Curling Grants in New Zealand: Funding for Clubs, Ice Access, and Development

Curling — the Olympic precision ice sport — has a small but dedicated following in New Zealand, concentrated in cities with ice rink access. New Zealand competes internationally in curling. The sport is notable for its Olympic and Paralympic (wheelchair curling) status and its accessible, strategic nature. This guide covers the key funding sources.

Curling New Zealand

Curling New Zealand is the national governing body:
- National championship events
- Club affiliation and standards
- International competition — World Curling Federation affiliate

Contact Curling NZ for access to Sport NZ investment and national programme guidance.

Sport New Zealand

Sport NZ funds curling through Curling NZ:
- National programme investment for Olympic winter sports
- Winter sport development

RSTs can fund community curling development.

Regional Sport Trusts

RSTs in regions with ice rinks fund curling:
- Equipment grants for curling clubs
- Junior curling development
- Women's sport participation

Key RSTs:
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland curling at Paradice or other rinks
- Sport Canterbury: Christchurch curling community (The Hub)

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund curling clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport organisations
- Grassroots Trust: Winter sport development
- Pub Charity: Equipment and programme grants
- Lion Foundation: Club sport

Gaming trust applications for curling typically cover:
- Brooms, sliders, and personal equipment for members
- Ice time subsidies
- Curling stone maintenance (stones are typically rink-owned)
- Scoreboard and training aids

Ice rink access — the primary constraint

Curling in New Zealand faces the same infrastructure challenge as all ice sports:
- Paradice Auckland: Primary Auckland ice facility
- The Hub Christchurch: Primary South Island ice venue
- Curling requires specific ice conditions — dedicated curling sheets or adaptation of existing hockey ice
- Ice time costs are the primary ongoing expense

Gaming trusts and RSTs can fund ice time as a direct programme cost.

Curling equipment

Equipment needs:
- Curling stones: Granite — expensive, long-lasting; typically rink-owned or shared
- Brooms: Personal equipment for sweeping
- Sliders and grippers: Shoe devices for delivery
- Helmets: Optional but increasingly recommended

Most NZ clubs access rink-owned stones and focus grant applications on personal equipment (brooms, sliders) and ice time.

Wheelchair curling — Paralympic sport

Wheelchair curling is played by teams of wheelchair users:
- No sweeping — stones delivered with a curling stick
- Paralympics NZ: Para sport investment
- Disability sport organisations: Adaptive sport development
- Wheelchair curling makes the sport accessible for many disability classifications

Junior curling development

Junior curling:
- School programmes: Introduction through ice sports education
- Junior competitions: Age-grade events
- Scottish heritage schools: Schools with Scottish heritage connections

Scottish and British heritage connections

Curling has deep Scottish cultural roots:
- Scottish community organisations in NZ: Cultural sport funding
- Caledonian societies: New Zealand Scottish societies sometimes support curling

Olympic profile

Curling's Olympic status (since Nagano 1998) raises its profile:
- Sport NZ Olympic pathway investment: Elevated for Olympic-recognised sports
- Curling NZ high performance: National team development

Lottery Grants Board

Lottery Sport funds community sport:
- Curling clubs with active community programmes can apply

What funders look for in curling applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Curlers by age, gender, and programme level
- Ice access: Confirmed rink relationship and dedicated ice time allocation
- Equipment: Stone access (rink partnership or club-owned), brooms, sliders
- Junior development: Young players in the sport
- Wheelchair curling: Paralympic discipline if applicable
- Scottish/cultural heritage: Community cultural connection if relevant
- Club governance: Financial health, affiliation to Curling NZ
- Competition calendar: Bonspiels and national events


Tahua's grants management platform helps winter sport clubs manage grant applications across Sport NZ, gaming trusts, and RSTs, tracking participation and programme outcomes that funders value.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →