Research Says Swimming Is Australia’s Most Popular Sport

According to a recent research study conducted within the nation of Australia, swimming is identified as the continent’s most popular sport. Aligned with the upcoming Commonwealth Games slated for the Gold Coast in April, researchers gathered data on participation levels across all Commonwealth Games sports, with more than 9.3 million Australians regularly or occasionally participating in at least one sport.

Independent research outfit ‘Roy Morgan Research’  found more Australians participate in swimming more than any other sport. In all, over 6 million Australians have swum either regularly or occasionally over the last 3 months. For perspective, basketball participation was measured at one million, golf at 1.5 million Australians, and tennis at 1.4 million participants. Of the 6 million swimmers, 3.45 million were women and 2.58 million were men.

Roy Morgan’s research also drilled down the 6 million swimmers in more detail in terms of its own ‘personas’ categories. 34.6% of ‘Metrotechs’, 33.5% of Aussie Achievers’ and 33.4% of ‘Leading Lifestyles’ compose more than half of the 6 million Australians who swim. Below are the descriptions of the segments, per Roy Morgan’s Helix Personas segmentation tool.

  1. Metrotechs — Young, single, well-educated, inner-city professionals with high incomes, typically renting apartments. Cultured, connected, clued-in and cashed up.
  2. Aussie Achievers — Closest to the average Australian, these young, educated, outer suburban families are working full-time to pay off their expensive separate house.
  3. Leading Lifestyles — High-income families that typically own their own home in the inner suburbs.

“From my perspective sport is of national importance,” John Bertrand AO, President of Swimming Australia said. “And swimming is the biggest participation sport in the country.

10
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

10 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
reeeee
4 years ago

well, Australia is hot, so no wonder

Col Bruton
5 years ago

How does this relate to swimmers in Europe?

commonwombat
6 years ago

Cannot help thinking that this is somewhat of a misleading headline. Whilst it is highly plausible that swimming (as in recreational swimming/children “going for a swim” in a backyanrd pool/ at a beach) WOULD hold that level of popularity; this needs to be differentialed from Competitive Swimming.

When it comes to the latter, it is the ever increasing expense of supporting a competitive swimmer/swimmers that has been causing the available talent pool in AUS to continue to contract to the current point where it is overwhelmingly only those of affluent backgrounds who stay in the sport. Swimming is far from an orphan as it is also biting most Olympic sports in AUS.

This trend is not unique to AUS… Read more »

Dee
6 years ago

Interesting; Funnily enough, we had a report in Britain that said swimming is (by some way) the most participated sport in England – Vast majority of the 2.5million weekly swimmers were ‘hobby swimmers’ though; There seems to be huge potential for swimming all over the world, with the right outreach initiatives and a few more affordable lessons for less-advantages children.

Misleading title
6 years ago

I think the key take away from this is “researchers gathered data on participation levels across all Commonwealth Games sports”. Across all commonwealth game sports. So this doesn’t include popular sports in Australia such as Cricket (Australian Baseball), AFL ( Australian NFL), and Rugby ( who knows what the US equivalent is). One could argue after 2008 Olympics and Phelps, swimming in the US was the most popular olympic sport and therefore most popular sport in the country.

Thoughts? Im open to debate.

straightblackline
6 years ago

What Swimming Australia needs to do is get all those hobby swimmers to take an interest in elite swimming. Attendances at Australian meets and media coverage is surprisingly low for a country that is said to be swimming-mad.

anonymous
Reply to  straightblackline
6 years ago

Its probably like Mission Viejo California where the kids are dropped off to the pool. There is also a lot of masters swimming there in MV, but traditional sports like high school football or baseball get higher attendance.

Caeleb Dressel Will Get 8 golds in Tokyo
6 years ago

It thought it already was since Ian Thorpe

shasha
6 years ago

Wonder how swimming ranks in the US?

Bon Jovi
Reply to  shasha
6 years ago

honestly probably out of the top 10

About Retta Race

Retta Race

Former Masters swimmer and coach Loretta (Retta) thrives on a non-stop but productive schedule. Nowadays, that includes having just earned her MBA while working full-time in IT while owning French 75 Boutique while also providing swimming insight for BBC.

Read More »