Following careful consideration, Mousehole AFC can confirm that the club is proposing a strategic reset by applying for voluntary relegation from the Southern League Division One South and seeking entry into the South West Peninsula League for the 2026/27 season.
After reviewing all options, the board believes that taking a step back now provides the best platform to rebuild on stronger and more sustainable foundations for the future.
Over the past decade, Mousehole AFC has been on one of the most remarkable journeys in Cornish football. Together, players, staff, volunteers, supporters and sponsors have helped take a small village club in West Cornwall to a level many thought impossible. Along the way, we have celebrated league titles, unforgettable occasions, national recognition, and created a football club that has become one of the most recognised and respected in Cornwall.
The club would like to place on record its heartfelt thanks to everyone who has contributed to that journey. From volunteers and supporters to players, coaches, sponsors and local businesses, this rise simply would not have been possible without the dedication, belief and commitment of so many people across our community.
But the reality is that the financial demands of operating at Step 4 level — particularly given our location at the far western edge of the country — have increased significantly in recent years. Rising travel and operational costs, infrastructure requirements, the impact of VAT, and debt accumulated during the club’s rapid growth mean that now is the right moment to regroup, reassess and build again from a position of strength.
Importantly, this is not a step back in ambition. It is a step forward in strategy.
With key foundations already in place — including improved infrastructure, growing support, a strong identity within the community and beyond, and the opportunities created by the new road development at Trungle Parc — the club believes it is well-positioned to take a more deliberate and sustainable approach moving forward.
The focus for the upcoming period will include:
- Strengthening youth pathways and local engagement
- Building a robust and aligned leadership team on and off the pitch
- Developing a sustainable commercial model
- Reducing long-term reliance on benefactors
- Maximising the opportunities created by the club’s infrastructure and new road development
- Continuing to grow football opportunities across youth, women’s and men’s football
Our aim is to create a genuine community-driven football club that can thrive for generations to come, while continuing to represent West Cornwall with pride.
The long-term vision remains clear. We have not given up on the dream of top-level football in West Cornwall. Far from it. This is a moment to reflect, reset and work relentlessly towards creating a football club capable of achieving great things again in the future — but this time on the strongest and most sustainable foundations possible.
Chair Deryk Heywood said:
“Mousehole AFC has always tried to do the right thing, not simply the easy thing. This decision reflects our commitment to protecting the long-term future of the football club and building something sustainable for our players, supporters and wider community.
“We are incredibly proud of what has been achieved over the last few years. The journey this club has been on has been extraordinary. But now is the time to regroup, reconnect with our community roots, and make sure that whatever comes next is built to last.
“This is not the end of ambition at Mousehole AFC. It is the beginning of a new chapter.”

Travel in the South West is a huge financial strain on any club, especially as you progress up the leagues and like Plymouth Parkway FC as far as London ,or Evesham etc and it’s £1000+ for a game and even worse if it’s an evening game . The Rugby Football Union subsidises clubs with travel and it’s beyond me why the chairman of clubs of South West teams haven’t got together and approached the cash rich FA for help clubs will continue to fold or reappraise their situation and do what you’ve done …and l can only wish you all the best .one of the most enjoyable clubs lve visited as a Parkway FC supporter over the last 6/7 years for our friendlies …
What a shame, but given the distances you can understand.
Enjoyed meeting several Mousehole fans at Wimborne and Bashley.
Good luck in the future
This league nearly finished off Thatcham Town financially. Relegation was a financial relief
I completely agree with what Paul says here. Something needs to be done. I wrote an article about this very thing a while back in the Western Morning News, which appeared on DevonLive… for anyone interested:
https://www.devonlive.com/sport/football/football-news/fa-need-act-now-help-10825481
Whatever the future holds, I wish Mousehole all the very best (always had a bit of a soft spot for them after being taken there as a kid to watch them against Manchester United!!)
The season before last I believe there was a strong link up with Exeter City that benefitted Mousehole, Exeter and the young players involved.
Whilst I know very little of the detail, and playing in a slightly lower league may curtail such opportunities, it seems that more formal links with other clubs could provide mutual benefit to all concerned. If it works at the elite level, could it also work in some way at Mousehole’s level?
It was interesting to hear the comments about the F.A. Subsidising club’s travel for long distance trips, the F.A. Is not there to subsidise clubs, it there to run football all over the country.
If certain clubs chose to pay players to the extent that they endanger the club, that is their affair. We only have to look at St. Austell to see what debt can do to a club, Falmouth Town won the Western League four years on the trot, but that didn’t stop them from nearly going out of business.
These two clubs should be an object lesson to all clubs to cut your cloth accordingly.