Youth Mentoring Grants in New Zealand: Funding for Young People's Mentoring Programmes

Youth mentoring — connecting young people with caring adult mentors — is one of the most effective youth development interventions. Mentoring supports educational achievement, employment readiness, and resilience for young people facing adversity. This guide covers the key funding sources for youth mentoring in New Zealand.

Ministry of Social Development (MSD)

MSD funds youth mentoring through:
- Youth Development Fund: Mentoring programmes for at-risk youth
- Youth Connections: Linking young people to support including mentoring
- Community Development Scheme: Mentoring as community development

Mentoring Aotearoa

Mentoring Aotearoa supports the mentoring sector:
- Quality standards for mentoring programmes
- Training for mentors and programme managers
- Research on mentoring effectiveness

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund youth mentoring:
- Four Winds Foundation: Youth community development including mentoring
- Grassroots Trust: Youth development programmes
- Pub Charity: Community youth programmes
- Lion Foundation: Youth community development

Gaming trust mentoring applications:
- Programme coordinator salaries
- Mentor recruitment and training
- Youth activity costs (outings, events)
- Online mentoring technology
- Programme evaluation

Philanthropy — private funders

Private funders supporting youth mentoring:
- Todd Foundation: Youth development
- J.R. McKenzie Trust: Child and youth wellbeing
- Tindall Foundation: Youth and social development
- Community foundations: Regional youth mentoring investment

Māori and Pacific mentoring

Culturally grounded mentoring:
- Te Puni Kōkiri: Māori rangatahi mentoring
- Ministry for Pacific Peoples: Pacific youth mentoring
- Tuakana-tēina: Māori peer mentoring concept
- Pacific leadership mentoring: Pacific youth into leadership

School-based mentoring

Mentoring in schools:
- School mentoring: Mentors within schools for at-risk students
- Literacy mentoring: Reading mentors for primary students
- Tertiary transition: Mentoring for secondary to tertiary transition

Types of mentoring in NZ

Mentoring models:
- One-to-one mentoring: Paired adult-youth relationship
- Group mentoring: One mentor to multiple youth
- E-mentoring: Online mentoring for rural youth
- Peer mentoring: Near-peer mentoring in schools
- Speed mentoring: Short-term intensive mentoring

Big Brothers Big Sisters NZ

BBBS NZ:
- One-to-one community mentoring programme
- Volunteer mentors paired with young people
- Evidence-based matching process

Sport mentoring

Sport as mentoring vehicle:
- Sport NZ: Sport as positive youth development
- Sport mentors: Coaches as mentors for youth
- Gaming trusts: Sport mentoring programme costs

What funders look for in youth mentoring applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Young people reached: Number in mentoring relationship, demographics
- Match quality: Duration of matches, mentor-mentee relationship
- Evidence: Research evidence for the mentoring model
- Equity: Māori, Pacific, and disadvantaged youth prioritised
- Training: Mentor recruitment, screening, and training quality
- Retention: Length of mentoring relationships (longer = better outcomes)
- Outcomes: Academic achievement, employment, wellbeing
- Volunteer mentors: Community volunteers as resource


Tahua's grants management platform helps youth mentoring organisations manage grant applications across MSD, gaming trusts, philanthropy, and community funders, tracking mentor-mentee relationships, youth outcomes, and programme quality.

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