Food insecurity — not having reliable access to sufficient, nutritious food — affects a significant and growing number of New Zealanders. Food banks, community pantries, school lunch programs, and food rescue organisations provide immediate relief for families and individuals who cannot afford adequate food. As the cost of living rises and housing costs consume an increasing share of household income, demand for emergency food support has reached unprecedented levels. Grant funding supports food banks, food rescue operations, community food programs, and the advocacy that addresses the underlying drivers of food insecurity.
The scale of hunger in NZ
Causes of food insecurity
Who food banks serve
Ministry of Social Development
Ministry of Education
Ministry of Health
Countdown / Woolworths NZ
Food rescue and food bank supply partnerships.
Foodstuffs NZ (New World, Pak'nSave)
Food rescue and community support.
Nestlé, Fonterra, other food companies
Product donations and community food programs.
Community trusts
Regional food bank support through community trusts.
Lottery Grants Board
Community food programs.
Rotary and Lions Clubs
Food bank support at community level.
Food banks
Food rescue
Community pantries and fridges
School food programs
Community meals
Food dignity and choice
Māori and Pacific food programs
Research and advocacy
Traditional food bank models — taking what you're given — can be humiliating for recipients. New models prioritise dignity:
- Choice food banks: clients select their own food from displayed options
- Social supermarkets: low-cost shopping (1-2% of retail price) that looks and feels like a shop
- Community meals: eating together, not transactional hand-outs
- Respectful framing: kai (food) as a right, not charity
Grant applications that incorporate dignity-based approaches to food relief are more appropriate and more likely to be taken up by people who would otherwise not seek help.
Root causes
Food banks address symptoms; the causes are housing costs, inadequate benefits, and low wages. Applications that combine food relief with advocacy for root cause change are more comprehensive.
Culturally appropriate kai
Food banks that provide culturally inappropriate food (pork-based products for Muslim recipients, for example) miss the mark. Applications with culturally responsive food sourcing and distribution are more effective.
School holiday hunger
School food programs operate during term time — but children are often most food insecure during holidays when they have no access to school food. Applications addressing holiday hunger fill a specific gap.
Measurement
Food relief has straightforward outputs: parcels distributed, meals served, people fed. Applications with clear output tracking and some attempt at food security outcome measurement are more credible.
Tahua's grants management platform supports food bank funders and food security organisations in New Zealand — with distribution tracking, recipient reach data, food security outcome measurement, and the reporting tools that help food bank funders demonstrate their investment in ending hunger across Aotearoa.