Community Foundation Grants in New Zealand: Local Philanthropy for Local Impact

Community foundations are permanent, locally rooted philanthropic organisations that connect donors with community needs. Unlike national foundations, community foundations are focused on a specific place — a city, region, or province — and their grantmaking reflects local priorities and relationships. New Zealand's community foundation sector has grown significantly over the past two decades, with foundations now covering most major population centres. Understanding the community foundation landscape is essential for both organisations seeking local grant funding and donors wanting their giving to support their community.

Community foundations in New Zealand

What community foundations do

  • Hold and grow philanthropic endowments on behalf of donors and the community
  • Make grants to local organisations from investment returns
  • Provide donor advised funds and philanthropic advisory services
  • Support community knowledge and connection
  • Build local philanthropic culture

How community foundations work

  • Donors contribute to a community endowment (can be named or anonymous)
  • Endowment capital is invested for perpetual growth
  • Grants are made from annual investment returns
  • Grants typically target community wellbeing, arts, environment, education, and social services
  • Professional staff manage grant processes and donor relationships

New Zealand's community foundations

  • Auckland Foundation: major Auckland philanthropic organisation
  • Wellington Community Trust: Wellington region community grantmaker
  • Community Trust of Southland: major Southland regional philanthropist
  • Eastern and Central Community Trust (ECCT): Hawke's Bay, Manawatū, Whanganui
  • Nelson Marlborough Community Foundation: top of the South Island
  • Northland Foundation: Northland region
  • Bay of Plenty Community Foundation: Bay of Plenty region
  • Canterbury Community Trust: Canterbury region
  • Otago Community Trust: Otago region

Note: Some of these operate as community trusts (established through bank privatisation proceeds) rather than community foundations, but perform similar functions.

Auckland Foundation

Scale and focus

Auckland Foundation manages a substantial and growing philanthropic endowment for Auckland:
- Grantmaking across Auckland's diverse communities
- Donor advised funds for Auckland philanthropists
- Community leadership and knowledge
- Specific funds for education, arts, environment, and social services

Priorities

  • Social resilience and equity
  • Environment and conservation
  • Arts and culture
  • Education and youth

How to engage

Applications typically by EOI (Expression of Interest) or invited. Strong local presence and Auckland focus required.

Wellington Community Trust

Scale and focus

Wellington Community Trust is one of the most significant philanthropic funders in the Wellington region:
- Created from Community Finance credit union proceeds
- Wide-ranging grantmaking across Wellington communities
- Major funder of arts, culture, and community development in Wellington

Priorities

  • Arts and culture
  • Community development
  • Youth and families
  • Environment

Community Trust of Southland

One of the largest community trusts outside Auckland, holding significant assets from the privatisation of Southland Building Society:
- Major regional funder for Southland
- Broad community focus
- Significant arts, environment, social services, and sport funding

Types of community foundation grants

Community wellbeing

  • Social services for disadvantaged communities
  • Family and community support
  • Older people's programs
  • Youth and children's initiatives

Arts and culture

  • Community arts programs
  • Cultural events and festivals
  • Arts infrastructure
  • Creative community initiatives

Environment

  • Local conservation projects
  • Environmental education
  • Sustainability initiatives
  • Urban greening

Education

  • Early childhood education
  • School programs
  • Youth education
  • Scholarships and bursaries

Sport and recreation

  • Community sport programs
  • Recreation facilities
  • Youth sport
  • Inclusive sport

Community building

  • Neighbourhood programs
  • Volunteer infrastructure
  • Community spaces
  • Social cohesion

How to apply to community foundations

Research the foundation

Each community foundation has distinct priorities, processes, and geographic focus. Understanding the specific foundation's strategy before applying is essential.

Check geographic eligibility

Community foundations fund within their geographic region — applications from organisations outside the region (or for work outside the region) are typically ineligible.

Expression of Interest

Many community foundations use an EOI process before full applications. EOIs allow foundations to screen applications early and give potential applicants feedback.

Local relationships

Community foundations value local knowledge and relationships. Applicants with existing relationships with foundation staff, board members, or previous grant recipients are better positioned.

Alignment with strategy

Community foundations often have specific strategic priorities. Applications that align clearly with current strategy are stronger than those making a generic case.

Donor advised funds

Community foundations offer donor advised funds (DAFs) for philanthropists:
- Donor contributes to the DAF and gets immediate tax benefit
- DAF invested and grown by the foundation
- Donor recommends grants from the DAF over time
- Useful for philanthropists who want to give regularly but plan giving carefully

Nonprofits benefit from building relationships with DAF donors — community foundation staff can often facilitate introductions.


Tahua's grants management platform supports community foundations in New Zealand — with programme tracking, grantee relationship management, community impact measurement, and the reporting tools that help community foundations demonstrate the local impact of their philanthropic investment.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →