Source: Roy Morgan Single Source Australia, July 2017 – June 2018, n=14,836 and July 2018 – June 2019 n=14,383. Base: Australians 14+.

The Sydney Swans have again topped the annual Roy Morgan AFL supporter ladder – although down 74,000 supporters (-6.3%) from a year ago and now with 1.100 million supporters according to the 2019 annual Roy Morgan AFL club supporters survey.

AFL Club Supporter Ladder 2019





Source: Roy Morgan Single Source Australia, July 2017 – June 2018, n=14,836 and July 2018 – June 2019 n=14,383. Base: Australians 14+.



Richmond, Melbourne, Gold Coast and Hawthorn are best at converting supporters







% of supporters who are members Roy Morgan Supporter

Numbers Official 2019

AFL Club Memberships* Gold Coast Suns 39.0% 35,000 13,649 Richmond Tigers 22.8% 453,000 103,358 Melbourne Demons 21.7% 242,000 52,421 Hawthorn Hawks 20.9% 389,000 81,211 Port Adelaide Power 18.8% 276,000 51,951 North Melbourne Kangaroos 18.8% 226,000 42,419 Western Bulldogs 15.9% 279,000 44,373 GWS Giants 15.8% 190,000 30,109 Geelong Cats 15.6% 416,000 65,063 Carlton Blues 15.2% 422,000 64,269 St. Kilda Saints 14.5% 297,000 43,038 Essendon Bombers 14.2% 592,000 84,237 Fremantle Dockers 13.9% 371,000 51,431 Collingwood Magpies 13.4% 637,000 85,226 West Coast Eagles 12.3% 733,000 90,445 Adelaide Crows 10.8% 596,000 64,437 Sydney Swans 5.6% 1,100,000 61,912 Brisbane Lions 5.4% 515,000 28,023 BY STATE# Victoria 23.6% 2,825,000 665,615 South Australia 14.8% 786,000 116,388 Western Australia 12.7% 1,121,000 141,876 New South Wales & ACT 5.9% 1,558,000 92,021 Queensland 4.7% 896,000 41,672 Tasmania & NT n/a 255,000 n/a TOTAL 14.2% 7,441,000 1,057,572 #State membership numbers are split by club’s location (home state). *Full AFL Membership Figures available at https://www.afl.com.au/news/2019-08-06/thanks-a-million-afl-club-memberships-hit-alltime-record.





Melbourne still living off 1950s Flags although a new generation of supporters is arising



In 2019 the quintessential supporter of the oldest football club in the land is well-educated, Victorian, and with a diploma or degree under his belt. Yes, he’s more likely to be male than female. He’s a young parent under 35 years old with pre-school aged children and likely following in the footsteps of his Melbourne supporting parents – Melbourne supporters are also over-represented amongst the over 65s who were around to experience the club’s last successful period in the 1950s and 1960s.



In terms of the Roy Morgan Values Segments he’s more likely than the average Australian to be in either the



He’s far more likely than the average Australian to agree that ‘Terrorists deserve the same rights as other criminals’ and think ‘threats to the environment are exaggerated’. He also has a charitable streak and is more likely than the average Australian to agree ‘a percentage of everyone’s income should go to charities’ and ‘tries to buy Australian made products as often as possible’.



Our favourite Melbourne supporter is more likely than the average Australian to order pizza or other foods for home delivery, and head out for a rock or pop music concert or jazz, classical or blues performance or enjoy some live theatre. As well as watching the AFL on TV he also likes to watch other sports including Golf, Cricket, Soccer, the Olympic Games and Car Racing.





Brisbane Lions supporters are looking forward to a new era of success after a lean period



Supporters of the Brisbane Lions are emerging from hibernation in 2019 with the AFL’s northernmost club set to play finals again for the first time in a decade this September. Over two-thirds of Brisbane Lions supporters are men and support for the Lions is particularly strong amongst Generation X now aged in their 40s and 50s.



The characteristic Lions supporter is far more likely than the average Australian to have a high school education, work full-time and have an average household income of $110K. He’s in a Mid-Life household with teenage kids and likely in the



Our quintessential Lions supporter is far more likely than the average Australian ‘to love to do as many sports as possible’, ‘to always read the business section of the newspaper’ and ‘quite often finds TV advertising more entertaining than the programs’. He’s also more likely to ‘keep up-to-date with new ideas to improve his home’.



He’s not only twice as likely as the average Australian to attend professional sporting events such as following his favourite footy team but also to play a game of pool, snooker or billiards and far more likely than most to go to RSL or Leagues clubs. Being a northern States AFL supporter doesn’t mean disregarding the other football codes and he’s far more likely to watch other football codes including Rugby Union, the NRL and Soccer on TV than the average Australian.





Julian McCrann, Industry Communications Director, Roy Morgan, says the correlation between success and increasing a club’s supporter base has been reinforced in the latest Roy Morgan AFL club supporter survey with the big winners West Coast and the Brisbane Lions:



“Reigning Premiers the West Coast Eagles are the big winners in this year’s Roy Morgan AFL club supporter survey increasing their supporter base by an AFL leading 34% to 733,000 to be the second most widely supported club in Australia following their 2018 Premiership victory.



“The Eagles are riding high again in 2019 and currently sit in third place on the ladder behind ladder-leading Geelong only by percentage with two rounds to go and equal with another big winner from the survey the Brisbane Lions.



“Many predicted the Brisbane Lions would have a good 2019 after a promising year in 2018 and this has been borne out on the field and off with the Lions increasing their support by 19.5% from a year ago to 515,000 to sit in sixth place overall on the supporter ladder.



“Other clubs to increase their support included surprise 2018 Preliminary Finalists Melbourne, the Fremantle Dockers, Port Adelaide and North Melbourne while it was MCG co-tenants Richmond, Melbourne and Hawthorn that are best at converting their supporters into members. “However, there are grounds for concern for the AFL with fewer Australians than a year ago now supporting an AFL club in 2019 and fewer watching AFL games on TV. In Australia as a whole 7.441 million Australians aged 14+ (36%) now support an AFL club compared to 7.621 million a year ago (37.6%).



“In terms of passion – Victoria remains the beating heart of the AFL with over 2.8 million supporters buying around 660,000 AFL club memberships in 2019 – a conversion rate of 23.6% of supporters to members ahead of South Australia (14.8% of supporters become members) and Western Australia (12.7%).



“The high conversion rates of supporters to members underpin the AFL’s strong attendances. In 2019 there are 7,441,000 supporters of an AFL club around Australia and with two rounds of the home & away season to go AFL attendance so far sits at a total of 6,294,611.



“These aggregate attendance figures suggest the AFL is on track to break the all-time home & away attendance record set last year of 6,893,909.” In 2019 the quintessential supporter of the oldest football club in the land is well-educated, Victorian, and with a diploma or degree under his belt. Yes, he’s more likely to be male than female. He’s a young parent under 35 years old with pre-school aged children and likely following in the footsteps of his Melbourne supporting parents – Melbourne supporters are also over-represented amongst the over 65s who were around to experience the club’s last successful period in the 1950s and 1960s.In terms of the Roy Morgan Values Segments he’s more likely than the average Australian to be in either the Traditional Family Life or Conventional Family Life – ‘the core of middle Australia with values centred around significant events. Within ‘Conventional Family Life’ exists the great Australian dream of owning your own home in the suburbs and driving a good solid car.’He’s far more likely than the average Australian to agree that ‘Terrorists deserve the same rights as other criminals’ and think ‘threats to the environment are exaggerated’. He also has a charitable streak and is more likely than the average Australian to agree ‘a percentage of everyone’s income should go to charities’ and ‘tries to buy Australian made products as often as possible’.Our favourite Melbourne supporter is more likely than the average Australian to order pizza or other foods for home delivery, and head out for a rock or pop music concert or jazz, classical or blues performance or enjoy some live theatre. As well as watching the AFL on TV he also likes to watch other sports including Golf, Cricket, Soccer, the Olympic Games and Car Racing.Supporters of the Brisbane Lions are emerging from hibernation in 2019 with the AFL’s northernmost club set to play finals again for the first time in a decade this September. Over two-thirds of Brisbane Lions supporters are men and support for the Lions is particularly strong amongst Generation X now aged in their 40s and 50s.The characteristic Lions supporter is far more likely than the average Australian to have a high school education, work full-time and have an average household income of $110K. He’s in a Mid-Life household with teenage kids and likely in the Visible Achievement Roy Morgan Values Segment – ‘Despite being successful they retain traditional values about home, work & society. The family is very important to this Segment and they place great emphasis on providing their families with a high quality environment.’Our quintessential Lions supporter is far more likely than the average Australian ‘to love to do as many sports as possible’, ‘to always read the business section of the newspaper’ and ‘quite often finds TV advertising more entertaining than the programs’. He’s also more likely to ‘keep up-to-date with new ideas to improve his home’.He’s not only twice as likely as the average Australian to attend professional sporting events such as following his favourite footy team but also to play a game of pool, snooker or billiards and far more likely than most to go to RSL or Leagues clubs. Being a northern States AFL supporter doesn’t mean disregarding the other football codes and he’s far more likely to watch other football codes including Rugby Union, the NRL and Soccer on TV than the average Australian. Overall over 7.4 million Australians (36%) support an AFL team and nearly 5.4 million (25.9%) support an NRL team. Allowing for significant crossover with those who support teams in both codes just under half of Australians, 10.0 million (48.5%) support either an AFL or NRL team – or support teams from both competitions.

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Several clubs increased their support over the last year including 2018 Premiers, surprise 2018 Preliminary Finalists Melbourne and this year’s ‘bolter’ the second-placedReigning AFL Premiershad the biggest increase lifting their support base by a huge 186,000 (+34%) to 733,000 to be Australia’s second most widely supported AFL club.surprised many by getting within one victory of a first Grand Final in nearly two decades in 2018 and this run to the Preliminary Final has helped boostsupport by 44,000 (+22.2%) to 242,000 while thehave increased their support by 84,000 (+19.5%) to 515,000.Other teams to increase their support over the last year include thewho moved into the new Perth Stadium in 2018 up by 14,000 (+3.9%) to 371,000;which saw support increase 17,000 (+6.6%) to 276,000;for which support increased 16,000 (+7,6%) to 226,000; and theup by 13,000 to 190,000.is again the most widely supported Victorian club with 637,000 supporters ahead ofwith 592,000 supporters. Despite holding the two top supporter slots in Victoria, both these ‘Big 4’ power clubs saw declines in support over the last year.Although it is no surprise to see the traditionally well-supported clubs such as theandat the top of the overall AFL club supporter ladder, a key metric for AFL clubs is their ability to convert their latent supporters into financial members that directly benefit the clubs.A record 1.06 million Australians have taken out AFL club memberships in 2019 and the table below ranks clubs based on how effective they are at converting their supporters into financial members based on dividing the (official AFL club memberships divided by Roy Morgan supporter numbers) x 100.On this important metric it is the supporters of one of the AFL’s newest clubs thewho are most committed to their team converting 39% of their supporters to become club members – which is unfortunately for the Suns the lowest in the league at only 13,649.Three Victorian clubs all have impressive conversion rates of over 20% led by the club with the AFL’s highest membership tally the 2017 AFL Premierswith a conversion rate of 22.8%. Despite having the longest Premiership drought of all current clubs Melbourne Football Club converts 21.7% of their supporters to become members just ahead ofwith a conversion rate of 20.9%. All three of these Melbourne based clubs call the MCG their home ground.