Disc golf is one of Australia's fastest-growing outdoor recreational sports — players navigate a course of 9 or 18 holes, throwing plastic discs (drivers, mid-ranges, and putters) into metal basket targets. Disc Golf Australia governs the sport. Disc golf has particular appeal for youth, families, and outdoor recreation enthusiasts, and most courses are free to play. This guide covers the key funding sources for disc golf.
Disc Golf Australia is the national governing body:
- Club affiliation
- National competition events
- PDGA (Professional Disc Golf Association) connection
- Junior development
Contact Disc Golf Australia and your state body for sport investment access.
Disc golf's growth factors:
- Free to play: Most courses are in public parks, free access
- Low equipment cost: A starter disc set costs $30–$60
- All ages: From young children to seniors
- Accessible for beginners: Easy to start, difficult to master
- Outdoor and active: Well-suited to Australia's outdoor lifestyle
- COVID growth: Outdoor sport that grew dramatically during the pandemic
Sport Australia funds growing sports including disc golf:
- Community sport investment
- Participation development
State sport agencies fund community disc golf:
- NSW Office of Sport: Course and club grants
- Sport and Recreation Victoria: Growing sport investment
- State agencies: Disc golf development across Australia
Local councils are the most important funding source for disc golf:
- Course construction: Installing metal basket targets ($200–$600 each)
- Signage and tee pads: Course infrastructure
- Park activation: Disc golf as a free public recreation activity
- Youth recreation: Councils value free, accessible outdoor sport
A basic 9-hole disc golf course costs $5,000–$15,000 to install (baskets, tee pads, signage). An 18-hole course costs $15,000–$40,000. This is very cost-effective compared to other sport infrastructure.
Gaming grants fund disc golf clubs:
- NSW ClubGRANTS: Community sport and recreation
- State gaming trusts: Equipment and programme grants
Gaming trust applications for disc golf:
- Club discs for loan (beginners and school use)
- Portable baskets for events and schools ($200–$500 each)
- Course maintenance tools
- Junior programme development
Major disc golf course grants:
- Federal sport infrastructure: Community sport infrastructure
- State government: Recreation and outdoor sport grants
- Council partnerships: Co-funded course construction
- Parks and reserves: Working with parks management for course design
Junior development:
- Schools disc golf: Physical education using disc golf
- Youth events: Junior and youth competition
- Kids' clinics: Introduction to disc golf
- After-school programmes: Outdoor physical activity
Schools disc golf is a strong programme — discs are inexpensive, skills transfer quickly, and courses can be set up in any open space.
Women's participation:
- Sport Australia: Women in sport investment
- Women's divisions: Active women's competition at state and national level
- Women's only events: Growing events for female players
Disc golf is highly adaptable:
- Wheelchair disc golf: Can be played from a wheelchair
- Adaptive equipment: Modified techniques for various abilities
- Disability sport inclusion: Disc golf's accessibility makes it suitable for disability programmes
Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Players by age, gender, and level (registered and casual)
- Course access: Existing courses and gaps in coverage — course installation justified
- Junior development: Youth players and school programmes
- Women's participation: Female players and women-specific events
- Community access: Free play model — accessible regardless of income
- Council partnership: Evidence of council support for course infrastructure
- Organisation governance: Affiliation to Disc Golf Australia, financial health
Tahua's grants management platform helps disc golf clubs and associations manage grant applications across sport agencies, local councils, gaming trusts, and community funders, tracking course development, participation, and youth outcomes.