New Zealand's coastline — 15,000 kilometres of beaches, harbours, and surf — is one of the nation's most treasured assets. But it is also dangerous: drowning is one of New Zealand's leading causes of accidental death. Surf Life Saving New Zealand (SLSNZ) coordinates volunteer lifeguard patrols at beaches across Aotearoa, providing beach safety education, rescue services, and programs that build water confidence and safety skills. Grant funding supports patrol operations, equipment, nipper programs for children, and the volunteer infrastructure that saves lives every summer.
New Zealand's water safety context
Surf Life Saving NZ
What surf lifesaving provides
Water Safety New Zealand
Drowning prevention; some surf lifesaving support.
Sport New Zealand
Community sport funding for surf lifesaving programs.
ACC (Accident Compensation Corporation)
Injury prevention including drowning prevention.
Local government
Beach patrol support from councils.
Surf Life Saving NZ Foundation
National fundraising for the movement.
Community trusts
Regional surf lifesaving support through community trusts.
Lottery Grants Board
Community sport and safety programs.
Patrol operations
Club facilities
Nippers programs
Water safety programs
Training and skills
Community outreach
Māori and Pacific people are over-represented in New Zealand drowning statistics:
- Traditional fishing and coastal activities without modern safety practices
- Limited swimming and lifesaving skill in some communities
- River and lake drowning (not just beach)
- Cultural factors: different relationships with water
Grant applications for water safety programs specifically targeting Māori and Pacific communities — delivered in culturally appropriate ways — are high-priority for drowning prevention funders.
Lives saved: the ultimate impact
Surf lifesaving has one of the clearest impact measures of any community service — rescues completed and lives saved. Applications that document rescue numbers, preventive actions, and beach patrol hours are highly compelling.
Equipment safety
Rescue equipment must be current and functional — worn or outdated equipment endangers both patrollers and those being rescued. Applications for equipment replacement or upgrade address essential safety needs.
Multicultural water safety
New Zealand's drowning statistics show clear demographic patterns. Applications that address drowning prevention in Māori and Pacific communities address the highest-risk populations.
Nipper program access
Nippers programs build lifelong water safety skills in children. Applications for nipper programs — particularly in communities with high drowning risk — address preventive capacity building.
Tahua's grants management platform supports surf lifesaving funders in New Zealand — with patrol data tracking, rescue outcome measurement, program reach data, and the reporting tools that help surf lifesaving funders demonstrate their investment in beach safety and drowning prevention across Aotearoa.