Queensland Football Association


The Queensland Football Association is the largest Australian rules football league in Queensland and second largest in the world by number of senior clubs. Dating back to 1969 and going by various names it is now run by AFL Queensland as a second tier competition under its semi-professional Queensland Australian Football League. There are 52 clubs spanning as far north as Gympie in Queensland to as far south as Ballina in New South Wales. Most clubs field men's and women's senior and reserve sides in the top divisions, with senior only teams in the lower divisions. The men's competition is known as the QFA and the women's is known as the QFAW.
The current competition is the result of merging Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast leagues with existing Brisbane leagues in the 1990s along with the addition of New South Wales clubs in the 2010s after numerous attempts to restructure QFA (Northern Rivers) and AFL North Coast competitions. Successive restructuring has seen the number of teams balloon resulting in numerous divisions. The QFA covers more municipalities than any other competition in Queensland including Gympie Region, Shire of Noosa, Sunshine Coast Region, City of Moreton Bay, Somerset Region, Brisbane City Council, Gold Coast City Council, Redland City and Ipswich City Council with a combined population of almost 4 million. Due to the enormous distances between clubs for a mostly amateur competition, which can reach 350 kilometres placing significant stress on clubs, the league restructured in 2021 into North/South sub-divisions.
It is one of the few Australian rules football leagues that operates a promotion and relegation system. AFL Queensland considers the QFA to be a development league for clubs to prove that they are sufficiently stable and successful to apply for a QAFL license. The most recent examples of QFA Division 1 clubs entering the QAFL are Redland-Victoria Point in 2021, Noosa Tigers in 2022, and Coorparoo Kings for 2025.
Traditionally an amateur competition, amateur status was enforced between 2014 and 2017 when it split off the Queensland Amateur Football Association competition. However with increasing professionalism in the QAFL and clubs seeking promotion, AFL Queensland accommodated for player payments in 2020 and it is now not uncommon for QFA Division 1 clubs to sign big name players. This has made it more difficult for truly amateur clubs to compete and get promoted from the lower divisions.

History

In 1969, the "South Queensland Australian Football Association" was established with the purpose of developing players for the Queensland Australian Football League (QAFL). Most of the players were amateurs. In 1992, the league changed its name to the "Brisbane Australian Football League" and included clubs from the Sunshine Coast.
Another name change in 2000 brought about AFL South Queensland. In 2006, AFL South Queensland was taken under the umbrella of AFL Queensland and rebranded as the Queensland State Association. In 2012, it was renamed South East Queensland AFL. Finally in 2014 the local level was divided into two leagues, the Queensland Football Association and the Queensland Amateur Football Association. Again in 2017 the name will change again to the Queensland Football Association, now covering five divisions and the re-introduction of two regional based leagues.

Competition structure

2017 to 2019:
;Notes
* Premiers
** Wooden spooners

2020 to 2024:
2025 to present:

Queensland Football Association clubs

Some clubs are listed multiple times as they field teams in multiple grades and divisions.

Club Locations

Red pogs - Division 1 clubs
Blue pogs - Division 2 clubs
Yellow pogs - Division 3 clubs

Division 1

*won by a side in a different division

Division 3 - Brisbane North

*won by a side in a different division

Recent Grand Finals

GFPremiership decided by a grand final where a challenge was not needed
Premiership decided by a grand final replay, after the scheduled grand final was drawn
Premiership decided by a challenge final under the Argus system
Premiership decided by a grand final because no team finished outright first after full season win–loss record
W/LPremiership decided by full season win–loss record
NFNo grand final held