A structured self-assessment built for community sporting clubs. You tell us what your club does and how you do it, and OneSide measures it against the National Principles for Child Safe Organisations, the National Integrity Framework Safeguarding Children and Young People Policy, your state's child safe standards, and your sport's specific requirements. You receive a gap report with practical, achievable options for your club.
Most clubs complete the assessment in around 30–40 minutes, and your gap report is generated straight away. Our Prepare guide helps you gather what you need before you start so it goes smoothly.
Someone who knows how the club actually runs day to day — typically the Child Safety Officer, secretary or president. It helps to have your policies and documents handy, but honest answers matter more than perfect paperwork.
No. Your report belongs to your club. It is never shared with your sporting body, league, or regulator, and OneSide has no reporting obligation based on your responses. It's safe to be honest — that's what makes the report useful.
All Australian states and territories are covered. Sports currently include AFL, Netball, Cricket, Soccer, Rugby League, Rugby Union, Basketball, Tennis and Golf, with more being added. Use the sport checker on the homepage to see if yours is covered.
A detailed gap report delivered by email, structured against each of the 11 National Principles and the National Integrity Framework. Each area is rated as Met, Partial, or Gap, with colour-coded findings and practical options for what addressing each gap could look like in your club. The report is specific to your club, your sport, and your state.
The Child Safety Gap Assessment is $270 AUD. There are no ongoing fees or subscriptions. If you'd like to talk through the assessment before purchasing, you can book a free 30-minute discovery call.
No. The gap assessment is an information and analysis service. It tells you where your club stands against national and sport-specific requirements and gives you practical options to act on — it is not a compliance certification and does not constitute legal advice. Clubs should seek independent advice for their specific circumstances.
Yes, and we recommend it. Child safety requirements evolve, clubs change, and an annual assessment is a practical way to meet the ongoing review obligation under Standard 10. Returning clubs receive the same thorough report updated against any new requirements.
Still have a question? We're happy to talk it through.
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