Disc golf is one of New Zealand's fastest-growing outdoor recreation sports. Players throw plastic discs into metal basket targets across courses in public parks, reserves, and dedicated venues. Disc Golf NZ governs the sport. New Zealand has disc golf courses in many major centres, with an active competitive community and a large recreational following. This guide covers the key funding sources.
Disc Golf NZ is the national governing body:
- Club affiliation
- National championship events
- PDGA (Professional Disc Golf Association) connection
- Junior development
Contact Disc Golf NZ for Sport NZ investment access and national guidance.
Sport NZ funds growing sports including disc golf through relevant bodies:
- National programme investment
- Community participation development
RSTs fund community disc golf clubs and courses.
RSTs fund disc golf clubs:
- Course installation and maintenance grants
- Junior disc golf development
- Equipment grants
Key RSTs:
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland disc golf community
- Sport Wellington: Wellington disc golf
- Sport Canterbury: Christchurch area courses
- Sport Otago: Queenstown and Dunedin disc golf
Gaming trusts fund disc golf clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport organisations
- Grassroots Trust: Youth sport and recreation
- Pub Charity: Equipment and community grants
- Lion Foundation: Junior sport
Gaming trust applications for disc golf:
- Club discs for beginner loan (starter sets $30–$60 each)
- Portable baskets for events ($200–$500 each)
- Course maintenance tools
- Junior programme delivery
Local councils fund disc golf course construction:
- Permanent course installation: Metal basket targets, tee pads, signage
- Park activation: Disc golf as free public outdoor recreation
- Youth recreation: Councils value accessible outdoor sport for all ages
A basic 9-hole disc golf course in NZ costs $5,000–$15,000 (baskets + tee pads + signage). An 18-hole course $15,000–$40,000. This is very cost-effective outdoor recreation infrastructure.
New Zealand's disc golf advantages:
- Outdoor culture: Disc golf suits NZ's outdoor recreation lifestyle
- Free to play: Most courses in public parks with free access
- Low entry cost: Starter set of discs costs $30–$60
- All ages: Families, youth, adults, and seniors all participate
- Flexibility: Courses can be set up in a wide range of environments
Youth development:
- Schools disc golf: Disc golf in physical education programmes
- Junior clubs: After-school disc golf training and competition
- Youth events: Age-grade competitions
- School holiday programmes: Outdoor disc golf activities
Women's participation:
- Sport NZ women in sport: Female participation investment
- RSTs: Women in sport development
- Active women's divisions in NZ competition
Disc golf and Department of Conservation:
- Some NZ courses are on or adjacent to DOC reserves
- DOC community partnerships: Working with clubs for reserve-based courses
- Conservation-compatible: Low-impact outdoor recreation
Lottery Outdoor Leisure and Sport: Outdoor recreation including disc golf courses and clubs.
Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Players by age, gender, and level
- Course infrastructure: Existing courses and gaps — installation justified by demand
- Junior development: Youth players and school programmes
- Women's participation: Female players and events
- Community access: Free public course access and loan disc sets
- Council partnership: Council support for course in public land
- Organisation governance: Affiliation to Disc Golf NZ, club financial health
Tahua's grants management platform helps disc golf clubs manage grant applications across Sport NZ, RSTs, gaming trusts, and councils, tracking course development, participation, and youth outcomes.