commitment to women's inclusion — not token programs — are more credible to sports funders.


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

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