National Teams Collective Bargaining Agreement FAQ

Following the announcement of a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) between Football Australia (FA) and Professional Footballers Australia (PFA), PFA Co-Chief Executives Kate Gill and Beau Busch sat down to answer some of the key questions about the agreement.

Q: What does the agreement cover?

Kate: The CBA covers all aspects of players engagement in the Matildas and Socceroos. This includes their travel, accommodation, minimum staffing standards, pay, prize money allocation, use of their image, and commercial and game development obligations. This agreement will also safeguard minimum levels of investment into Australia’s Junior National Teams and the PFA’s Footballers’ Trust, and for the first time, investment into the PFA’s Past Players Program.

Q: How long is the agreement for?

Beau: The CBA will run until 30 September 2027. This period will include two FIFA World Cups (Men’s and Women’s), the 2023 Paris Olympics and three Asian Cups, so clearly, it is a critical period for the sport, with the CBA providing certainty for this period for the players and FA.

Q: What are the key aspects of the agreement?

Kate: Like the 2019 agreement, we have maintained a revenue share model. The CBA defines the revenues the players generate, and from there, the players receive a share of that revenue pool. In addition, we have maintained the principle of gender equality, so player payments for the Matildas and Socceroos are the same as are the conditions afforded to the players.

We are also able to work with FA to ensure continued investment into player welfare programs through the PFA’s Player Development Program.

In terms of player prize money, the players and FA will now share a 50:50 split of payments from FIFA World Cup tournaments. If FIFA equalises prize money for the 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup, the Matildas and Socceroos are set to earn similar overall salaries across the four-year period of this deal.

Q: What amount of money do the Socceroos and Matildas generate for the game?

Beau: The national teams directly contribute between one third and half of FA’s revenues. This doesn’t include indirect sources such as amateur player registration fees, which are projected to increase off the back of the national teams’ recent achievements.

Q: How long were the negotiations?

Kate: CBA negotiations commenced with FA in January this year. They have been the most wide ranging I have been involved in, and over 40 players actively participated in the negotiations with FA.

Q: How do the players feel about the new agreement?

Beau: They have been involved from the start in forming our vision for a new agreement in late 2022 to, and as Kate said, participating in the negotiations directly, so they have been there every step of the way. In addition, the agreement was unanimously approved by the players. This is their agreement.

Q: What comes next?

Kate: We now need to bring the agreement to life with FA. That means playing our role in driving greater community connection for both teams, growing the revenue base of the National Teams to allow for more investment into all areas of the game and working in partnership to continue to ensure players and staff have a world class environment.

In addition, we have the small matters of World Cups, Olympics and Asian Cups. There is so much to look forward to over the next four years.