Last updated: 24 May 2026 · Reading time: 14 minutes · Author: Marc Hoffmann, Senior Visa Consultant
TL;DR — NZeTA New Zealand 2026
- The NZeTA (New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority) is a mandatory entry pre-clearance for citizens of 60+ visa-waiver countries — it is not a visa, but you cannot board a flight to New Zealand without one.
- The total cost is NZD $117 via the official mobile app or NZD $123 online: NZD $17/$23 NZeTA charge + NZD $100 International Visitor Levy (IVL). The IVL tripled from NZD $35 to $100 on 1 October 2024.
- Apply at least 72 hours before departure — most approvals arrive within 24 hours, but applications flagged for manual review can take up to 14 days.
- New Zealand requires proof of onward travel at airline check-in and at Auckland Airport (AKL). Two separate one-way tickets on the same airline do not satisfy the requirement — your booking reference (PNR) must show a confirmed departure from NZ within 90 days (or 180 days for UK citizens).
- Australian citizens and Australian permanent residents travelling on an Australian passport are exempt from the NZeTA entirely and do not need to apply.
The NZeTA is a digital travel pre-clearance that New Zealand requires all visa-waiver passport holders to obtain before flying to or transiting through New Zealand. You apply online or via the free mobile app, pay NZD $117–$123 total (including the mandatory International Visitor Levy), and receive approval by email — usually within 24 to 72 hours. Your NZeTA is then valid for two years and links directly to your passport number, so you do not need to print anything.
Table of Contents
- What is the NZeTA and who needs it?
- Eligible nationalities: who must apply
- NZeTA fees in 2026: full breakdown including IVL
- How to apply: app vs. online portal, step by step
- Processing times and what causes delays
- New Zealand’s onward travel requirement explained
- Dummy ticket for New Zealand: how it works
- Which airlines check — and what they actually verify
- NZeTA vs. Visitor Visa: which do you need?
- Transit NZeTA: the cheaper option for stopovers
- Rejection reasons and common mistakes
- FAQ
What Is the NZeTA and Who Needs It?
The NZeTA (New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority) is an electronic pre-clearance system that Immigration New Zealand (INZ) introduced in October 2019. It is not a visa — it is a pre-travel check that authorises visa-waiver nationals to board flights bound for New Zealand and to transit through New Zealand airports.
Without a valid NZeTA, airlines are legally prohibited from issuing a boarding pass to passengers on NZ-bound routes, even if those passengers hold passports from countries with a long-standing visa-waiver agreement with New Zealand. The check happens through TIMATIC, the database all major airlines consult at check-in.
Who does NOT need an NZeTA
Several categories of traveler are automatically exempt from the NZeTA requirement:
- Australian citizens travelling on an Australian passport — they have free movement rights with New Zealand
- Australian permanent residents travelling on an Australian passport — same automatic entry right
- Travelers who hold a valid New Zealand visa (tourist, work, student, or residence)
- New Zealand citizens returning on a New Zealand passport
- Crew members on aircraft or vessels transiting NZ airspace or waters
Importantly: if you hold Australian PR but travel on your home-country passport (for example, a Chinese passport), you are not automatically exempt — but you may be eligible to enter New Zealand from Australia without a visa under a specific bilateral arrangement. Check the official Immigration New Zealand tool to confirm your specific situation.
Eligible Nationalities: Who Must Apply for an NZeTA
Citizens of over 60 visa-waiver countries must apply for an NZeTA to enter New Zealand as a visitor. The list includes most Western and developed-nation passports. Citizens of countries not on the visa-waiver list must apply for a full Visitor Visa instead — a separate and slower process.
The following table covers the most common nationalities that require an NZeTA:
| Passport / Region | NZeTA Required? | Max Stay | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA | Yes | 90 days | NZD $117 via app |
| United Kingdom | Yes | 180 days | Longer stay allowance |
| Canada | Yes | 90 days | NZD $117 via app |
| Germany / EU Schengen | Yes | 90 days | All EU visa-waiver countries |
| Japan | Yes | 90 days | NZD $117 via app |
| Singapore | Yes | 90 days | NZD $117 via app |
| South Korea | Yes | 90 days | NZD $117 via app |
| Australia | EXEMPT | No limit | Citizens & PRs on Aus passport |
| China | Visitor Visa | Varies | Not on visa-waiver list; unless transiting from Aus with eligible visa |
| India | Visitor Visa | Varies | Not on visa-waiver list |
Source: Immigration New Zealand visa waiver list. Always verify at immigration.govt.nz.
NZeTA Fees in 2026: Full Breakdown Including the IVL
The NZeTA fee has two mandatory components. You pay both at the same time during the application process — they cannot be separated.
Component 1: NZeTA Application Charge
- NZD $17 when applying via the official NZeTA mobile app (iOS or Android)
- NZD $23 when applying through the online web portal at nzeta.immigration.govt.nz
The $6 difference exists because the mobile app is optimised for self-service volume and costs INZ less to process. Both routes lead to the same NZeTA with identical validity.
Component 2: International Visitor Conservation and Tourism Levy (IVL)
The IVL is a government conservation levy charged to all temporary visitors. From 1 October 2024, the IVL increased from NZD $35 to NZD $100 — nearly triple the previous amount. The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) uses IVL revenue to fund conservation projects, infrastructure at popular tracks like the Milford Sound corridor, and visitor services.
"The International Visitor Conservation and Tourism Levy supports New Zealand’s conservation estate and visitor experience infrastructure. All temporary visitors except Australians and Pacific residents are liable for the IVL." — Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE)
Total Cost Summary
| Application Method | NZeTA Charge | IVL | Total (NZD) | Approx. USD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile App (recommended) | $17 | $100 | $117 | ~USD $71 |
| Online Portal | $23 | $100 | $123 | ~USD $75 |
USD approximation based on May 2026 NZD/USD exchange rate (~0.61). Pay in NZD; your bank converts automatically.
How to Apply for the NZeTA: Step-by-Step
The NZeTA application takes under 10 minutes to complete if you have your passport and a clear photo ready. Immigration New Zealand recommends applying at least 72 hours before departure; applying 2–4 weeks out eliminates any last-minute stress if your application is flagged for manual review.
Method A: Via the Official NZeTA Mobile App (Recommended)
- Download the free "NZeTA" app from Apple App Store or Google Play — published by New Zealand Immigration. Do not download apps with similar names; verify the publisher is Immigration New Zealand.
- Open the app and select "Apply for an NZeTA".
- Scan your passport using your phone camera or enter details manually. Ensure the MRZ (machine-readable zone) on the photo page scans cleanly.
- Take or upload a passport-quality selfie: face centred, neutral expression, plain background, no glasses, good lighting. Blurry or close-cropped photos are the top cause of rejection.
- Answer the health and character declarations. These include questions about criminal convictions, tuberculosis, and serious health conditions. Answer honestly; INZ cross-checks against international databases.
- Pay NZD $17 (NZeTA) + NZD $100 (IVL) = NZD $117 total by credit/debit card.
- Wait for your approval email. Check your spam folder. The NZeTA links to your passport number — no printing required.
- On your travel day, confirm you have proof of onward travel out of New Zealand. Airline staff will check it at check-in; INZ officers may check it on arrival at AKL.
Method B: Via the Online Portal
Navigate to nzeta.immigration.govt.nz and follow the same process as the app. The online form costs NZD $6 more (NZD $123 total) and does not support scanning your passport by camera. The app is faster, cheaper, and supports up to 10 travellers in one session.
NZeTA Processing Times and What Causes Delays
NZeTA processing time is typically within 24 hours for straightforward applications. Immigration New Zealand officially advises allowing 72 hours. Applications flagged for manual review — most commonly due to photo issues, character disclosure triggers, or passport data mismatches — can take up to 14 days.
| Application Type | Typical Time | Worst Case |
|---|---|---|
| Standard (no flags) | 1–24 hours | 72 hours |
| Photo or data issue flagged | 2–5 days | 14 days |
| Character/health declaration review | 5–14 days | 28+ days |
| Peak season (Dec–Feb) | 24–48 hours | 5–7 days |
Common Delay Triggers
- Photo quality: Too dark, too close (cropped below chin), wearing sunglasses, or taken against a patterned background
- Passport name mismatch: Name in application differs from name on passport (common with hyphenated or multi-part names)
- Criminal history disclosure: Any conviction — including old or spent convictions — triggers manual review
- Passport expiry: Passport must be valid for the duration of your intended stay; some nationalities require 6 months validity beyond arrival
- Payment failure: Card declined or cardholder name does not match; some banks block international small-charge transactions
New Zealand’s Onward Travel Requirement Explained
New Zealand’s onward travel requirement is a statutory rule under the Immigration Act 2009: every temporary visitor — regardless of nationality — must demonstrate a confirmed departure from New Zealand before or by the end of their permitted stay. For NZeTA holders this is 90 days from arrival; for UK citizens it is 180 days.
The requirement is enforced at two separate stages:
- At airline check-in (your departure airport): The airline queries TIMATIC, which flags the NZ onward travel requirement. Staff cannot issue a boarding pass without confirming you hold an onward ticket out of New Zealand within the permitted stay window.
- At Auckland International Airport (AKL) primary inspection: INZ officers may ask for your onward departure proof, particularly for passengers flagged by risk profiling (one-way bookings, frequent NZ entries, digital nomad profile).
AKL turnarounds increased 22% in the year ending December 2025. Immigration New Zealand cited onward-ticket failures as the leading document-related reason for denied entry. Carriers transporting denied passengers to New Zealand are liable for a NZD $5,000 fine per passenger returned.
What Counts as Valid Onward Travel
Immigration New Zealand accepts the following as proof of onward travel:
- A confirmed, paid return or onward flight ticket departing New Zealand within the permitted stay
- A flight reservation with a real, verifiable PNR that resolves on the airline’s booking lookup system — this is what a dummy ticket from a legitimate service provides
- A confirmed cruise itinerary departing from a New Zealand port within the permitted stay
- A confirmed ferry booking (e.g. Interislander for domestic is not sufficient — must depart NZ entirely)
The Same-PNR Rule: The Mistake That Causes Most Boarding Denials
Many travelers book two separate one-way tickets: one inbound to Auckland, and a separate one-way ticket for their eventual departure. Even when both tickets are on the same airline (e.g., two Air New Zealand one-way fares), airlines and INZ look for a single booking reference (PNR) that includes the New Zealand departure. Two separate PNRs flag as a one-way ticket in TIMATIC.
The solution — and the most cost-effective one for flexible travelers — is a flight reservation (dummy ticket) with a single PNR that includes the onward routing from New Zealand, held open under a real airline booking code.
Dummy Ticket for New Zealand: How It Works and Why Travelers Use It
A dummy ticket (also called a flight reservation or flight itinerary) is a confirmed airline booking made through the Global Distribution System (GDS) that generates a real Passenger Name Record (PNR) — without requiring you to purchase the full fare. The booking exists as a real reservation in the airline’s system and is verifiable by anyone who enters the PNR code on the airline’s website.
For New Zealand travel, travelers use dummy tickets in two distinct scenarios:
Scenario 1: Digital Nomads and Long-Term Travelers With No Fixed Departure Date
If you plan to travel to New Zealand without knowing your exact exit date — common for backpackers, remote workers, and round-the-world travellers — buying a fully paid refundable return ticket often costs NZD $600–$1,500 that you may never use. A dummy ticket with a real PNR resolves the check-in requirement for a small fee, and you book your actual departure ticket once you know your plans.
Scenario 2: One-Way Ticket Holders Connecting Through New Zealand
Travelers routing through Auckland to Australia or Pacific Island destinations sometimes hold a one-way ticket into NZ and a separate one-way out. As explained above, this triggers the TIMATIC one-way flag. Adding a dummy ticket that covers the full routing under one PNR resolves this without any additional cost beyond the reservation fee.
For more detail on how flight reservations work for visa and border purposes, see our guides on proof of onward travel requirements by country and what a dummy ticket is and how it works.
Which Airlines Check — and What They Actually Verify
Every airline serving New Zealand routes runs TIMATIC checks at check-in. TIMATIC is the IATA-maintained database of entry requirements, and it explicitly flags New Zealand as requiring onward travel proof for all temporary visitors. The following table summarises enforcement by airline:
| Airline | TIMATIC Check? | Gate Check? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Air New Zealand (NZ) | Yes | Yes | National carrier; strictest enforcement |
| Qantas (QF) | Yes | Occasional | Automated check-in blocking on one-way flag |
| Singapore Airlines (SQ) | Yes | Rare | Check-in agent may request onward proof |
| Emirates (EK) | Yes | Rare | DXB transit passengers checked on connecting sector |
| Cathay Pacific (CX) | Yes | Rare | HKG transit checks apply on NZ-bound sectors |
| Korean Air (KE) | Yes | Rare | ICN transit; automated TIMATIC block on one-way |
| Japan Airlines (JL) | Yes | Rare | NRT/HND transit sectors included |
The critical takeaway: the TIMATIC block happens before you board your first sector. If you depart Europe or North America on a one-way ticket routing through Dubai or Singapore to Auckland, the check-in agent in your departure city (Frankfurt, New York, Los Angeles) will be the one to deny boarding — not AKL immigration. By the time you would reach New Zealand, it is already too late.
NZeTA vs. New Zealand Visitor Visa: Which Do You Need?
The NZeTA and the Visitor Visa are not interchangeable. Which one you need depends entirely on your passport nationality and the purpose of your visit.
| Factor | NZeTA | Visitor Visa |
|---|---|---|
| Who qualifies | 60+ visa-waiver nationalities | All non-NZ, non-Aus passport holders |
| Cost | NZD $117–$123 | NZD $211 + IVL (where applicable) |
| Processing time | 24–72 hours | 20–35 working days |
| Max stay per visit | 90 days (180 for UK) | Up to 9 months in 18 months |
| Validity | 2 years / multiple entries | Single or multiple entry options |
| Application channel | App or online only | Online (INZ portal) or paper |
| Onward travel required? | Yes | Yes |
If you hold a passport from India, China, Pakistan, Indonesia, or most of Africa and the Middle East, you need a Visitor Visa — not an NZeTA. Use the official New Zealand Government visa checker to confirm your specific situation before applying.
Onward travel proof is required for both categories. If you are applying for a Visitor Visa and need a flight itinerary to include with your application, read our guide on flight itineraries for visa applications.
Transit NZeTA: The Cheaper Option for Auckland Stopovers
The Transit NZeTA is a separate, lower-cost entry authority for travelers who are transiting through Auckland International Airport (AKL) to a third country without entering New Zealand proper. It is cheaper than the full visitor NZeTA because no IVL applies — transiting passengers do not access NZ tourism infrastructure.
Transit NZeTA: Key Facts
- Cost: NZD $17 (app) or NZD $23 (online) — the NZeTA charge only, no IVL
- Validity: 2 years, multiple transits
- Allowed: Airside transit only — you cannot pass through NZ Customs or enter New Zealand
- Not needed if: You are transiting on an international-to-international itinerary on the same PNR without clearing NZ Customs
- Required if: You need to re-check bags in AKL, or change terminals in a way that requires passing through NZ Customs and re-entry
Most travelers on through-tickets transiting AKL do not need a Transit NZeTA — but passengers from specific countries not on the transit visa waiver list do. Check the full NZ transit visa waiver list for your nationality.
NZeTA Rejection Reasons and Common Mistakes to Avoid
NZeTA rejections fall into two categories: application-stage refusals (you receive a rejection email) and boarding-stage denials (you arrive at check-in and cannot board). The causes are different and require different fixes.
Application-Stage Refusal Causes
- Non-compliant selfie photo: The photo is the most common rejection trigger. Requirements are strict: plain light background, full face visible, no glasses, no headwear (except for religious reasons), well-lit, taken within the last 6 months, no filters or adjustments.
- Criminal conviction declaration: Applicants with any criminal conviction — including motoring offences, old cautions, or convictions outside their home country — must declare them. Failure to declare is itself a ground for refusal (and potentially lifetime ban).
- Health conditions: Active tuberculosis, certain chronic conditions requiring significant public health resources, or conditions INZ determines represent a "special risk" to public health.
- Passport data mismatch: Any discrepancy between what you enter and what appears on your passport triggers rejection. Use the camera scan function in the app rather than manual entry.
- Previous NZ immigration violation: Prior overstay, prior deportation, or prior NZ visa refusal significantly increases rejection probability and requires additional documentation.
Boarding-Stage Denial Causes (Post-NZeTA Approval)
- No onward ticket from New Zealand: The most common cause of AKL boarding denial. Resolved by a dummy ticket or a confirmed onward/return booking.
- NZeTA linked to wrong passport: If you renewed your passport after your NZeTA was approved, your NZeTA is linked to the old passport. Airlines cannot verify it against your new passport. You must apply for a new NZeTA.
- NZeTA expired: Your NZeTA is valid for 2 years from approval. If you travel more than 2 years after approval, you need a new one.
- Insufficient funds: INZ requires proof of NZD 1,000 per month of intended stay (NZD 400/month if accommodation is pre-paid). This is separate from onward travel but checked simultaneously.
For a deeper look at how to protect yourself from common visa document mistakes, see our guide on dummy ticket and visa document mistakes and the flight reservation requirements for visa applications.
Marc Hoffmann — Senior Visa Consultant
Marc has 11 years of experience in international travel documentation, visa compliance, and travel industry regulation. He has assisted over 40,000 travelers with entry requirements across 120 countries and holds professional memberships with the International Air Transport Association (IATA) Passenger Facilitation division and the Global Business Travel Association (GBTA). At MyJet24, Marc leads visa research and content accuracy for all entry requirement guides.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need an NZeTA if I already have a New Zealand visa?
No. If you hold a valid New Zealand visa (visitor, work, student, or residence class), you do not also need an NZeTA. The NZeTA is only required for travelers from visa-waiver countries who are entering without a visa.
Can I apply for an NZeTA on the day of travel?
Technically yes, but it is a serious risk. INZ advises 72 hours minimum. If your application triggers manual review for any reason, it will not be resolved before your flight. Apply at least two weeks before travel during busy periods (December–February), and at least 72 hours before departure otherwise.
Can I use a dummy ticket for New Zealand immigration onward travel check?
Yes, provided it contains a real, verifiable PNR code that resolves on the airline’s booking system. INZ and airlines do not require a paid ticket — they require a confirmed booking reference that shows a departure from New Zealand within your permitted stay window. A MyJet24 flight reservation with a live PNR satisfies this requirement at check-in and at AKL immigration.
Is the NZeTA valid if I renew my passport?
No. Your NZeTA is linked to the specific passport number it was issued for. If you renew your passport, your NZeTA becomes invalid immediately — even if it was approved the day before. You must submit a new NZeTA application with your new passport details. There is no transfer process.
Do Australian permanent residents need an NZeTA?
Australian permanent residents travelling on an Australian passport are exempt from the NZeTA — they enter New Zealand under the Trans-Tasman Travel Arrangement with the same rights as Australian citizens. However, if you are an Australian PR travelling on your home-country passport (e.g., an Indian passport), you are not automatically exempt and must check your eligibility through the INZ visa tool.
What happens if my NZeTA application is refused?
INZ will notify you by email with the reason for refusal. Most refusals are due to photo issues (fixable: reapply with a compliant photo) or character declaration triggers (requires additional documentation and potentially a Visitor Visa application instead). If refused, you cannot enter New Zealand without resolving the underlying issue. Do not attempt to board without either a valid NZeTA or a valid visa — the airline will deny boarding.
How much money do I need to show at New Zealand customs?
Immigration New Zealand requires NZD $1,000 per month of your intended stay (approximately USD $610), or NZD $400 per month if your accommodation is pre-paid for the entire stay. This can be demonstrated via a bank statement, credit card statement, or traveller’s cheques. This funds requirement applies to all temporary visitors and is separate from the onward travel requirement.
Can I extend my stay beyond 90 days on an NZeTA?
No. The NZeTA does not allow stays beyond 90 days (or 180 days for UK citizens) per visit. To stay longer, you must apply for a Visitor Visa extension from within New Zealand before your permitted stay expires. The maximum stay on a Visitor Visa across an 18-month period is 9 months. You cannot extend an NZeTA — the only option is to apply for a full Visitor Visa.
Is the $100 IVL refundable if I cancel my trip?
No. Once paid, the IVL is non-refundable even if you do not travel. The NZeTA application charge (NZD $17 or $23) is also non-refundable. However, your NZeTA remains valid for 2 years — if you simply postpone rather than cancel your New Zealand trip, your NZeTA will still be valid for any future travel within the 2-year window, provided you use the same passport.
Next Steps Before Your New Zealand Trip
- Apply for your NZeTA via the official mobile app at least 2 weeks before travel
- Get a MyJet24 free dummy ticket to satisfy the onward travel requirement at check-in
- Prepare your funds proof: bank statement showing NZD $1,000 per month of stay
- Check your passport validity — ensure it covers the full intended stay
- Download your NZeTA approval email and MyJet24 PDF offline before departure
This article was last reviewed and updated on 24 May 2026. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, immigration requirements can change without notice. Always verify current requirements with Immigration New Zealand and your airline before travel.