Community Housing Trust Grants in New Zealand: Affordable Housing Development Funding

Community housing — housing provided by not-for-profit community housing providers (CHPs) rather than government or private landlords — is an increasingly important part of New Zealand's housing landscape. Community housing trusts provide affordable rented housing to people who can't access private market housing but don't meet the threshold for public housing. Understanding how these organisations are funded helps those seeking housing, those working in the sector, and funders interested in housing as a social issue.

New Zealand's community housing sector

Scale and role

Community housing providers in New Zealand manage approximately 7,000-10,000 homes — a small but growing fraction of the social housing system. They sit between:
- Public housing (Kāinga Ora / Housing NZ): ~70,000 homes for highest-need households
- Private rental market: market-rate housing, often unaffordable for low-income households
- Community housing: affordable rented housing for moderate-need and transitional households

Registered Community Housing Providers

CHPs must be registered with the Community Housing Regulatory Authority (CHRA) to access government funding and subsidies. Registration requires meeting quality standards for governance, financial management, and housing management.

Government funding mechanisms

Community Housing Assistance Programme (CHAP)

MBIE and HUD fund registered CHPs through lease and subsidy arrangements:
- Long-term head leases on Kāinga Ora properties for CHP management
- Rental income supplements for affordable housing delivery
- Capital grants for new community housing development

Housing First contracts

Some CHPs deliver Housing First (intensive support for homeless people) through government contracts — providing both housing and support services.

Income-Related Rents (IRR)

Registered CHPs can access income-related rent subsidies — allowing tenants to pay a proportion of their income rather than market rent, with the government topping up to CHP's required rent.

Philanthropic and grant funding for community housing

Habitat for Humanity NZ

Habitat for Humanity NZ builds affordable homes using volunteer labour and community fundraising:
- Homeownership model: beneficiary families build equity through sweat equity
- Social enterprise construction training
- Funded through public fundraising, corporate partnerships, and some government grants

Salvation Army housing

The Salvation Army operates transitional and long-term community housing alongside its social services — funded through government contracts and charitable fundraising.

Community foundations

Some community foundations have invested in community housing:
- Capital contributions to CHP development
- Advocacy and research on housing affordability
- Emergency housing support grants

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund community housing-adjacent services:
- Transitional housing support services
- Tenant advocacy
- Community facilities in housing developments

Individual and corporate philanthropy

  • Some wealthy New Zealanders have made significant capital contributions to community housing development
  • Corporates with social responsibility commitments have donated to Habitat and similar organisations

The financing challenge for community housing

Community housing development requires significant capital — land, construction, and development costs. The financing gap is persistent:
- Land costs in New Zealand cities are extremely high
- Construction costs have risen dramatically
- Government subsidies cover operating costs but often not development costs
- Debt financing is available but creates affordability pressure

Closing the financing gap requires:
- Government capital grants (capital subsidies for development)
- Philanthropic capital (below-market or grant capital)
- Impact investment (patient, below-market loans)
- Cross-subsidisation from market-rate units within developments
- Long-term lease arrangements with Kāinga Ora

Progressive home ownership models

Beyond renting, some community housing organisations offer ownership pathways:

Shared equity

CHP holds a share of the property, reducing the deposit and mortgage required by the purchaser. As households build equity, they can buy out the CHP's share.

Affordable homeownership

Habitat for Humanity's model — affordable homes sold at cost to families, with mortgages at favourable terms.

Rent-to-buy

Rental arrangements with the option to purchase — building savings and credit history toward ownership.

Applying for community housing grants

For housing organisations seeking grants:

  • Demonstrate housing need: waiting list data, housing affordability in the area, demographics of those in need
  • Organisational capacity: CHRA registration, governance quality, financial management capability
  • Sustainability plan: how will the housing be financially sustainable long-term without continuous philanthropic support?
  • Community benefit: who benefits and how many?
  • Equity focus: Māori and Pacific communities disproportionately face housing exclusion — show cultural responsiveness

Tahua's grants management platform supports housing funders and community housing organisations — with CHP grant tracking, development milestone management, tenant outcome monitoring, and the financial tools that help housing funders manage complex, multi-funder affordable housing investment.

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