Roller derby in New Zealand has vibrant leagues in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Hamilton, and other cities. New Zealand participates internationally in roller derby through the WFTDA (Women's Flat Track Derby Association) framework. The sport has exceptionally high women's participation and a strong inclusive community culture. This guide covers the key grant funding sources.
Roller Derby New Zealand (RDNZ) coordinates roller derby nationally:
- WFTDA-affiliated league network
- National events and regional coordination
- Governance and standards
Contact RDNZ and your local league for access to Sport NZ investment and national programme guidance.
Sport NZ funds roller derby through RDNZ:
- National programme investment
- Participation growth
RSTs fund community roller derby development.
RSTs fund roller derby leagues:
- Equipment grants for skates and safety gear
- Junior derby programme support
- Women's sport and inclusion grants
Key RSTs:
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland leagues — Pirate City Rollers and others
- Sport Wellington: Wellington leagues
- Sport Canterbury: Christchurch Roller Derby community
Gaming trusts are important funders for roller derby leagues:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport organisations
- Grassroots Trust: Community sport development
- Pub Charity: Equipment grants
- Lion Foundation: Junior and community sport
Gaming trust applications for roller derby:
- Quad roller skate loan fleet
- Protective equipment sets (helmets, wrist guards, knee pads, elbow pads)
- Training equipment: Cones, agility tools
- League uniforms
Roller derby is overwhelmingly women-led:
- Sport NZ women in sport: Female participation grants — roller derby is genuinely women-led
- RSTs: Female sport development investment
- The feminist character of roller derby is a genuine strength in women-in-sport applications
Roller derby's inclusive culture:
- Trans and non-binary inclusion is central to many leagues' identity
- Community trusts: LGBTQI+ community sport and recreation investment
- The inclusive culture is a genuine differentiator in diversity-focused grant applications
Key equipment:
- Quad roller skates: Derby-specific four-wheel skates ($200–$600+)
- Helmet: Dual-certified (ASTM and bicycle helmet standards) — mandatory
- Wrist guards: Compulsory safety equipment
- Knee pads: Derby-specific knee protection
- Elbow pads: Additional joint protection
- Mouthguard: Compulsory for contact
Per-skater starting kit costs $400–$800 — club loan fleets are essential for new skater access.
Flat track roller derby needs smooth indoor floors:
- Community halls: Many NZ leagues train in community halls
- Basketball courts: Smooth floor — common for scrimmage and practice
- Roller rinks: Auckland's Roller Palace and other rinks
Gaming trusts and RSTs can fund venue hire as a direct programme cost.
Junior roller derby:
- Junior leagues: For skaters under 18
- Modified rules: Non-contact or modified contact for juniors
- Junior national events: Through JRDA framework
NZ roller derby leagues often self-fund significantly:
- Bouts as community events: Games are fundraisers and public spectacles
- Merchandise: League-branded products
- Community crowdfunding: Supplement formal grants
This self-reliance is a grant application strength — demonstrate financial resilience alongside the grant need.
Lottery Community Wellbeing or Lottery Sport funds community sport:
- Roller derby leagues with active community programmes can apply
Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Skaters by gender, age, and skill level
- Women's participation: Overwhelmingly female and gender-diverse membership
- LGBTQI+ inclusion: The inclusive community character
- Equipment specifics: Skates and safety gear — justified per league size
- Junior derby: Young people in the sport
- Venue access: Indoor smooth floor venue confirmed
- Community events: Bouts as community events — public engagement evidence
- League governance: Financial health, RDNZ affiliation
Tahua's grants management platform helps roller derby leagues manage grant applications across Sport NZ, gaming trusts, and RSTs, tracking equipment, inclusion, and participation outcomes that funders value.