Speed skating in Australia spans both ice speed skating (short track and long track) and inline speed skating on wheels. Australia competes at Winter Olympics in short track speed skating. Inline speed skating is more widely accessible, with active competitive communities in major cities. This guide covers the key funding sources.
Speed Skating Australia governs both ice and inline speed skating:
- Short track and long track ice speed skating
- Inline speed skating racing
- National championship events
- Olympic programme — short track has Olympic status
Contact Speed Skating Australia and your state body for access to national programme investment.
Sport Australia funds speed skating through Speed Skating Australia:
- Olympic programme investment (short track speed skating)
- Inline skating participation development
State sport agencies fund community speed skating:
- Equipment grants for speed skating clubs
- Junior development programmes
- Women's participation investment
Ice speed skating requires dedicated ice:
- Short track: Oval track on standard ice rink surface — can use hockey rink ice
- Long track: 400m oval — very few facilities in Australia (not widely accessible)
Ice time costs are the primary expense for ice speed skating clubs.
Inline speed skating is more accessible than ice skating:
- Can use any smooth outdoor or indoor surface
- Community velodromes and cycling tracks
- School car parks and outdoor surfaces
- Equipment: Inline speed skates (different from recreational inline skates)
Gaming grants fund speed skating clubs:
- NSW ClubGRANTS: Equipment and programme grants
- State gaming trusts: Club development and equipment
Typical applications:
- Inline speed skates for club fleet
- Protective equipment (helmets, knee pads, wrist guards, gloves)
- Cones and timing equipment for inline training
- Ice skates for short track athletes
Speed skating equipment:
- Inline speed skates: Low-cut boots with 5-wheel frames — expensive ($300–$800+)
- Ice speed skates: Long blade (long track) or tube blade (short track) — $400–$1,500+
- Skinsuit: Tight-fitting racing suit
- Helmet: Required for competition
- Cut-resistant gloves and neck cover: Safety equipment for ice speed skating
- Knee pads: For short track
Junior development is the sport's growth priority:
- Junior inline racing: Age-grade competitions
- Junior short track: Pathway to Olympic programme
- Learn-to-skate: Entry through recreational skating
- School programmes: Physical education integration
Women's speed skating:
- Olympic programme: Women's short track events
- Sport Australia: Women in sport participation investment
- Women's inline racing competitions
Para inline speed skating (sitting and standing):
- Paralympics Australia: Para sport investment
- State disability sport organisations: Adaptive skating
Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Skaters by discipline, age, and gender
- Ice or surface access: Confirmed venue for training and competition
- Junior development: Youth pathway — Olympic class connection for ice speed skating
- Women's participation: Female athletes in programmes
- Equipment specifics: Skates, helmets, protective gear — justified per athlete
- Competition: Race calendar at club, state, and national level
- Safety: Protective equipment use and training progressions
- Club governance: Financial health, affiliation to Speed Skating Australia
Tahua's grants management platform helps speed skating clubs manage grant applications across multiple funders, tracking participation and equipment outcomes that funders value.