New Zealand has a distinctive and sophisticated philanthropic landscape. Unlike many comparable countries, the primary sources of large-scale grant funding in New Zealand are not private foundations but community trusts and gaming trusts — a consequence of historical decisions about how to distribute gambling revenues. Understanding this landscape is essential for anyone working in or seeking funding from the New Zealand grants sector.
Gaming trusts
Gaming trusts are the largest grant funders in New Zealand by volume. They derive revenue from gaming machines (pokies) in clubs, pubs, and other venues, distributing a significant proportion as grants to community organisations. Key gaming trusts include:
Gaming trust grants are typically for specific projects rather than core funding; amounts are usually under $50,000; and sports and recreation are the most funded categories.
Community trusts
Community trusts distribute funds derived from the privatisation of Trustee Savings Banks (TSBs) in 1988. There are 12 community trusts nationally, varying enormously in asset size:
Community trusts collectively hold several billion dollars in assets and distribute hundreds of millions annually. They are the most significant private funders in their regions.
The Lotteries Commission (New Zealand Lottery Grants Board)
The Lottery Grants Board distributes gaming surpluses through independent distribution committees covering:
- Community and leisure
- Cultural facilities
- Environment and heritage
- Health
- Rest homes
- Arts
Lottery funding is significant — approximately $250-300 million annually — and accessible to most registered charitable organisations.
Private foundations
New Zealand has a smaller private foundation sector than Australia or the US. Major private foundations include:
Charitable trusts
Many organisations operate as charitable trusts — these may be philanthropic foundations, community service organisations, or both. The distinction between a charitable trust as grantmaker and as service provider is not always clear.
Government grants
The New Zealand government funds the community sector through multiple agencies — MSD, Ministry of Health, Ministry for the Environment, Ministry of Education, and others — through a mixture of grants and contracts. The Lotteries Commission distributes gaming surpluses. Kainga Ora funds housing. Te Puni Kōkiri funds Māori development.
Gaming trust dominance: New Zealand's philanthropy is unusually dominated by gaming trust revenue — creating a funding landscape shaped by the priorities and processes of gaming distribution. This has implications for the types of organisations funded and the purposes supported.
Regional concentration: Community trusts are regionally focused; Foundation North is concentrated in Auckland and Northland; other trusts serve their specific regions. National organisations often struggle with New Zealand's regionalist funding model.
Project funding preference: Most New Zealand funders strongly prefer project grants over core operational funding — a persistent challenge for operational sustainability in the sector.
Māori philanthropy: Iwi and hapū economic development has generated significant philanthropic capacity — Ngāi Tahu, Tainui, and other major iwi have substantial commercial assets that generate social investment capacity alongside commercial returns. Ngāi Tahu's community investment is significant in the South Island.
Workplace giving: Corporate payroll giving and workplace giving campaigns (United Way, Give a Little) provide significant, if smaller, flows to charities.
For organisations seeking New Zealand philanthropic funding:
Many New Zealand funders have specific geographic priorities, issue area focus, and organisation type preferences. Researching fit before applying saves time and improves success rates.
Growing interest in strategic philanthropy: New Zealand's community trusts and foundations are increasingly articulating explicit theories of change and focusing on long-term systemic impact rather than scattered project grants.
Te Tiriti-based grantmaking: Following Waitangi Tribunal findings and growing mainstream understanding of Te Tiriti, some funders are adopting explicit Te Tiriti frameworks — partnership, protection, and active participation — for their grantmaking practice.
Response to growing need: Post-COVID income inequality, housing crisis, and mental health pressures have increased demand on the sector. Some funders have responded with strategic adaptation.
Tahua's grants management platform is purpose-built for the New Zealand context — with gaming trust, community trust, and government grant tracking, proportionate reporting tools, and relationship management features that help New Zealand organisations manage their diverse funding portfolios.