Youth Mental Health Grants in New Zealand: Funding Young People's Wellbeing

Youth mental health is one of New Zealand's most significant public health challenges. Rates of anxiety, depression, and self-harm among young people have been rising for a decade — exacerbated by social media, academic pressure, family stress, and the pandemic. New Zealand has among the highest rates of youth suicide in the developed world. Addressing this crisis requires sustained investment across prevention, early intervention, and treatment — and a strong funding ecosystem to support it.

The youth mental health landscape

Epidemiology

  • Approximately 1 in 5 young New Zealanders experiences a mental health condition in any year
  • Rates are significantly higher for LGBTQI+ youth, Māori and Pacific youth, and young people with disability
  • New Zealand's youth suicide rate is consistently among the highest in OECD countries
  • Most mental health conditions first emerge before age 24 — early investment has a lifetime impact

The treatment gap

Despite high need, access to youth mental health services is severely constrained:
- Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) have long waitlists
- Primary care mental health support varies significantly by region
- School-based counselling is insufficient relative to need
- Community youth mental health services are patchy

Philanthropic investment fills critical gaps in this system.

Government funding for youth mental health

Health New Zealand (Te Whatu Ora)

Health NZ funds Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS), Primary Mental Health services, and some community youth mental health through DHB successor entities.

Ministry of Education

The Ministry funds school counsellors (though at inadequate ratios — approximately one per 400 students, against best practice of 1:250) and some school-based mental health programmes.

Ministry of Social Development

MSD funds some youth-focused social services with mental health components.

Budget 2019 mental health package

The 2019 Budget allocated $1.9 billion for mental health over five years — significant but still insufficient relative to need. Some community services received new funding; access to Primary Mental Health through GP services expanded significantly.

Philanthropic funders for youth mental health

Mental Health Foundation of New Zealand

The Mental Health Foundation runs public education, policy advocacy, and some community grant programmes related to youth mental health.

Like Minds, Like Mine

Government-funded programme reducing mental health stigma — with some grants for community-led initiatives, including youth-focused work.

Youthline

Youthline is New Zealand's largest youth helpline and counselling service — a philanthropically-supported organisation accessing both government contracts and community fundraising and grants.

Foundation North

Foundation North has specifically funded youth mental health initiatives in Auckland and Northland — recognising youth mental health as a strategic priority.

Sir John Kirwan's Mentemia / related initiatives

High-profile advocacy and some philanthropic investment in digital mental health tools for young people.

The Tindall Foundation

Tindall has funded youth wellbeing initiatives including mental health-related components.

Community foundations

Local community foundations fund youth mental health services — particularly organisations providing early intervention and community support that government mental health services don't cover.

Types of funded youth mental health programmes

School-based mental health support

  • School counsellors and additional counselling time
  • Mindfulness and wellbeing programmes in schools
  • Mental health literacy education
  • Teacher professional development on student mental health

Youth community counselling

  • Community counselling services for young people (often free or subsidised)
  • Walk-in counselling clinics without appointment barriers
  • Online and text counselling services

Peer support and youth leadership

  • Youth peer support programmes
  • Mental health ambassador programmes in schools
  • Youth advocacy and lived experience leadership

Crisis support

  • Crisis line staffing (Youthline, 1737)
  • Safe messaging initiatives around suicide
  • Postvention support (support after youth suicide loss)

Kaupapa Māori youth wellbeing

  • Māori cultural wellbeing approaches (whakatau, tikanga, connection to whakapapa)
  • Rangatahi Māori youth mental health services
  • Integrated wellbeing approaches within kura and kōhanga settings

Digital and social media

  • Digital mental health tools for young people
  • Social media support communities with moderation
  • Apps for wellbeing skills and crisis support

Applying for youth mental health grants

Effective applications for youth mental health funding:

  • Ground in need: local data on youth mental health need, waiting lists, unmet demand
  • Target specific populations: where is need greatest? LGBTQI+ youth, Māori/Pacific rangatahi, rural youth — specific targeting strengthens applications
  • Show early intervention approach: many funders prioritise early intervention over late-stage treatment — demonstrate your prevention focus
  • Demonstrate youth voice: youth mental health programmes should be co-designed with young people. Show genuine youth involvement.
  • Cultural responsiveness: how does your programme serve Māori, Pacific, and diverse youth appropriately?
  • Measure outcomes: beyond reach numbers, how will you know if young people are better off? (validated wellbeing measures, help-seeking behaviour, school engagement)

Tahua's grants management platform supports funders investing in youth mental health — with outcome tracking, youth programme portfolio management, school-based grant administration, and the tools that help funders build a coherent investment in young people's mental health and wellbeing.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →