Ice Hockey Grants in New Zealand: Funding for Clubs, Ice Time, and Development

Ice hockey in New Zealand has a small but dedicated following, concentrated in cities with ice rinks — Auckland (Paradice), Christchurch (the Hub), and a few other centres. Ice Hockey New Zealand governs the sport. The Ice Blacks compete internationally. Ice rink access is the primary constraint, but funding for clubs, equipment, and junior development is available. This guide covers the key sources.

Ice Hockey New Zealand

Ice Hockey New Zealand is the national governing body:
- National team programmes (Ice Blacks men's and women's)
- Club affiliation and development
- National competition structure

Contact Ice Hockey NZ and your regional association for guidance on Sport NZ investment and national programme access.

Sport New Zealand

Sport NZ funds ice hockey through Ice Hockey NZ:
- National programme investment
- Participation growth for niche winter sports

RSTs can fund community ice hockey development as a community sport investment.

Regional Sport Trusts

RSTs can fund community ice hockey:
- Equipment grants for junior players
- Development programme support
- Women's hockey participation

Key RSTs for ice hockey:
- Aktive Auckland: Auckland ice hockey at Paradice
- Sport Canterbury: Christchurch ice hockey at the Hub

Gaming trusts

Gaming trusts are important funders for ice hockey clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation: Community sport including ice hockey
- Grassroots Trust: Club development
- Pub Charity: Equipment grants
- Lion Foundation: Junior sport development

Gaming trust applications for ice hockey typically cover:
- Protective equipment loan libraries (helmets, pads, skates)
- Team jerseys and club uniforms
- Stick and training equipment
- Tournament and competition travel

Equipment — the major cost barrier

Ice hockey equipment is expensive. A full player kit costs $500–$1,500:
- Helmets: Required for all participants
- Skates: Hockey-specific ice skates
- Full protective gear: Shoulder, elbow, shin, gloves, pants
- Sticks: Composite sticks
- Goalie equipment: Significantly more expensive

Equipment loan libraries are essential for making ice hockey accessible to junior players.

Ice time — the primary ongoing cost

Ice time is the core ongoing expense for clubs:
- Auckland: Paradice North Shore and other rinks
- Christchurch: The Hub
- Gaming trusts can fund ice time as a direct programme cost

Junior ice hockey

Junior ice hockey is the sport's growth engine:
- Learn-to-skate: The entry point — often provided by rinks
- Junior leagues: Age-grade competitions (mite through bantam)
- Development squads: Talented junior pathway
- School holiday ice hockey camps: Community introduction

Women's ice hockey

Women's ice hockey:
- Ice Hockey NZ women's programme: National women's development
- Sport NZ women in sport: Female participation grants
- RSTs: Female participation targets

Connection to figure skating and speed skating infrastructure

Ice rinks in NZ are shared with figure skating and speed skating:
- Clubs can collaborate on facility access advocacy
- Shared learn-to-skate infrastructure benefits all ice sports

Lottery Grants Board

Lottery Sport funds community sport organisations:
- Ice hockey clubs with active community programmes can apply
- Equipment and junior development grants

What funders look for in ice hockey applications

Strong applications demonstrate:
- Participant numbers: Players by age, gender, and programme
- Ice time commitment: Hours per week of training and competition
- Junior development: Children and youth in the sport — equipment loan programme
- Women's hockey: Female participation
- Equipment: Justified loan library programme for junior players
- Rink access: Relationship with a rink for sustainable ice time
- Club governance: Financial health, affiliation to Ice Hockey NZ
- Community pathways: Learn-to-skate connections, school programmes


Tahua's grants management platform helps ice hockey clubs manage grant applications across Sport NZ, gaming trusts, and RSTs, tracking equipment and programme outcomes that funders value.

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