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A third of music festivals are losing money as costs skyrocket

Among 51 Australian music festivals surveyed, more than half turned a profit but 35% lost money with a median deficit of $470,000.
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Cassandra Morgan
music festivals
Source: Unsplash/ Aranxa Esteve

More than one-third of Australian music festivals are losing money as operational costs skyrocket, red tape becomes harder to wade through and people in their late teens and early 20s ditch events.

That’s the finding from Creative Australia’s first Soundcheck report, which revealed it cost an average of $3.9 million to run a music festival.

Among 51 Australian music festivals surveyed, more than half turned a profit but 35% lost money with a median deficit of $470,000.

Rising operational costs were severely hurting almost half of festival organisers, while a lack of funding and grants, insurance costs and extreme weather were also sore points.

Australian live music venues’ public liability insurance policies increased 10-fold in the year to August 2023, and one festival organiser said their insurance excess climbed from about $5,000 to $250,000.

Another organiser said insurance was a “minefield” when festivals had to be cancelled.

“We had to wait until the morning of the show to make the final determination to cancel, otherwise there’s the possibility that the insurance company could have said we could have worked out other alternatives,” the festival organiser told Creative Australia, formerly the Australia Council.

“You’re left with this real balancing act of do you let your patrons know … who may have been booking accommodation, may have been getting drivers, getting babysitters, outlaying some money to attend the festival?”

Almost one-in-three festival organisers were still feeling the impact of COVID-19, with several noting their profession’s formerly “high-risk, high-reward” nature.

One organiser described themselves as resembling a professional gambler.

“The main difference is that those stakes have just been completely turned, the volume has been turned up,” they said.

“You can obviously still make a lot of money, but the margins are so much tighter than they were before.”

The median profit for festivals that made money was almost $732,000.

Creative Australia chief executive Adrian Collette and Music Australia director Millie Millgate said many popular music festivals had been cancelled or significantly downscaled since the start of the pandemic, equating to multi-million-dollar losses.

“Further cancellations have been caused by escalating operational costs and lower ticket sales due to the cost of living, along with extreme weather events which continue to increase in scale and severity,” the pair said in the report.

“These disruptions have prompted discussions about the future of the industry and how music festivals can thrive in a constantly shifting world.”

Complex and inconsistent planning and local government requirements were also impacting events.

The number of young adults attending music festivals slumped from 41% of all ticket buyers in 2018-19, to 27% in 2022-23.

People in their mid- to late-20s overtook younger people as the biggest ticket-buying demographic.

Festival-goers were also waiting longer to buy tickets than they did before COVID.

Organisers speculated that cost of living pressures, along with festival cancellations and headliners pulling out at the last minute, led some punters to hold off on buying tickets.

Contemporary music festivals made more than $234 million in Australia in 2022, representing almost 12% of the live performance industry’s total revenue.

This article was first published by AAP.