July 15, 2026

Club Whitsunday: Investing Profits Back into People, Sport & Community

Club Whitsunday continues to invest in local sport and community

Club Whitsunday is more than a hospitality venue – it is a 100% profit-for-community organisation built on a model that directly reinvests earnings back into local sport and community development across the Whitsundays.

Unlike traditional hospitality businesses, Club Whitsunday is owned by not-for-profit sporting groups, with volunteer directors overseeing operations. Every dollar generated is returned to the community, either through reinvestment into facilities or direct support for local not-for-profit organisations. This structure ensures the Club’s success is measured not only in financial performance, but in community impact.

In 2025 alone, Club Whitsunday contributed more than $120,000 to local not-for-profit clubs through direct contributions and raffle proceeds. In addition to this, the Club is investing more than $100,000 annually into maintaining and upgrading the Whitsunday Sportspark playing fields and courts. This includes comprehensive groundskeeping services and specialised equipment designed to deliver some of the highest-quality playing surfaces in the region.

These investments directly benefit the sporting codes that call Whitsunday Sportspark home, including AFL, cricket, darts, netball, rugby union, soccer, and touch football. Support also extends beyond the main codes to rugby league, fishing, and bowls, as well as broader community organisations such as the Whitsunday Neighbourhood Centre, Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea, Kids Cancer initiatives and MND Deep Freeze fundraising efforts.

Like many regional organisations, Club Whitsunday acknowledges that community clubs face growing pressures, including rising transport and construction costs, wage pressures and increasing regulatory requirements. However, one of the most significant challenges is the decline in volunteer participation.

“People’s lives are busier than ever, and fewer volunteers are available to support the day-to-day running of clubs,” Justin Butler, Club Whitsunday Chairman said. “We help take on many of those operational tasks so committees can focus on delivering the sporting and community outcomes they exist to provide.”

By providing groundskeeping services, operational support and event assistance, Club Whitsunday helps reduce the burden on volunteer committees, ensuring community clubs can continue to thrive even with reduced volunteer capacity.

In partnership with Whitsunday Sportspark Operations and in support of the Whitsunday Regional Council’s new sporting precinct at Brandy Creek, Club Whitsunday sees a future where the region is supported by multiple high-quality facilities.  

At its core, Club Whitsunday remains focused on one purpose: investing in people, sport, and community to strengthen the Whitsundays for the long term.