New Zealand's performing arts sector — theatre, dance, music, opera, circus, and performance poetry — occupies a central place in national cultural life. From intimate community productions to internationally touring companies, performing arts are funded through a mix of government, philanthropic, and earned revenue sources. Understanding this funding landscape matters for arts organisations, independent artists, producers, and the funders who sustain New Zealand's live performance culture.
Significance of the sector
Revenue mix
Most performing arts organisations combine:
- Government grants (Creative NZ, Ministry for Culture and Heritage)
- Earned revenue (ticket sales, venue hire)
- Philanthropy (individual donors, charitable trusts, gaming trusts)
- Sponsorship (corporate)
- Local government arts funding
Ticket revenue alone rarely sustains performing arts — even commercially successful productions require grant subsidy.
Creative NZ is the principal government arts funding body — distributing around $80m annually across all art forms.
Arts Leadership Programme
CNZ's flagship investment — multi-year funding for organisations of national significance:
- Royal New Zealand Ballet
- Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra
- New Zealand Opera
- New Zealand Symphony Orchestra
- Major theatre companies (Auckland Theatre Company, Circa)
- Contemporary dance companies
These organisations receive substantial multi-year funding providing the financial foundation for their operations.
Project funding — Arts Grants
Project-based grants for specific productions, seasons, tours, and initiatives:
- Available to organisations and individuals
- Multiple funding rounds per year
- Broad eligibility across art forms and scales
Toi Ake — Māori Arts
CNZ funds wāhanga Māori (Māori arts) as a distinct investment stream:
- Kapa haka production and development
- Haka and taonga pūoro
- Tikanga-based performance traditions
- Contemporary Māori performance (Te Reo Māori theatre, Māori dance)
Pacific Arts
CNZ's Pacific arts investment funds Pacific performance traditions and contemporary Pacific performance.
Residencies and development
Artist development funding supports performers outside production contexts:
- Composition and choreography development
- Mentoring and masterclasses
- International study and residency
Touring
CNZ funds domestic touring — making productions accessible beyond main centres:
- Arts on Tour NZ (touring programme)
- Tahi (music touring)
- Regional touring for major productions
MCH provides policy oversight and some direct cultural investment — including support for flagship cultural institutions alongside CNZ.
Auckland
Auckland Council funds Auckland through:
- Auckland Live (operated by Tātaki Auckland Unlimited — major venues)
- Auckland Arts Festival
- Local board community arts funding
- Regional arts funding (arts grants administered through Creative NZ partnership)
Wellington
Wellington City Council is a major arts funder — Wellington has a high per-capita arts investment relative to other New Zealand cities.
- Wellington City Council arts grants
- Wellington Venues (TSB Arena, Michael Fowler Centre)
- Wellington Festivals (NZIFF, New Zealand Festival of the Arts)
Other councils
Christchurch (Tūranga, Court Theatre, Symphony Orchestra), Dunedin (Regent Theatre, DSO), Hamilton, and other centres have local arts investment and grants.
Gaming trusts (Pub Charity, Lion Foundation, Grassroots Trust, etc.) fund performing arts at community and mid-scale level:
- Community theatre productions
- Musical societies and choirs
- Equipment for performing arts organisations
- Performance space upgrades
- Youth performing arts
Gaming trusts are particularly important for community and amateur performing arts that don't reach CNZ priority thresholds.
Lion Foundation arts grants
Major gaming trust with arts as a priority area.
Todd Corporation arts sponsorship
Significant philanthropic investment in performing arts.
Individual major donors
Major performing arts organisations (RNZB, APO, NZ Opera) cultivate individual major donors — a critical funding stream for capital campaigns, programming, and new work.
Arts patrons networks
Patron societies and friends groups around major arts organisations provide a structured giving community.
Artistic case
The artistic rationale for the work — why this work, why now, what artistic significance — must be clearly articulated. CNZ assessors are arts professionals who evaluate artistic merit alongside strategic fit.
Cultural safety and diversity
Applications should address how the work engages with diversity — including te ao Māori, Pacific perspectives, and diverse communities — particularly for CNZ funding.
Artist careers and development
Projects that develop artists and build careers (not just present work) are stronger applications. How does this project contribute to the artist's or organisation's long-term development?
Audience access
Funders value reach and access — who will experience this work, how are barriers to access addressed (ticket pricing, accessibility, touring, community engagement)?
Financial sustainability
Demonstrate that grant funding is part of a viable financial model — show earned revenue, co-investment, and how the project contributes to organisational sustainability.
Track record
Prior successful productions, tours, or outcomes demonstrate organisational capability. For new organisations, document founder track records.
Tahua's grants management platform supports performing arts organisations and cultural funders managing grant portfolios — with project tracking, artistic outcome reporting, touring programme management, and the multi-funder tools that help arts organisations navigate the complex performing arts funding landscape in Aotearoa New Zealand.