First offered in 2019, the Sargeson Prize is New Zealand's richest short story prize, sponsored by the University of Waikato. Named for celebrated New Zealand writer Frank Sargeson, the Prize was conceived by writer Catherine Chidgey, who also lectures in Writing Studies at the University.

There is no entry fee, and entries are limited to one per writer, per division.

Entries for the 2024 competition have now closed. Entries for 2025 open on 1 April 2025 and close on 30 June 2025.

If you have any questions that aren't answered on this page or in the terms and conditions, please follow us on Facebook or Twitter or email sargeson.prize@waikato.ac.nz

Image of Frank Sargeson by Robin Morrison, 1978. Used with permission of copyright holder.

Open Division

The Open Division is open to New Zealand citizens or permanent residents aged 16 and over who are writing in English. Published and unpublished writers are welcome to enter. Entries must be single stories of no more than 5000 words. They must be original, unpublished pieces of work.

  • First Prize: $10,000
  • Second Prize: $1,000
  • Third Prize: $500

The winning stories will be published by Newsroom in its literary section ReadingRoom.

Secondary Schools Division

The Secondary Schools Division is open to students enrolled at a New Zealand secondary school, or home-schooled students, who are aged between 16 and 18 years on the date that competition entries close. Entries must be single stories of no more than 3000 words. They must be original, unpublished pieces of work.

  • First Prize: $2,000
  • Second Prize: $1,000
  • Third Prize: $500

The winning story will be published by Newsroom in its literary section ReadingRoom.

The winner of the Secondary Schools Division will also be offered a one-week summer residency at the University of Waikato, to be taken up in January or February of the following year. The residency will include accommodation and meals at one of the University of Waikato Halls of Residence, a writing space in the School of Arts, and mentoring from postgraduate students and/or academic staff in the Writing Studies programme. If the winner is under 18 years of age, parental consent will be required.

How to enter

Entries must be typed and 1.5-spaced in a standard legible font (eg Times New Roman, Arial, Calibri, Palatino Linotype). The story title and page number must appear on each page of the manuscript (as a header or footer). Writers will be asked to provide a word count on the entry form.

The author's name must not appear anywhere on the manuscript, including headers and footers, any title page and the file name. Entries may be submitted online or by post. Online is the preferred entry method.

Entries that do not follow the formatting requirements may be disqualified.

Entrants are responsible for ensuring that their entry, whether by post or online, reaches us by the deadline.

Judging

Each year we invite a leading New Zealand literary figure to judge the Sargeson Prize. In 2024 our Chief Judge was Harriet Allan.

Harriet Allan

After starting with a medical publisher and then Oxford University Press, Harriet Allan worked at Penguin Random House and its earlier iterations for nearly 35 years. She edited and produced books of all genres for both adults and children before becoming fiction publisher, in which role she published numerous award-winning novels and literary nonfiction titles, working with some of New Zealand’s pre-eminent writers.

In the course of her employment, she also wrote and edited several publications. She is currently working as a freelance editor, mentor and manuscript assessor. She was awarded an MNZM for services to publishing in 2024.

Judging is conducted "blind" – i.e., without the writer's name attached to their submission. Entries are subject to a pre-judging screening process by a panel overseen and moderated by the Chief Judge.

General terms

Entries for the 2025 competition open on 1 April 2025 and close on 30 June 2025.

Terms and conditions

There is no entry fee. Only one entry per writer is permitted. A writer may submit in either the Open or Secondary Schools Divisions, but not both. Copyright remains with the author.

To remain eligible, entries must not be submitted to other publications, prizes or anthologies for the duration of the Sargeson Prize entry and judging period. Winners and place-getters will be contacted by 15 September 2025.

Previously published, prize-winning, or broadcast stories will not be accepted. Appearance online on a blog or in an anthology constitutes prior publication.