2019 Square Australia Events Report

2019 Square Australia Events Report
We crunched the data from 100 events across the country to find out how Aussies are spending at our favourite festivals.
by Square Jul 14, 2019 — 3 min read
2019 Square Australia Events Report

Whether you’re a beer connoisseur, foodie, or gig junkie, events and festivals are a popular attraction for Australians, peppering the national calendar year-round. In fact, in 2018 Live Performance Australia released a report showing significant growth in attendance at revenue for Australia’s live events, and IBIS World now estimates the wider Australian events industry to be valued at $28 billion. This is a big deal.

Since launching payments in Australia just over three years ago, Square has partnered with hundreds of music, arts, food, and beverage events across the country. With headline events like Bluesfest, Laneway Festival, GABS, Spilt Milk and more, the 2018–19 season was our busiest yet, so with another events year about to kick off, and Splendour just around the corner, we thought we’d share some of our insight.

We crunched the data from thousands of transactions taken at more than 100 events across the country over the past 12 months to find out how Aussies are spending at our favourite festivals. Here’s a roundup of what we found.

Beer is boss

bar favourites australia

Nationally, beer was the most popular beverage consumed at events over the past 12 months, making up 33 per cent of total sales. Wine was surprisingly the least popular, making up only 5 per cent of sales.

Average spend on beer nationally was just under $9, with people spending the most on spirits, cocktails and premixed drinks at around $12 each. State by state the sales data was pretty similar, except in the ACT and South Australia, where premixed drinks, spirits and cocktails were favoured over beer.

Happy hours

happy hour australia

For all-day events, beer still reigned supreme throughout the day, but sales did hit their peak around 3 p.m., making up 51 per cent of total drinks sold. Beer sales started to drop off from 6 p.m., with spirits and cocktails becoming the drink of choice by midnight, making up 45 per cent of total drinks sold.

Burgers are better

When we looked into food, the most popular snack consumed at festivals across the country was burgers, except in New South Wales, where pizza won the vote.

Average spend on food nationally was a little over $14 for a burger, pizza or salad, with hot dogs and sandwiches coming in at a lower price tag, around $10.

Forking out at festivals

festival prices

Price sensitivity did vary by state for both food and drink. Event-goers’ spending in NSW, on average, was $4 more for their burgers and $4 more for their beer than those in Queensland, who spent the least across the board.

When we looked at all-day events, the average spend per card per day was $60, with just 20 per cent of those event-goers spending more than $100. At the other end of the scale, there were also some big spenders at all-day festivals, with $3,600 the highest spend on one card in one day.

Convenience over cash

cashless events

Despite most items purchased at events costing less than $15, Square’s data revealed that the majority of attendees are now choosing to pay by card (79 per cent) over cash (21 per cent) when purchasing their food and drinks.

Traditionally, events, festivals and markets lent themselves to being a more cash friendly environment, however, it seems Australia’s increasingly cashless society is leaving no industry untouched. Aedan Buckley, Founder of Australian events company Bar Pop says that while it’s taken the industry a little longer to adapt, digital payments are definitely starting to pay dividends for event attendees and organisers alike.

“Aside from the fact that cards and mobile wallets are much more convenient for our attendees, as an event organiser they are also adding more value to our operations,” said Mr Buckley. “When you weigh up the cost of having to deal with cash onsite at an event, the choice becomes a no-brainer. Armguard services, portable ATMs, security vaults and financial teams can cost event organisers dearly.”

Data is an added benefit that going cashless provides. “Data is becoming a key tool to the way we run events. From inventory management to real-time sales tracking and employee performance, the benefits of digital payments are far outweighing cash and the industry is fast catching onto this,” he said.

square events report

Learn more about how Square can help power payments are your event here.

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