

Table of contents
Before You Do Anything Else
You have a group of people who want to form a club. That is the easy part. Here is everything else.
Step 1: Decide on a Structure
Most clubs in Australia incorporate as an association under their state's Associations Incorporation Act. This gives the club a legal identity separate from its members, which protects committee members from personal liability.
Check your state's requirements. In most states, you need a minimum number of founding members (typically 5-7), a constitution, and a committee.
Step 2: Write a Constitution
Your state's consumer affairs or fair trading body usually provides a model constitution. Use it. Customising every clause is unnecessary and creates confusion when your committee changes.
The constitution covers: the club's purpose, membership categories, committee structure, meeting procedures, financial management, and dissolution.
Step 3: Incorporate
Lodge the incorporation application with your state authority. This costs $50-150 depending on the state. You will receive an incorporation number that you use for official purposes.
Step 4: Get Insurance
Public liability insurance is essential if your club uses any shared facility, runs events, or has any interaction with the public. Your governing body may provide coverage through affiliation. If not, get a standalone policy.
Volunteer insurance covers committee members for injury during club activities. Worth the investment.
Step 5: Open a Bank Account
Open a dedicated club bank account. Not someone's personal account with "club funds" in it. A proper account in the club's incorporated name with at least two signatories.
Step 6: Set Up Membership
Decide your membership tiers and fees. Set up a membership management platform — even if you start with 20 members. A clean database from day one saves reconstruction later.
TidyHQ's Starter plan handles everything a new club needs: member database, online payments, event management, and committee workspace. $99 per month AUD.
Step 7: Affiliate with Your Governing Body
If your club plays a sport, join the relevant state body. Affiliation gives you access to competitions, insurance, coaching resources, and credibility with members.
Step 8: Hold Your First AGM
Even if it is just the founding committee sitting around a kitchen table, document it. Elect positions formally. Record minutes. This is where your governance record starts.
Step 9: Communicate
Set up role-based email addresses. Create a Facebook page or website. Let people know you exist and how to join.
The First Year
Focus on three things: building membership, running a few good events, and establishing governance habits. Do not try to do everything. A club that does three things well in its first year builds a foundation for decades.
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