Carer Grants in New Zealand: Funding Support for Unpaid Carers

Unpaid carers — New Zealanders who provide care at home for family members, friends, or whānau with illness, disability, or age-related needs — are the invisible backbone of New Zealand's care system. Approximately 475,000 New Zealanders are unpaid carers, contributing billions of dollars of care that would otherwise fall to the formal health and disability system. Despite this contribution, carers are often exhausted, isolated, financially disadvantaged, and poorly supported. Grant funding supports carer support services, respite care, carer wellbeing programs, and the advocacy that ensures carers are recognised and resourced.

Carers in New Zealand

Who carers are

  • Family members caring for an older person (parent, grandparent)
  • Parents caring for a child with disability
  • Partners caring for a spouse with illness or disability
  • Adult children caring for parents with dementia
  • Whānau members caring for family in culturally embedded care arrangements
  • Friends or neighbours caring for isolated people

The carer burden

  • Physical exhaustion from the demands of care
  • Social isolation — caring can be all-consuming and isolating
  • Financial disadvantage — many carers reduce working hours or stop working
  • Mental health challenges: depression, anxiety, grief
  • Health neglect — carers often put their own health last
  • "Compassion fatigue" in long-term caring situations

Carer statistics in NZ

  • Approximately 475,000 unpaid carers in New Zealand (5 million+ hours of care per week)
  • Women are the majority of carers
  • Māori and Pacific carers provide culturally expected care within whānau structures
  • Many carers are older themselves (spouse carers, older parents caring for adults)
  • Young carers (children and young people caring for parents) are often invisible

Why carer support matters

  • Supporting carers sustains care in the community (cheaper than institutional care)
  • Preventing carer breakdown protects the person being cared for
  • Carer health is a predictor of care quality
  • Carers deserve recognition and support in their own right
  • System failure to support carers leads to crisis placements and hospitalisation

Government carer support in NZ

Carers NZ / Carer Support Allowance

Government-funded carer support allowance for eligible family carers.

Ministry of Health

  • Carer support programs
  • Respite care funding through DHBs / Health NZ

Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC)

Some carer support for people with accident-related disability.

Whaikaha — Ministry of Disabled People

Disability support including carer support.

Philanthropic carer funders in NZ

Carers New Zealand

Peak body for carers; provides support programs.

Community trusts

Local carer support through regional funders.

Aged care charities

Some support for carers of older people.

Disease-specific charities

  • Alzheimer's NZ (carer support for dementia carers)
  • Cancer Society (carer programs)
  • MS Society NZ (carer support)

Types of funded carer support programs

Respite care

  • In-home respite (someone comes to care so the carer gets a break)
  • Day programs for the person being cared for
  • Residential respite (short-term placement)
  • Emergency respite when carers cannot continue

Carer wellbeing programs

  • Carer peer support groups
  • Carer social connection programs
  • Mental health support for carers
  • Physical health programs for carers
  • Online communities for carers

Practical support

  • Home help and personal care support
  • Meal delivery for carer households
  • Transport assistance for carers
  • Technology and equipment that makes caring easier

Carer education and training

  • Training in caring skills (moving, medication management)
  • Understanding the condition being cared for
  • Legal and financial aspects of caring
  • Using support systems (ACC, health system)

Financial support

  • Carer allowance navigation support
  • Financial counselling for carers
  • Grants for equipment and adaptations

Whānau carers

  • Culturally appropriate support for Māori whānau carers
  • Pacific family carer support
  • Recognising and resourcing whānau-based care

Young carers

  • Support for children and young people who are carers
  • School support for young carers
  • Young carer social connection

Rural carers

  • Remote support for rural carers
  • Telehealth and online resources for isolated carers

Whānau caring in Aotearoa

Māori and Pacific caring has a distinct cultural character:
- Whānau care is not just expected, it is an expression of love, whakapapa, and responsibility
- The person being cared for does not typically go to a care facility — they are cared for within whānau
- Multiple family members may share caring responsibilities
- The cultural cost of not caring is significant — shame, identity, belonging
- But the physical and financial burden on whānau carers is real and often under-supported

Applications for carer support that recognise and honour the cultural context of Māori and Pacific caring — rather than trying to substitute it with formal services — are more appropriate and more effective.

Grant application considerations

Respite priority

Respite is consistently the most requested form of carer support and the most under-funded. Applications specifically providing respite — genuine breaks for carers — address the clearest gap.

Reaching hidden carers

Many carers don't identify as carers and don't access support. Applications with proactive outreach — through GPs, hospitals, Māori health providers, churches — reach carers who otherwise wouldn't be found.

Whānau centred

Applications for Māori and Pacific carers must centre whānau values — not just translate Western carer support into Māori language, but redesign support around collective care models.

Young carers

Young carers are among the most invisible and under-supported. Applications specifically for young carers address a group rarely prioritised.


Tahua's grants management platform supports carer funders in New Zealand — with carer registration tracking, respite provision data, wellbeing outcome measurement, and the reporting tools that help carer funders demonstrate their investment in the health and sustainability of New Zealand's unpaid caring workforce.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →