The first season On 10 February the Western Force made their
2006 season rugby debut against the
Brumbies at a near sold out Subiaco Oval in Perth, losing 25–10. After this result, the Force had a difficult debut in Super 14. A one-sided loss to the Hurricanes and an ugly loss at home to the Chiefs in Perth followed. Many fans were unimpressed, with only approximately 23,000 turning up to watch a match against the
Bulls. On 31 March, in front of 24,000, the Force came closest to their first win, losing 26–25 to the
Stormers at Subiaco Oval. This was after leading 10–0 early on in the match. This was the Force's first competition point ever, and was the longest it had ever taken a side to get a point in Super rugby history (8 rounds/7 matches). On 21 April a crowd of 32,231 saw the Force nearly pull off the upset of the year, drawing 23-all with the undefeated defending champion
Crusaders. Though the Force were leading 7–0 after several minutes the feeling was still that the Crusaders would win, especially after they scored a try seconds later to make it 7–5. Only when the Force had blown the score out to 17–5 did anyone begin to talk of an upset. Leading 20–8 at half time the Force did not hold on for the win after the Crusaders scored two tries and a penalty within the closing half. At 23-all with seconds left the Force crashed over the line but were denied by the television match official. Two days after the draw with the Crusaders, the Force were able to sign rising star
Matt Giteau from the Brumbies, effective with the 2007 season. Giteau, whose contract with the Brumbies ended after the 2006 season, inked a three-year deal reportedly worth
A$4.5 million, making him the highest-paid player in the history of any Australian football code. On Saturday 6 May the Force announced they had managed to sign another player, Reds winger
Drew Mitchell. However, during the same week the Force were fined $110,000 after an "independent committee found that Rugby WA had entered a negotiation process with
Al Kanaar in a way that was contrary to and in breach of the contracting protocols." The Force notched up their first win by defeating the
Cheetahs 16–14 on 6 May.
Super Rugby years The Western Force continued to play in Super Rugby until the
2017 season. During this time they struggled to achieve much success, failing to qualify for the playoffs in a single season. Their best season came in
2007, where they finished 7th out of 14 teams. Ahead of the
2018 Super Rugby season,
SANZAAR made the decision to reduce the competition from 18 to 15 teams, deciding to cut 2 South African teams and 1 Australian team. On 11 August 2017 it was announced that the Western Force would be the Australian team to be axed from Super Rugby.
Global Rapid Rugby and National Rugby Championship In September 2017, Australian billionaire
Andrew Forrest made plans to launch an Indo-Pacific Rugby tournament, consisting of the Western Force and other teams from the
Indo-Pacific region. Several countries – such as , and – expressed an interest in joining the new competition. While organisation of the Indo-Pacific tournament was still underway, Andrew Forrest announced that the Western Force would play a series of matches in 2018 in what would be known as
World Series Rugby. The Force played matches against
Fiji A,
Tonga A,
Samoa A, the second tier national sides of those countries, along with the
Hong Kong national team, Super Rugby sides
Melbourne Rebels and the
Crusaders, and Japanese club
Panasonic Wild Knights. Andrew Forrest's Indo-Pacific Rugby tournament was officially announced as
Global Rapid Rugby and began in 2019. The
inaugural 2019 season consisted of a series of showcase matches with the competition adopting a full home and away round-robin format for the
2020 season. The Western Force played in Global Rapid Rugby against teams from
Fiji, Hong Kong, Japan,
Malaysia,
Samoa and Singapore. During this time the Western Force also played in the 2018 and 2019
National Rugby Championship (NRC) seasons, replacing
Perth Spirit, who had previously acted as a feeder team for the Force during their Super Rugby years. The National Rugby Championship was Australia's second-tier competition below Super Rugby, taking place after the Super Rugby season and featuring players who were not selected to play for the
Australian national team in the test season, similar to New Zealand's
Mitre 10 Cup and South Africa's
Currie Cup. The Western Force finished 3rd in the
2018 season, being knocked out in the semi-finals, and won the
2019 season, beating the Canberra Vikings 41–3 in the final.
Return to Super Rugby Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, the
2020 Global Rapid rugby season, which the Western Force were competing in, was cancelled. The pandemic had also caused the cancellation of the
2020 Super Rugby season, and international travel restrictions meant that it was unfeasible for the competition to continue in its current state, as it spanned multiple countries. Due to this,
Rugby Australia (RA) launched a domestic competition known as
Super Rugby AU. The Western Force were soon announced as one of five teams entering the competition. The
inaugural season (2020) ran from 3 July to 19 September 2020. The Western Force competed in the
2021 Super Rugby AU season, along with
Super Rugby Trans-Tasman, a
trans-tasman competition that featured the five Super Rugby AU teams taking on the five
Super Rugby Aotearoa teams. Beginning in
2022, the
Super Rugby was restructured into a twelve-team competition containing
four Australian teams,
one Fijian team,
five New Zealand teams, and a
Pacific Islands team based in New Zealand. This competition included the full-time return of the Western Force. In the
inaugural season (2022), the Force finished ninth on the ladder, narrowly missing the
Finals on point-difference. They recorded four wins from 14 matches, accumulating a total of 23 competition points,
Moana Pasifika; and a
final-round (Round 15) victory over the
Hurricanes. In their following season (
2023), the Force picked up one more win than their previous season despite being of mixed results. The Force
opened their season with a 34–27 victory over Australian rivals, the
Melbourne Rebels. Missing just 13 tackles to the Rebels' 35, which included a
30–17 surprise win against the
Highlanders, being described by
ESPN as "their best first-half performance of the Super Rugby Pacific season". However, the young team struggled with consistency which kept them out of
Finals contention. and tries per game that came from the
maul (which was also the highest in the world).
carries, the biggest crowd for a Western Force match. Beginning in late
2025, the Western Force, alongside three
Australian Super Rugby teams (, , ), began competing in the newly established
Super Rugby AUS: Australia's national
rugby union competition organised by
Rugby Australia (RA). ==Name and colours==