Field hockey has a storied Australian history — the Kookaburras and Hockeyroos are among the world's most successful hockey programs, and Australia has produced Olympic gold medallists for decades. At the community level, field hockey clubs across Australia develop players, provide competition, and maintain the traditions that have produced elite success. Grant funding supports club equipment, synthetic turf development, junior programs, and the inclusive programs that grow participation in this distinctive team sport.
Australian hockey landscape
Hockey's infrastructure challenge
Hockey's shift to synthetic turf has created significant infrastructure costs:
- Natural grass is inadequate for modern hockey — synthetic turf is standard
- Synthetic pitches cost $1-3 million to construct
- Shared facilities with football and other sports sometimes conflict
- Club investment in synthetic turf access is a recurring cost
Australian Sports Commission / Sport Australia
Community sport grants.
State sport agencies
Synthetic turf and hockey development funding.
Local government
Hockey field infrastructure grants.
Hockey Australia
National governing body:
- Club development grants
- Junior hockey programs
- Women's and girls' programs
- Synthetic surface programs
State hockey associations
Synthetic turf
Club operations
Junior hockey development
Women's hockey
Multicultural inclusion
Goalkeeping specific
Synthetic turf is the priority
Synthetic turf is not optional in modern hockey — it's foundational. Applications for synthetic turf access or construction are the highest-impact investments for hockey development.
Women's momentum
Australia's women's hockey tradition is extraordinary. Applications that build on this — developing girls and women through the pathway — are well-aligned.
Multicultural inclusion
Hockey's South Asian heritage makes it culturally significant for Indian, Pakistani, and Sri Lankan communities. Applications for multicultural hockey programs can access community and multicultural funders.
Tahua's grants management platform supports hockey funders and community sport organisations — with participant tracking, synthetic turf utilisation data, program reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help hockey funders demonstrate their investment in Australian field hockey communities.