Immigration and Migrant Settlement Grants in New Zealand: Funding Integration Support

New Zealand is a nation built by migration — from Māori voyagers who first settled Aotearoa to Pacific peoples, British settlers, and waves of migrants from Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East over recent decades. Supporting migrants to settle well — learn English, find work, build community, access services, and contribute to their new home — is both a humanitarian imperative and an economic investment. A range of funders supports this work.

Who migrates to New Zealand

New Zealand's migrant population is diverse:
- Skilled migrants: recruited for specific skills shortages
- Family reunification: joining New Zealand-based family members
- Refugees and humanitarian entrants: including quota refugees, asylum seekers, and those on humanitarian visas
- International students (transitioning to residency): significant pathway to residence
- Pacific peoples: special categories for Pacific migration

Settlement challenges vary significantly by migrant category — refugees often have the most complex needs; skilled migrants may need connection and credential recognition more than basic support.

The settlement support ecosystem

Immigration New Zealand

Immigration New Zealand (INZ) manages visa and residency policy but has limited direct settlement support funding. Its focus is on selection and compliance, not settlement.

MBIE Settlement Division

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment manages settlement policy and funds settlement support:
- Refugee Settlement Support (for quota refugees)
- Migrant settlement services contracts
- English language in the workplace programmes
- Settlement information and integration resources

New Zealand Red Cross

Red Cross provides settlement support for convention refugees — intensive, comprehensive settlement case management funded through MBIE.

English language and literacy grants

English language learning is fundamental to successful settlement:

ESOL (English for Speakers of Other Languages)

  • Ministry of Education funds ESOL in schools for migrant and refugee children
  • Tertiary Education Commission funds adult ESOL through community providers
  • English Language Partners and similar organisations deliver community ESOL

Workplace English

Some employers and industry bodies access grants for workplace language programmes.

Community English

Community ESOL programmes — often volunteer-tutored, delivered through churches, community centres, and libraries — supplement government-funded provision.

Refugee-specific settlement funding

Refugees have more complex settlement needs than economic migrants:
- Trauma and mental health support
- Intensive English language
- Work experience and credential recognition
- Social connection in unfamiliar communities

Resettlement services

MBIE contracts specialist organisations (Red Cross, Refugee Council, regional partners) for quota refugee resettlement — intensive support for the first year.

Refugee Welcome Centres

Community-based refugee welcome services in major centres — funded through government contracts and philanthropy.

Community-sponsored refugee programme

New Zealand's Community Organisation Refugee Sponsorship (CORS) programme involves community groups sponsoring refugee families — with some government support and significant community fundraising.

Philanthropic funders for migrant and settlement

Lotteries Community

Lotteries grants fund migrant and refugee community organisations — multicultural associations, settlement support services.

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund migrant community organisations' operations — particularly equipment and facilities.

Foundation North

Foundation North has funded settlement support and multicultural community organisations in Auckland and Northland.

Community foundations

Local community foundations fund local migrant settlement services — particularly in areas with significant new migrant populations.

The J.R. McKenzie Trust

J.R. McKenzie has funded some migration and settlement initiatives — particularly relating to children and youth.

Types of funded settlement programmes

Orientation and navigation

  • Settlement information (rights, services, systems)
  • Help accessing government services
  • Legal advice (immigration, employment rights)
  • Banking and financial services navigation

Employment support

  • CV writing and job search
  • Work experience
  • Credential recognition and bridging programmes
  • Employer connections

Community connection

  • Cultural community associations and events
  • English conversation groups
  • Volunteer programmes connecting migrants with established residents
  • Sports and recreation for social inclusion

Children and family

  • Homework support and after-school programmes
  • Parenting education in culturally appropriate contexts
  • School orientation for newly arrived children
  • Maternal and child health navigation

Health and wellbeing

  • Mental health support (especially for refugees with trauma history)
  • Dental and health access
  • Disability support
  • Interpreting services for health settings

Challenges for migrant settlement programmes

Language access: settlement services must operate in multiple languages — single-language (English-only) services exclude those who most need support.

Cultural appropriateness: effective settlement support is culturally responsive — understanding specific communities' values, family structures, and community dynamics.

Precarious legal status: asylum seekers and those with temporary visas have precarious legal status that creates significant anxiety and can limit engagement with services.

Geographic dispersal: as New Zealand encourages migrants to settle beyond Auckland, settlement services must reach smaller centres with fewer established migrant community organisations.


Tahua's grants management platform supports settlement and integration funders — with multilingual application handling, community organisation profiles, outcome tracking for settlement indicators (employment, English language, community connection), and the tools that help funders build effective investment in migrant and refugee integration.

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