Effective Governance
skip to content Te Puni Kokiri.

Māori Reservation

Māori reservations are a very common land holding structure.

A Māori reservation can be established over both Māori freehold and general land under Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993.

Typically reservations may be set aside over land that is culturally, spiritually or historically significant to Māori. Common purposes include Papakainga, Marae, urupa, church sites, sports and recreation grounds. Reservations can also be set-aside over fishing grounds, springs, timber reserves, places of scenic interest and wahi tapu.

The main advantages of Māori Reservations are:

The main disadvantages of Māori Reservations are:

Suitability of Māori Reservations

Māori reservations are suitable for non-commercial purposes such as marae, meeting places and urupa.

A Māori reservation can be set-up and used for a number of purposes. For instance part of a reservation can be set-aside for a Marae, part for a sports ground and part for an urupa.

A major advantage is the ability for marae and meeting places to obtain an exemption from paying rates.

Māori reservations are not suitable for commercial operations.

What Trustees of a Māori Reservation do

The main function of the trustees is to administer the reserve for the beneficiaries named in the Māori Land Court order. The beneficiaries are usually a hapu although it is possible to set a reservation aside for a local community or even the people of New Zealand.

The functions include:

Trustees should hold meetings and record their decisions in written minutes. At the least there should be a yearly meeting.


Page last updated: Thu, 12 May 2005