The fully non-inductive sustainment of high normalized beta plasmas (betaN) is a crucial challenge for the steadystate operation of a tokamak reactor. In order to assess the difficulties found on such scenarios, steady-state regimes have been explored at the Tokamak à Configuration Variable (TCV) using the newly available 1MW Neutral Beam Injection (NBI) system. The operating space is extended towards plasmas that are closer to those expected in JT-60SA and ITER, i.e. with significant NBI and Electron Cyclotron Resonance Heating and Current Drive (ECRH/CD), bootstrap current and Fast Ion (FI) fraction. BetaN values up to 1.4 and 1.7 are obtained in lower single null L-mode (H 98 (y,2)~0.8) and H-mode (H 98 (y,2)~1) plasmas, respectively, at zero time averaged loop voltage and q 95~6 . Fully non-inductive operation is not achieved with NBI alone, whose injection can even increase the loop voltage in presence of EC waves. A strong contribution to the total plasma pressure of bulk and FIs from NBI is experimentally evidenced and confirmed by interpretative ASTRA and NUBEAM modelling, which further predicts that FI charge-exchange reactions are the main loss channel for NBH/CD efficiency. Internal transport barriers, which are expected to maximize the bootstrap current fraction, are not formed in either the electron or the ion channel in the plasmas explored to date, despite a significant increase in the toroidal rotation and FIs fraction with NBI, which are known to reduce turbulence. First results on scenario development of high-betaN fully noninductive H-mode plasmas are also presented.