List of Māori deities
This is a list of Māori deities, known in Māori as atua.
Note: there are two Mythologies relating Tangaroa, Papatuanuku and Ranginui (Raki)
Major departmental deities
- Haumiatiketike, the god of uncultivated food, particularly bracken fern.
 - Papatūānuku, the primordial earth mother.
 - Ranginui, the primordial sky father.
 - Rongomātāne, the god of cultivated foods, particularly sweet potato / Kūmara.
 - Tānemahuta, the god of forests and birds.
 - Tangaroa, the god of the ocean and the creatures within. (Original Father in the Main Mythology)
 - Tāwhirimātea, the god of storms and violent weather.
 - Tūmatauenga, the god of war, hunting, cooking, fishing, and food cultivation.
 - Whiro, the lord of darkness and embodiment of all evil and death.
 - Aituā, the god of death, unhappiness, and misfortune.
 - Ao, a personification of light.
 - Auahitūroa, the personification of comets, and the origin of fire.
 - Haere, several personifications of the rainbow.
 - Ikatere, a fish god and father of all sea creatures.
 - Io Matua Kore, the supreme being; personification of light and the world of the living and the forest.
 - Kahukura, a war god who appears as the upper bow of a double rainbow.
 - Kiwa, one of several divine guardians of the ocean.
 - Makeatutara, the father of Māui and guardian of the underworld.
 - Maru, the god of freshwater, southern god of war.
 - Mataaho, a god of earthquakes and volcanoes from the Tāmaki Makaurau Region (Auckland).
 - Māui, a demigod, culture hero, and trickster.
 - Motoro
 - Ngahue or Kahue, the god or discoverer of pounamu, the taniwha Poutini is his guardian.
 - Pūhaorangi, a celestial being who descended from the heavens to sleep with the beautiful maiden Te Kuraimonoa.
 - Punga or Hairi, the ancestor of sharks, lizards, rays, and all deformed, ugly things.
 - Rehua, the star god with the power of healing.
 - Rongomai, the name of a number of separate beings.
 - Rongo, the god of crops and peace
 - Rūaumoko, the god of volcanoes, earthquakes, and seasons.
 - Tamanuiterā, the personification of the sun.
 - Tane-rore, the personification of shimmering air.
 - Tāwhaki, a semi-supernatural being associated with thunder and lightning.
 - Te Uira, the personification of lightning.
 - Tiki, the first human, but sometimes is a child of Rangi and Papa, and creates the first human.
 - Tinirau, a guardian of fish.
 - Tūtewehiwehi, the father of all reptiles.
 - Uenuku, a god of the rainbow, associated with war. Also a deified ancestor.
 - Urutengangana, the god of the light.
 
Female atua
- Ārohirohi, the goddess of mirages and shimmering heat.
 - Hinauri, sister, or uncommonly, wife of Māui, associated with the moon.
 - Hinekapea, the goddess of loyalty.
 - Hinehōaka, the goddess of sandstone, the taniwha Whatipū is her guardian.
 - Hinenuitepō, the goddess of night and death, and ruler of the underworld.
 - Hine-kau-ataata
 - Hinepūkohurangi, the goddess of the mist
 - Hineteiwaiwa, the goddess of childbirth, te whare pora and the arts
 - Hinemoana, the goddess of the ocean
 - Ikaroa, the long fish that gave birth to all the stars in the Milky Way.
 - Kohara
 - Kui, the chthonic demigod.
 - Mahuika, the goddess of fire.
 - Mārikoriko
 - Moekahu, a lesser known goddess (or god) of Tūhoe whose form was of a dog (kurī), and a sibling of Haere.
 - Rohe, the goddess of the spirit world.
 - Tangotango, a celestial woman who fell in love with the great hero Tāwhaki and came to earth to become his wife.
 - Tūāwhiorangi, the wife of Kahukura who manifests as the lower bow during a double rainbow.
 - Whaitiri, the personification of thunder.