Scuba Diving Grants in New Zealand: Funding for Diving Clubs, Equipment, and Conservation

Scuba diving and underwater sports have a dedicated following in New Zealand's marine environment — the Poor Knights Islands, Fiordland, and the Bay of Islands are world-class dive destinations. New Zealand also has active underwater hockey and freediving communities. This guide covers the key grant funding sources.

Diving NZ

Diving NZ governs competitive underwater sports in New Zealand:
- Underwater hockey (octopush)
- Finswimming and other underwater disciplines
- National championship events

Contact Diving NZ and your regional body for Sport NZ programme access.

Underwater hockey in New Zealand

Underwater hockey (octopush) is played on the bottom of a swimming pool with snorkelling equipment:
- Teams push a weighted puck with short sticks
- New Zealand has an active community competitive scene
- National championships held annually
- Pool access is the primary requirement

Sport New Zealand

Sport NZ funds underwater sports through Diving NZ:
- National programme investment
- Participation development

RSTs can fund community underwater sport development.

Regional Sport Trusts

RSTs fund underwater sport clubs:
- Equipment grants for underwater hockey clubs
- Junior development programmes

Key RSTs:
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland pool-based underwater hockey community
- Sport Wellington: Wellington underwater hockey clubs

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund diving and underwater sport clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport organisations
- Grassroots Trust: Club sport development
- Pub Charity: Equipment grants
- Lion Foundation: Junior sport development

Typical gaming trust grants:
- Underwater hockey equipment (fins, gloves, sticks, pucks, masks)
- Pool hire subsidies
- Shared scuba or freediving equipment for clubs
- Junior development clinics

Underwater hockey equipment

Underwater hockey needs:
- Long freediving fins: Speed underwater
- Gloves: Protective hand gear
- Sticks: Short curved sticks
- Pucks: Lead game pucks
- Masks and snorkels: Standard underwater masks
- Caps: Optional head protection

Pool hire is the ongoing primary cost.

Marine conservation connection

New Zealand's marine environment creates strong conservation diving connections:
- Marine reserve monitoring: Citizen science diving in protected areas
- Marine debris: Underwater rubbish collection
- Kina (sea urchin) removal: Helping kelp forest recovery by removing overabundant kina
- Environmental funders: DOC, community trusts, and environmental foundations fund conservation diving

DOC and marine conservation grants

Department of Conservation (DOC) funds marine conservation:
- Dive surveys and monitoring in marine reserves
- Conservation volunteer programmes
- Marine reserve management partnerships

Environment funders: Community trusts with environmental focus fund marine conservation diving.

Freediving in New Zealand

Competitive freediving:
- AIDA NZ: Governing body for competitive freediving in NZ
- Spearfishing NZ: Competitive spearfishing (separate from conservation diving)
- Equipment: Wetsuits, monofins, weight systems

Disability diving

Adaptive scuba diving:
- Paralympics NZ: Where disability diving has competitive connection
- Disability sport organisations: Adaptive aquatics
- Scuba diving is accessible for many physical disabilities

Snorkelling for juniors

Entry-level underwater sport:
- Snorkelling programmes: Learn-to-snorkel for children
- Coastal school programmes: Schools near marine reserves
- Youth ocean education: Marine biology and ocean literacy programmes

Lottery Grants Board

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

What funders look for in diving applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Divers and underwater sport participants by programme
- Pool or ocean access: Confirmed venues for training and competition
- Conservation programme: Marine conservation activities — a major strength for NZ funders
- Equipment specifics: Shared equipment justified per club size and programme
- Junior development: Young participants in entry-level programmes
- Disability diving: Adaptive aquatics if applicable
- Club governance: Financial health, affiliation to Diving NZ
- Environmental outcomes: Conservation impact — species monitoring, debris removed


Tahua's grants management platform helps diving clubs manage grant applications across sport, environmental, and community funders, tracking participation and conservation outcomes that funders value.

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