Weightlifting and powerlifting are strength sports with growing New Zealand communities. Olympic weightlifting (snatch and clean & jerk) is part of the Olympic programme, while powerlifting (squat, bench, deadlift) and Para powerlifting (Paralympic) have active international competition. Clubs and associations need funding for equipment, coaching, and development. This guide covers the key funding sources.
Weightlifting New Zealand is the national governing body for Olympic weightlifting in New Zealand, affiliated with the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF).
Key programmes:
- Olympic pathway development
- Junior and youth weightlifting
- Club and coaching development
- National competitions
Contact Weightlifting NZ and your regional lifting club for guidance on Sport NZ investment and national programme access.
Powerlifting New Zealand governs powerlifting and Para powerlifting. Powerlifting has large participation relative to Olympic weightlifting — many gym-based athletes compete at powerlifting meets.
Key body: IPF-affiliated technical powerlifting is governed separately from "equipped" powerlifting federations.
Para powerlifting (bench press only for athletes with lower limb impairment) is a Paralympic discipline. Funding:
- Paralympics NZ: Para sport development
- Sport NZ: Disability sport inclusion
- Gaming trusts: Adaptive programme grants
Sport NZ funds Olympic weightlifting through Weightlifting NZ. Access:
- RSTs may fund community weightlifting clubs with active programmes
- High performance investment through national body for Olympic pathway athletes
RSTs vary in their appetite for weightlifting — it's a less mainstream community sport in New Zealand. Contact your local RST for current grant availability.
New Zealand gaming trusts fund community weightlifting clubs:
- Four Winds Foundation
- Grassroots Trust
- Pub Charity
- Lion Foundation
- Southern Trust
Gaming trusts fund:
- Barbells, plates, and platform equipment
- Competition equipment (calibrated bars, competition plates)
- Safety equipment (lifting belts, chalk, spotting stands)
- Club development costs
Equipment grants for weightlifting clubs are well-aligned with gaming trust community sport priorities.
Weightlifting and powerlifting require significant equipment investment:
- Olympic weightlifting: Competition barbells and plates (calibrated to IWF standards), lifting platforms, chalk boxes
- Powerlifting: Barbells and plates, squat racks/power cages, bench press stations, deadlift platforms
- Safety: Collars, safety bars, spotting stands
Club-owned equipment accessible to members at low cost is the primary funding case.
Weightlifting requires specific space and flooring:
- Local councils: Some recreation centres have weights facilities
- Commercial gyms: Some weightlifting clubs operate within commercial gyms (limiting grant access)
- Community-owned facilities: Not-for-profit clubs with own spaces have better grant access
Youth weightlifting is growing internationally:
- Junior and youth competitions through Weightlifting NZ
- School weightlifting programmes
- Development squads for Olympic pathway
Weightlifting NZ: National youth programme.
Sport NZ: Youth sport development.
Gaming trusts: Junior sport grants.
Lottery Sport funds community sport organisations. Weightlifting and powerlifting clubs with active community programmes can apply.
Strong weightlifting applications demonstrate:
- Participation numbers: Total club members, competition participants
- Olympic connection: Olympic weightlifting (clean & jerk, snatch) has clearest Sport NZ pathway
- Junior development: Youth programmes and competition pathway
- Para powerlifting: Disability sport inclusion
- Equipment specifics: Detailed justified equipment lists
- Safety culture: Appropriate coaching, spotting, progressive loading
- Club governance: Financial health, volunteer structure, coaching qualifications
Tahua's grants management platform helps sport organisations manage grant applications, track equipment funding, and demonstrate the community outcomes that Sport NZ and gaming trusts value.