Alcohol and Drug Grants in New Zealand: Funding for AOD Treatment and Prevention

Alcohol and other drug (AOD) harm is one of New Zealand's most significant public health and social challenges. Alcohol alone costs NZ approximately $7.8 billion annually in crime, health, and lost productivity. Grants fund treatment, prevention, harm reduction, and community recovery. This guide covers the key funding sources.

Te Whatu Ora / Health New Zealand

Health system AOD funding:
- Specialist AOD services: DHB-funded residential and community treatment
- Community alcohol and drug services (CADS): Community AOD treatment
- Opioid substitution treatment: Methadone and buprenorphine programmes
- Dual diagnosis: Co-occurring mental health and AOD treatment

Ministry of Social Development (MSD)

MSD funds community AOD support:
- Community development: AOD organisations with community development focus
- Social housing: AOD support in social housing communities
- Employment: AOD treatment enabling workforce participation

Ministry of Justice

Ministry of Justice funds justice-linked AOD:
- Drug Court: Auckland, Wellington — rehabilitation as alternative to prison
- Restorative justice: AOD harm reduction through restorative approaches
- Community sentences: AOD treatment as court order

Problem Gambling Foundation / Gambling harm

Gaming trusts CANNOT fund gambling harm services (conflict of interest), but:
- Ministry of Health: Problem gambling treatment
- Gambling harm: Funded separately through levy on gaming industry

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts fund AOD community services (not gambling harm):
- Four Winds Foundation: AOD community support
- Grassroots Trust: Community health including AOD
- Pub Charity: Community health (note: cannot fund alcohol-specific harm)
- Lion Foundation: Community health and wellbeing

Gaming trust AOD applications:
- Residential AOD treatment support
- Community AOD recovery programmes
- Peer support for AOD recovery
- Family support for people with AOD issues

Lottery Grants Board

Lottery Community Wellbeing: Community AOD services and recovery.

Māori AOD services

Kaupapa Māori AOD treatment:
- Te Puni Kōkiri: Māori AOD health equity
- Māori AOD providers: Kaupapa Māori residential and community treatment
- Whānau Ora: Whānau-centred AOD support

Māori have higher rates of methamphetamine use and alcohol harm — culturally appropriate treatment is critical.

Youth AOD

Young people and AOD:
- Youth AOD services: Specialist youth AOD treatment
- Schools: AOD education and early intervention
- CAYAD: Community action on youth and drugs

Methamphetamine

Methamphetamine-specific:
- Te Ara Whakamana: Residential treatment
- Community recovery: Peer support for methamphetamine recovery
- Family support: Families of methamphetamine users

What funders look for in AOD applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Treatment completion: Clients completing AOD treatment programmes
- Abstinence/harm reduction: Reduction in substance use or harm
- Equity: Māori and Pacific communities with highest burden
- Co-occurring disorders: Mental health alongside AOD
- Family: Families supported alongside person with AOD issue
- Employment: Return to work or education after treatment
- Criminal justice: Diversion from criminal justice through treatment
- Peer support: Lived experience in programme delivery


Tahua's grants management platform helps AOD organisations manage grant applications across Te Whatu Ora, MSD, Ministry of Justice, gaming trusts, and Lottery, tracking treatment completion, harm reduction, and recovery outcomes.

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