Mountain Bike Grants in New Zealand: Funding for Clubs, Trails, and Development

Mountain biking is one of New Zealand's fastest-growing outdoor sports, with a world-class trail network and an enthusiastic community of riders. Cycling New Zealand and regional mountain bike clubs govern the sport. New Zealand's terrain and growing trail infrastructure make it an exceptional mountain biking destination and community. This guide covers the key funding sources for NZ mountain bike clubs and trail networks.

Cycling New Zealand — mountain bike

Cycling New Zealand governs mountain bike as a discipline:
- Cross-country (XCO) — Olympic
- Enduro, downhill, and trail riding
- National championship events
- Junior and youth development

Contact Cycling NZ and your regional MTB club or trust for national body access.

Sport New Zealand

Sport NZ funds mountain biking through Cycling NZ:
- Olympic programme investment (XCO)
- Community participation development

RSTs fund community mountain bike programmes.

Regional Sport Trusts

RSTs fund mountain bike clubs:
- Equipment grants for bikes and safety gear
- Junior MTB development
- Trail access support

Key RSTs:
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland Cycling Collective and regional MTB clubs
- Sport Wellington: Wellington mountain bike community
- Sport Canterbury: Christchurch and Canterbury MTB
- Sport Otago: Queenstown and Wanaka MTB community

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund mountain bike clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport organisations
- Grassroots Trust: Community sport and recreation
- Pub Charity: Equipment and community grants
- Lion Foundation: Junior sport

Gaming trust applications for mountain biking:
- Mountain bikes for junior loan fleet
- Helmets (full-face for gravity disciplines; trail helmet for XC)
- Body armour and knee/elbow pads
- Tools and workshop equipment for club mechanic sessions
- Junior programme development

Department of Conservation (DOC) — trail funding

DOC manages much of New Zealand's conservation estate where trails are built:
- DOC community partnership: Partnering with clubs for trail development on public land
- Trail funding: Some DOC funding for recreational infrastructure
- Concession process: Clubs need DOC concessions for trails on DOC land

Building a relationship with local DOC offices is essential for MTB clubs with trails on conservation land.

Local councils — trail infrastructure

Local councils are the primary funders of trail infrastructure:
- Community grants: Trail construction and maintenance
- Sport facility grants: Pump tracks and skills areas in parks
- Greenway connections: Cycle and walking networks that include MTB trails
- Tourism investment: Mountain bike trails as visitor infrastructure (Queenstown, Rotorua, Nelson)

Major MTB trail systems in NZ (Rotorua's Whakarewarewa Forest, Queenstown Bike Park, Nelson's Dun Mountain Trail) are largely council or DOC-funded or managed.

Lottery Grants Board

Lottery Outdoor Leisure and Sport and Lottery Sport:
- Trail development grants for clubs
- Equipment for recreational outdoor sport

Equipment for mountain biking

Mountain bike equipment:
- Mountain bike: Hardtail entry $600–$2,000; full-suspension $2,500–$10,000+
- Helmet: Trail helmet $100–$400; full-face gravity $200–$700
- Pads: Knee and elbow — $50–$200 per set
- Shoes: Clipless or flat MTB shoes — $100–$250
- Pump track materials: If club builds its own pump track

Junior loan bikes (for riders who can't afford bikes) are a strong grant application — lowering the entry barrier to the sport.

Junior mountain biking in New Zealand

Youth development:
- Kids' MTB programmes: Learn-to-ride mountain bike for young children
- Junior racing: XCO and enduro youth categories
- School holiday camps: MTB skills development
- Junior clubs: After-school trail riding

Trail advocacy and access

Mountain bike clubs are trail advocates:
- Access negotiations: Building relationships with councils and DOC
- Trail maintenance: Volunteer trail days — clubs contribute significant volunteer labour
- Trail design: Working with councils on trail network planning

Demonstrating volunteer contribution (hours of trail work) is a powerful element in funding applications — it shows community investment.

What funders look for in mountain bike applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Riders by age, gender, and discipline
- Junior development: Youth riders and programmes
- Women's participation: Female riders — growing significantly
- Equipment: Bikes, helmets, protective gear — loan fleet justified per programme
- Trail assets: What trail infrastructure the club maintains or develops
- Volunteer contribution: Hours and value of volunteer trail maintenance
- Community access: Open trails and subsidised participation for those unable to pay
- Organisation governance: Affiliation to Cycling NZ and regional body


Tahua's grants management platform helps mountain bike clubs manage grant applications across Cycling NZ, Sport NZ, RSTs, gaming trusts, and councils, tracking equipment, trail development, and participation outcomes.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →