🇳🇿 New Zealand visa for EU citizen citizens
EU citizen passport holders can enter New Zealand visa-free for up to 90 days. No application, no fee, just a passport valid for at least six months.
The verdict
For EU citizen passport holders specifically
EU passport holders get 90 days visa-free in New Zealand. No application needed beforehand. You just show up. That's the good news.
The catch? New Zealand requires an NZeTA (New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority) for visa-waiver entries, even for EU citizens. You apply online via the official New Zealand Immigration website or the NZ Immigration app. It costs NZ$17 for the app application or NZ$23 if done online, and usually comes through within minutes, though allow up to 72 hours. Most EU applicants get rejected because they forget this step, treating it as a truly visa-free entry. Don't be that person. You'll also need to prove you have enough money to support yourself and an onward or return ticket.
New Zealand visa, the full picture
Most nationalities get 3 months on arrival in New Zealand. Some need to apply way ahead.
Who Walks In Visa-Free (and Who Doesn't)
If you're from Australia, you can live and work in NZ indefinitely. For citizens of the US, UK, Canada, and most EU countries, it’s usually a 90-day visa waiver upon arrival. Think of it as a free tourist stamp. You'll typically need to fill out an NZeTA (New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority) before you fly, which costs NZD $23 online or $17 via the app. It's a simple online form, not a visa.
Holders of passports from countries like Singapore, Malaysia, and South Korea also often get 90 days visa-free. Some other nations get a shorter 30-day visa waiver. It’s critical to check the official Immigration New Zealand website for your specific passport before booking flights. If your country isn't on the visa-waiver list, you’ll need to apply for a visitor visa before you travel. This can take weeks, sometimes months. Don't leave it to the last minute.
Stays, Stamps, and Serious Fines
That 90-day tourist stamp isn't always a clean 90 days. For many nationalities, it’s a single-entry allowance. This means if you leave New Zealand, even for a day trip to Fiji, your 90 days are up. You’d need to apply for a new visa or visitor permit to re-enter. Some passports might get an allowance for two entries within a 12-month period, but don't assume this. Always confirm your entry conditions on your visa sticker or at the border.
Overstaying your welcome carries hefty penalties. You could face deportation and bans from re-entering New Zealand for up to 10 years. While specific fines aren't always published for minor overstays, expect them to be substantial, often calculated per day. The authorities track departures rigorously. Getting caught means significant trouble, and it will make any future travel to Australia, New Zealand, or other Commonwealth countries much harder.
Working Remotely on a Tourist Stamp?
Can you work remotely from New Zealand on a visitor visa or visa waiver? Technically, no. The conditions of a visitor visa are for tourism, visiting family, or short-term business meetings. Engaging in remote work for an overseas employer can be a breach of those conditions. However, enforcement is… patchy. Immigration officers are generally focused on people taking local jobs or establishing businesses.
Most digital nomads I know work on their tourist stamp without issue. They don't advertise their work, don't seek local employment, and don't overstay. The risk is real, but often considered low by those who travel this way. If you’re earning money from a foreign company and not impacting the local labour market, you’re unlikely to face scrutiny. But know the rules: if questioned, you're technically not supposed to be working.
What's Changed Recently
Immigration New Zealand has been steadily moving towards digital processing. The NZeTA replaced the old IVL (Immigration Levy) and labels for many nationalities over the last few years. More recently, they've been rolling out an eVisa system. This means your visa might be linked electronically to your passport, rather than a physical sticker.
Fees can fluctuate. The NZeTA fee has seen minor increases. There are also discussions and occasional policy shifts regarding visitor numbers and visa lengths, especially post-pandemic. Always check the Immigration New Zealand website for the most current requirements, fees, and processing times before your trip. They are the definitive source.
How other passports enter New Zealand
The rule changes entirely with the document. Open the row that matches yours.