About

Tipping, but built for groups.

SwiftKick is the consumer tipping product from Gallantree — built because the existing options didn't respect the people using them, and because we wanted something real to sharpen our craft on.

Why we built it

Tipping sites sucked. Culture deserved better.

We'd run office tipping comps for years — in spreadsheets, in group chats, in half-broken legacy sites plastered with odds banners. None of them felt built for the actual humans involved: the colleague who tips on emotion, the friend who forgets every second week, the manager who just wants something light to bond the team around.

A good tipping comp is one of the highest-leverage culture tools an organisation has. It's cheap, it's recurring, it gives quiet people a way in, and it gives loud people something harmless to be loud about. SwiftKick exists to make that easy and to keep it clean — no gambling integrations, no affiliate cuts, no dark patterns.

What we stand for

Four things we keep coming back to.

Tipping sites sucked

Cluttered, ad-heavy, half-built for punters chasing odds. Nothing felt designed for the office chat or the family group that just wants a leaderboard and a laugh.

Culture, not gambling

A well-run tipping comp is one of the cheapest ways to keep a team connected — banter on Mondays, gentle ribbing on Fridays. We built around that, not around a sportsbook.

Groups, not punters

No affiliate odds. No nudges to bet. Scoring, reminders, and recaps shaped for the workplace, the WhatsApp, and the family chat that's always one round behind.

A test of how we build

SwiftKick is also Gallantree's open-air workshop — a place to pressure-test our coding practices and delivery rhythm against real users and a live season.

A workshop, in public

SwiftKick is also how we test the way we build.

The way we write, review, and ship software matters to every client we serve in financial services. SwiftKick gives us a real product — with real users, real deadlines, and a live sporting calendar that doesn't care about our sprint plans — to pressure-test those practices against.

Disciplined delivery

Tight feedback loops, careful reviews, and a bias for shipping the smallest change that solves the problem.

Small, reversible changes

We ship in tight increments. Nothing too clever, nothing too coupled, nothing we can't roll back on a Friday afternoon.

Patterns we reuse

Auth, billing, notifications, content — the bones of SwiftKick are the same bones we ship to enterprise clients.

Our story

From spreadsheet to season.

01 — Itch

Years of running messy office comps in spreadsheets. Reminders chased by hand. Ladders that didn't tie-break properly. We kept saying "someone should fix this."

02 — Build

A small Gallantree team prototyped SwiftKick alongside client work — shipped in small increments, every pattern reusable in our other products.

03 — Season

Live with real comps across NRL, AFL and the codes that matter to Australian groups. Slack and Teams bots, weekly recaps, auto-tip for the forgetful.

04 — Forward

Workplace plans, sponsor-friendly comps, and the engineering muscle to keep shipping fast. The roadmap stays public; the code stays clean.

Made by Gallantree

An Australian financial services firm.

Gallantree is an Australian-based financial services firm. SwiftKick is a side project — built in a weekend to test our engineering capabilities, and kept alive because people actually use it. Australian-built, Australian-hosted, and not for sale to gambling operators. If you're interested to talk to us, let us know — the front door is gallantree.com.au.

Or email info@gallantree.com.au.

© 2026 SwiftKick · a Gallantree company

Gallantree Group Pty Ltd · ABN 40 644 812 617

Tipping for the group chat.

League names, team names, crests and logos shown on SwiftKick are trademarks of their respective leagues and clubs (including the NRL, AFL, NBA, Premier League, MLB and NHL). SwiftKick is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any league or club. Sports data and badges are surfaced from licensed third-party providers; identifying marks are used for informational reference only.