Fiji Sports Council Records $29.58 Million Revenue as Prime Minister Rabuka Cites Governance Reforms
Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka reports $29.58M in revenue for Fiji Sports Council while maintaining a 5-year fee freeze for grassroots access.
By: AXL Media
Published: May 1, 2026, 3:41 PM EDT
Source: Information for this report was sourced from The Fiji Times

The Revenue Milestone in Fiji’s National Parliament
The Fijian government has officially disclosed that the Fiji Sports Council amassed more than $29.58 million in total revenue from its various facilities between 2020 and 2025. Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka, providing a written response to parliamentary inquiries, detailed a financial trajectory that highlights a significant bounce-back for the nation’s sporting infrastructure. This figure, encompassing a combination of usage fees, fines, and specialized levies, serves as a benchmark for the Council’s operational capacity as it navigates the post-pandemic economic landscape.
A Five Year Fiscal Recovery Roadmap
The annual data provided by the Prime Minister illustrates a clear period of stagnation followed by aggressive growth within the sports sector. During the 2020-2021 and 2021-2022 fiscal years, revenue remained subdued at $4.64 million and $4.55 million respectively, largely reflecting the global suppression of public gatherings. However, a sharp pivot occurred in the 2022-2023 period, where collections surged to $7.10 million. While the subsequent year saw a slight dip to $6.24 million, the 2024-2025 figures climbed back to $7.03 million, signaling what Rabuka described as a sustained upward trend in the Council’s earning potential.
Governance Reforms Beyond Increased Utilization
According to Sitiveni Rabuka, the strengthening of the Council’s balance sheet is not merely a byproduct of more athletes returning to the field. The Prime Minister attributed the $29.58 million total to a fundamental overhaul of financial governance and internal systems. By strengthening revenue collection protocols and implementing more rigorous management of outstanding arrears, the Council has managed to capture value that was previously lost to administrative inefficiency. This shift suggests a move toward a more corporate, accountable model of managing state-owned athletic assets.
Categories
Topics
Related Coverage
- Fiji Records Negative 1.5 Percent Average Annual Inflation Amid Surge in April Transport Costs
- Reserve Bank of Fiji Issues Economic Warning as Global Geopolitical Tensions Threaten 2026 Growth Outlook
- Ghana Sports Ministry Withdraws Official Recognition of Swimming Association Amid Governance Dispute
- Press Freedom Concerns Ignite in Fiji Following Seizure of Journalist's Device