Quick answer
An Invitation to Apply (ITA) is a formal notification from Immigration New Zealand granting you permission to submit a full residence visa application. You cannot apply directly — you must first submit an Expression of Interest (EOI), and if selected, you receive an ITA giving you 4 months to lodge your complete application with supporting documents. The ITA system is used for the Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) and the Parent Resident Visa. As of March 2026, the SMC uses a 6-point system, and the median wage threshold has increased to NZD $35.00/hour. Major changes to the SMC are coming in August 2026, including two new residence pathways.
In March 2026, a project manager from Mumbai named Arjun received an email that changed the trajectory of his career. The subject line was unremarkable — a system notification from Immigration New Zealand. But the content was anything but ordinary: after 11 weeks of waiting, he had received an Invitation to Apply for the Skilled Migrant Category Resident Visa.
The ITA gave Arjun exactly four months to assemble police clearances from three countries, arrange a medical examination, gather certified qualification transcripts, and compile 18 months of payslips from his employer in Auckland. He had already been living in New Zealand on an Accredited Employer Work Visa, but the transition from temporary work visa to permanent residence required navigating one of the most structured immigration systems in the world.
If you are considering moving to New Zealand permanently, or if you are already there on a work visa and thinking about residence, this guide covers everything you need to know about the ITA process — from submitting your Expression of Interest to collecting the documents that will make or break your application.
What Is an Invitation to Apply (ITA)?
An Invitation to Apply is a formal notification issued by Immigration New Zealand (INZ) that grants you permission to submit a complete residence visa application. Unlike most countries where you can apply for a visa directly, New Zealand uses a two-stage gatekeeping process for certain residence categories:
- Stage 1 — Expression of Interest (EOI): You submit a preliminary application declaring your qualifications, work experience, income, and other eligibility factors. No supporting documents are required at this stage.
- Stage 2 — Invitation to Apply (ITA): If your EOI demonstrates you are likely to meet the visa requirements, INZ issues an ITA. You then have 4 months to submit your full application with all supporting documents and pay the application fee.
The ITA system serves two purposes: it helps INZ manage application volumes against annual quotas, and it allows applicants to confirm their likely eligibility before incurring the significant cost and effort of a full application.
Important: If your ITA expires (after 4 months) without a submitted application, it lapses permanently. You would need to submit a new EOI and go through the entire selection process again.
Which Visa Categories Use the ITA System?
Two residence visa categories currently require an EOI and ITA:
1. Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) Resident Visa
This is the primary skilled worker pathway to New Zealand permanent residence. Applicants must demonstrate they meet a 6-point skills threshold based on qualifications, income, or occupational registration, plus additional points for New Zealand work experience. The SMC is the most widely used ITA-based visa and the focus of this guide.
2. Parent Resident Visa
Parents of New Zealand residents or citizens can apply through a separate EOI/ITA process. This category operates differently: EOIs are selected quarterly by ballot (February, May, August, November), with an annual cap of 2,500 approved visas. Of those, 2,000 go to EOIs submitted before 10 October 2022 (selected by date, oldest first), and 500 go to newer EOIs (selected randomly).
The EOI-to-ITA Process: Step by Step
Here is exactly how the process works from start to finish:
| Step | Action | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Create an account on the Immigration New Zealand website | Day 1 |
| 2 | Submit your EOI online (no documents required) | Day 1 |
| 3 | EOI enters the pool (valid for 6 months) | Ongoing |
| 4 | INZ reviews and selects qualifying EOIs | Days to weeks |
| 5 | Post-selection checks by INZ | ∼2 weeks |
| 6 | ITA issued — you receive email notification | After checks |
| 7 | Submit full application with all documents + pay fee (NZD $6,450) | Within 4 months of ITA |
| 8 | INZ processes your full application | 6–12 months |
Pro tip: Start gathering your documents before you receive the ITA. Police clearances from multiple countries and medical examinations can take weeks to arrange, and the 4-month clock starts ticking immediately.
The SMC 6-Point System Explained (2026)
The Skilled Migrant Category uses a points-based system. You need a minimum of 6 points, claimed from one skill category (qualification, occupational registration, or income) plus additional points from New Zealand skilled work experience. Points from different skill categories cannot be combined.
Qualification Points
| Qualification Level | Points |
|---|---|
| Doctoral degree (Level 10) | 6 |
| Master’s degree (Level 9) | 5 |
| Bachelor Honours / Postgrad Diploma (Level 8) | 4 |
| Bachelor’s degree / Postgrad Certificate (Level 7) | 3 |
Income Points (Median Wage: NZD $35.00/hour from 9 March 2026)
| Income Level | Hourly Rate | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 3× median wage | ~NZD $105.00/hr | 6 |
| 2× median wage | ~NZD $70.00/hr | 4 |
| 1.5× median wage | ~NZD $52.50/hr | 3 |
NZ Occupational Registration Points
| Training Required for Registration | Points |
|---|---|
| 6+ years of training | 6 |
| 5 years of training | 5 |
| 4 years of training | 4 |
| 2 years of training | 3 |
Bonus Points: NZ Skilled Work Experience
| NZ Experience | Additional Points |
|---|---|
| 36 months in past 60 months | +3 |
| 24 months in past 48 months | +2 |
| 12 months in past 24 months | +1 |
Example: A software engineer with a bachelor’s degree (3 points) and 24 months of NZ work experience (+2 points) reaches 5 points — not enough. But with a master’s degree (5 points) plus 12 months NZ experience (+1 point), they reach 6 points and qualify.
Documents You Need After Receiving Your ITA
Once you receive your ITA, the 4-month countdown begins. Here is every document category you will need to prepare:
Identity & Personal Documents
- Valid passport (for you and all included family members)
- Birth certificates
- Marriage or relationship evidence (if including a partner)
Medical Certificates
- Chest X-ray or full medical examination — must be less than 3 months old when received by INZ
- Book appointments early: medical slots in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch fill up quickly during peak season
Police Clearances
- Required for everyone aged 17 or older included in the application
- Must be less than 6 months old at time of application
- Required from every country where you have lived for 12+ months in the last 10 years
- Must cover your entire criminal history, not just the last 10 years
Warning: Police clearances from countries like India, Pakistan, and Nigeria can take 6–8 weeks. If you have lived in multiple countries, start requesting clearances before your ITA arrives.
English Language Evidence
- IELTS, PTE Academic, TOEFL iBT, or Cambridge results
- Test results must be less than 2 years old
- Exempt if you are a citizen of the UK, Ireland, USA, Canada, or Australia
Employment & Qualification Evidence
- Certified copies of degrees, diplomas, and transcripts
- Current employment agreement
- Payslips (typically 3–6 months)
- Occupational registration (if claiming registration points)
- NZQA qualification assessment (for overseas qualifications)
How Long Does It Take? Realistic Timeline
The total timeline from EOI submission to resident visa approval typically ranges from 12 to 24 months. Here is a realistic breakdown:
| Phase | Duration |
|---|---|
| EOI in pool (awaiting selection) | Days to 6 months |
| Post-selection checks by INZ | ∼2 weeks |
| ITA window to submit application | 4 months (deadline) |
| INZ processing of full application | 6–12 months |
| Total (typical) | 12–24 months |
Common Reasons Applications Are Declined
Understanding why applications fail can help you avoid the same mistakes. These are the most common reasons for rejection at each stage:
At the EOI Stage (no ITA issued)
- Insufficient points — not reaching the 6-point threshold
- Occupation not classified at the required skill level
- Not meeting base eligibility (age, health, or character)
- Note: There is no right to appeal if your EOI does not result in an ITA
At the Application Stage (after ITA)
- Incomplete documentation — missing forms, outdated certificates, or inconsistent information
- Falsified information — treated extremely seriously and can result in a multi-year ban
- NZQA assessment mismatch — overseas qualifications not recognized at the level claimed in the EOI
- Insufficient income evidence — payslips or tax records don’t support the income claimed
- Character concerns — criminal history, prior visa overstays, or outstanding deportation orders
- Medical grounds — health conditions that could impose significant costs on NZ’s public health system
- Employment not genuine — inability to prove the skilled employment is real and ongoing
- Expired ITA — failing to submit within the 4-month window
What’s Changing in August 2026: Two New Pathways
Immigration New Zealand has announced significant changes to the SMC effective August 2026. These are the most substantial updates since the 6-point system was introduced:
New Pathway 1: Skilled Work Experience
- For migrants in skilled roles (skill levels 1–3) with at least 5 years of directly relevant work experience
- Must include 2 years in New Zealand earning at least 1.1× the median wage
- No formal qualification required — experience alone qualifies
New Pathway 2: Trades and Technician
- For migrants in specified trades/technician roles (construction, engineering, automotive, electrical)
- Must hold a relevant Level 4 or higher qualification with at least 4 years post-qualification experience
- Must include 18 months in New Zealand at or above the median wage
Other August 2026 Changes
- Reduced NZ work experience requirements: Maximum reduced from 3 years to 2 years for most pathways
- NZ qualification bonus: +1 additional point for qualifications completed in New Zealand
- Simplified wage thresholds: Only need to meet the median wage that applied when you started your qualifying NZ work
- English test validity extended: 5 years (up from 2) for applicants with recognised NZ occupational registration
What this means: If you are a tradesperson or experienced professional without a university degree, the August 2026 changes may open a residence pathway that currently does not exist for you. Monitor the official INZ announcement for confirmed implementation details.
NZ Immigration by the Numbers (2025–2026)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total visa decisions (2025) | 1,000,000+ |
| Visitor visa approval rate | 89% |
| Student visa approval rate | 91% |
| AEWV (work visa) approval rate | 91% |
| Net migration gain (2025 estimate) | ~14,200 |
| Immigration median wage (from 9 March 2026) | NZD $35.00/hour |
| Minimum wage (from 1 April 2026) | NZD $23.95/hour |
| SMC application fee (family) | NZD $6,450 |
Travel Documents for Your NZ Journey
The ITA and residence application process is separate from travel document requirements. However, if you are travelling to New Zealand to take up employment before applying for residence, or if you need to travel during the application process, you will need proper documentation:
- Proof of onward or return travel: Airlines flying to New Zealand require evidence of intent to depart. A dummy flight ticket or temporary reservation satisfies this requirement without committing to a non-refundable fare.
- Accommodation evidence: A hotel booking confirmation demonstrates your accommodation plans to immigration officers.
- Travel itinerary: A detailed day-by-day travel itinerary can strengthen your visa application by showing a clear, structured travel plan.
- Financial evidence: At least NZD $1,000 per month of stay (or NZD $400/month if accommodation is prepaid).
- Passport validity: Must be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure date from New Zealand.
- New Zealand Traveller Declaration (NZTD): All travellers must complete this before arrival.
Pro tip: If you are already in New Zealand on an AEWV and applying for SMC residence, you do not need flight reservations for the residence application itself. However, if you are applying for a visitor visa to enter NZ initially, a free dummy ticket from MyJet24 is the most cost-effective way to show proof of onward travel.
5 Expert Tips for a Successful NZ Residence Application
- Start document collection before the ITA: Police clearances and medical exams take weeks. Begin as soon as your EOI is in the pool. The 4-month ITA window goes faster than you think.
- Get your NZQA assessment early: If your qualifications are from outside New Zealand, have them assessed by the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) before submitting your EOI. A mismatch between your claimed and assessed qualification level is a top rejection reason.
- Keep your employment consistent: INZ verifies that your employment is genuine and ongoing. Changing jobs during the application process can create complications. If a job change is unavoidable, notify INZ immediately.
- Be completely honest: Falsified information is treated as a serious character issue. It does not just cause a declined application — it can result in a ban from future New Zealand immigration applications.
- Monitor the August 2026 changes: If you are close to the 6-point threshold but not quite there, the new pathways launching in August 2026 may offer an alternative route. Do not rush an application that may qualify more easily under the updated rules.
Frequently Asked Questions
These are the most common questions about the New Zealand Invitation to Apply process, answered based on official Immigration New Zealand guidance.