Wheelchair rugby (also known as murderball) is a high-intensity Paralympic team sport combining elements of rugby, basketball, and handball, played in purpose-built contact wheelchairs. It is designed for athletes with impairments affecting all four limbs. Wheelchair Rugby Australia governs the sport. Australia's Steelers are a powerhouse of international wheelchair rugby. This guide covers the key funding sources.
Wheelchair Rugby Australia governs the sport:
- National competition — Wheelchair Rugby Super League
- National team — the Steelers (men's and women's programmes)
- State league competitions
- Junior and development programmes
- Paralympic pathway
Contact WRA and your state body for Paralympics Australia investment access.
State associations:
- NSW Wheelchair Sports / Wheelchair Rugby NSW
- Wheelchair Rugby Victoria
- QLD, WA, SA: State associations and competitions
Paralympics Australia funds wheelchair rugby as a Paralympic sport:
- National programme investment (Steelers programme)
- High performance pathway
- Paralympic selection and preparation
State Paralympic councils fund community wheelchair rugby.
Sport Australia funds wheelchair rugby through Paralympics Australia:
- Para-sport development investment
State sport agencies fund community wheelchair rugby:
- Equipment grants (contact wheelchairs — primary cost)
- Junior development
- Women's programme
Gaming grants fund wheelchair rugby clubs:
- NSW ClubGRANTS: Disability sport development
- State gaming trusts: Equipment and programme grants
Gaming grant applications for wheelchair rugby:
- Contact rugby wheelchairs — $5,000–$12,000 each (primary target)
- Wheelchair maintenance tools and parts
- Ballast weights and chair adjustments
- Match balls
- Court markers and equipment
Wheelchair rugby uses custom contact wheelchairs:
- Offensive wheelchair: Designed for speed and ball-carrying — $5,000–$12,000+
- Defensive wheelchair: Designed for contact and blocking — $5,000–$12,000+
- Custom fit: Each chair is custom to the athlete's body and classification
- Loan chairs: General-purpose sports chairs for beginners — $3,000–$6,000
A full starting fleet (8 chairs for a full team with substitutes) costs $40,000–$100,000+.
Wheelchair rugby classification:
- 0.5–3.5 points: Based on impairment to all four limbs
- Gender-neutral sport: Men and women compete together
- Teams limited to 8.0 points on court
The gender-neutral aspect is a unique strength for funding applications around gender inclusion.
Junior development:
- Junior rugby wheelchairs: Adapted for younger athletes
- Schools and youth programmes: Introduction to wheelchair rugby
- Junior competition: Youth pathways
Women's participation:
- Gender-neutral: Women compete with men in wheelchair rugby
- Increasing female representation: Growing women's participation
- National programme: Women on national Steelers squads
Beyond sport funders:
- NDIS: Sports wheelchair and participation for eligible individuals
- Disability foundations: Equipment and programme grants
- State disability organisations: Inclusive sport development
- Community foundations: Disability sport investment
Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Players by classification, age, and gender
- Contact wheelchairs: Loan fleet — specific chair count, condition, and ages
- Paralympic pathway: Connection to state league and national Steelers programme
- Disability inclusion: Accessible programme for athletes with quad impairments
- Gender-neutral participation: Men and women competing together
- Junior development: Youth players and school programmes
- Organisation governance: Affiliation to Wheelchair Rugby Australia and state body
Tahua's grants management platform helps wheelchair rugby clubs manage grant applications across Wheelchair Rugby Australia, Paralympics Australia, state sport agencies, and disability funders, tracking contact wheelchair fleet, participation, and Paralympic pathway outcomes.