Kitesurfing has a passionate following in New Zealand's wind-rich coastal environment — Tasman Bay, Manukau Harbour, and the South Island's wind corridors make New Zealand excellent kite territory. Yachting New Zealand governs the sport under World Sailing. Formula kite is an Olympic class. This guide covers the key funding sources for kitesurfing clubs and programmes.
Yachting New Zealand governs kitesurfing as a sailing discipline:
- Formula kite (Olympic class)
- National kitesurfing championship
- Club development and international pathway
Contact Yachting NZ and your regional association for access to Sport NZ investment.
Sport NZ funds kitesurfing through Yachting NZ:
- Olympic formula kite programme investment
- Participation development for water sports
RSTs in coastal regions fund community kitesurfing.
RSTs fund kitesurfing clubs:
- Equipment grants for kites, boards, and safety gear
- Junior kite sports development
- Women's sport participation
Key RSTs for kitesurfing:
- Sport Nelson Marlborough: Tasman Bay — excellent kite conditions
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland harbour kitesurfing community
- Sport Tasman: Nelson and Motueka kitesurfing
Gaming trusts fund kitesurfing clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport organisations
- Grassroots Trust: Water sport development
- Pub Charity: Equipment and programme grants
- Lion Foundation: Junior sport
Typical gaming trust applications:
- Trainer kite sets for beginners
- Full kite sets for intermediate programmes
- Boards and harnesses
- Safety equipment: Helmets, impact vests, quick releases
Key equipment:
- Kites: Multiple sizes ($600–$2,000+ per kite) — different sizes for different wind conditions
- Boards: Twin tip ($400–$1,200) or directional board
- Bar and lines: Control system
- Harness: Hip or seat harness
- Safety gear: Quick release, helmet, impact vest, wetsuit (essential in NZ waters)
Kitesurfing safety:
- IKO-certified instruction: International Kiteboarding Organisation certification
- Quick release systems: Mandatory on all kites
- Wetsuit requirement: NZ water temperatures require wetsuits at most venues year-round
- Weather protocols: Wind assessment and decision frameworks
Funders will closely assess safety systems in kite applications.
Junior pathway:
- Formula kite youth: Olympic class pathway
- Learn-to-kite: Trainer kites before water launching
- Junior national events: Through Yachting NZ regattas
Women's formula kite is an Olympic event:
- Yachting NZ women's programme: Female sailing development
- Sport NZ women in sport: Female participation investment
Legal beach access is essential:
- Councils: Beach access management and bylaws
- Conservation land: Some kitesurfing venues on DOC-managed beaches
- Community beach clubs: Long-term beach use agreements
Lottery Sport funds community sport:
- Kitesurfing clubs with active community programmes can apply
Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Kitesurfers by level, programme, and age
- Safety systems: IKO-certified instruction, quick releases, weather management
- Equipment: Kites, boards, safety gear — justified per programme
- Junior development: Olympic class pathway for talented juniors
- Women's participation: Female kitesurfers — Olympic women's formula kite
- Legal beach access: Confirmed, approved venue
- Club governance: Financial health, affiliation to Yachting NZ
- Environmental awareness: Beach stewardship and kite etiquette
Tahua's grants management platform helps kitesurfing clubs manage grant applications across Sport NZ, RSTs, and gaming trusts, tracking the safety, participation, and equipment outcomes that funders value.