Cryptocurrency investing in New Zealand has matured significantly. Several regulated platforms allow NZ investors to buy, sell, and hold crypto — and IRD has clear guidance on how it’s taxed.
The most accessible NZ crypto platforms are Easy Crypto NZ (best for NZ beginners), Binance (widest coin selection, lowest fees), and Independent Reserve (VASP registered, good for larger amounts). All crypto gains in NZ are taxable as income — IRD treats crypto as property, not currency. Bitcoin and Ethereum are the most appropriate for portfolio inclusion. Limit crypto to 1–5% of total portfolio if including it.
NZ Crypto Regulatory Environment
New Zealand does not have a comprehensive crypto-specific regulatory framework. Key points:
- VASP registration: Virtual Asset Service Providers must register with the Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) under the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Act
- FMA oversight: Crypto exchanges operating as financial services businesses must comply with some FMA requirements
- No crypto ETF via PIE: There are no NZ PIE fund-structured crypto investment options — all crypto investing is done directly through exchanges
- IRD tax guidance: IRD has issued detailed guidance treating crypto as property
Best Crypto Exchanges for NZ Investors (2026)
| Exchange | Type | Best for | NZ registration | Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Easy Crypto NZ | NZ-based broker | Beginners, simple BTC/ETH buying | VASP registered | 1.0–1.5% spread |
| Independent Reserve | AU-based exchange (NZ accessible) | Larger amounts, AUD/NZD pairs | VASP registered | 0.1–0.5% |
| Binance | Global exchange | Altcoins, lower fees, advanced trading | DIA registered | 0.1% (0.075% with BNB) |
| Swyftx | AU-based, NZ accessible | Mid-range investors | Not NZ VASP | 0.6% |
| Kraken | US-based | Advanced traders | Not NZ VASP | 0.16–0.26% |
Easy Crypto NZ
Easy Crypto is a NZ-founded platform (Christchurch) operating as a crypto broker rather than an exchange. You don’t trade against other users — Easy Crypto buys and sells from its own liquidity.
How it works:
- Enter the amount of NZD you want to spend
- Select the crypto (Bitcoin, Ethereum, and 100+ others)
- Pay via bank transfer or POLi
- Crypto delivered to your external wallet (or Easy Crypto wallet)
Pros: No signup complexity, NZ-based support, VASP registered, very simple UX Cons: Spread of 1–1.5% is higher than exchange trading fees; not suitable for frequent traders
Independent Reserve
An Australian exchange with NZ customers. Direct NZD bank deposits accepted. Better pricing than Easy Crypto for larger amounts ($5,000+). OTC desk available for large trades.
What Crypto to Consider (and What to Avoid)
For NZ investors considering crypto as a small portfolio allocation:
| Asset | What it is | Risk level |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) | Digital store of value, fixed supply | High, but lowest in crypto |
| Ethereum (ETH) | Smart contract platform | High |
| Altcoins (SOL, ADA, etc.) | Smaller platforms, higher speculation | Very high |
| Stablecoins (USDC, USDT) | USD-pegged, yield-bearing | Low price risk, counterparty risk |
| Memecoins (DOGE, SHIB) | No utility, pure speculation | Extreme |
For a first-time NZ crypto investor: Bitcoin and/or Ethereum only. Avoid altcoins and memecoins — the vast majority have destroyed wealth.
Crypto Tax in New Zealand
IRD’s position is clear: all cryptocurrency is taxable property in NZ. Unlike shares (which may escape capital gains tax outside the bright-line), crypto is taxed on every gain.
What’s taxable:
| Event | Taxable? |
|---|---|
| Selling crypto for NZD | ✅ Yes — gain is income |
| Trading BTC for ETH | ✅ Yes — disposal of BTC at market value |
| Spending crypto on goods/services | ✅ Yes — disposal at market value |
| Receiving crypto as payment | ✅ Yes — income at market value on receipt |
| Mining crypto | ✅ Yes — income at market value when received |
| Receiving staking rewards | ✅ Yes — income at receipt |
| Gifting crypto | ✅ Yes — disposal at market value |
| HODLing (just holding) | ❌ No — unrealised gains not taxed |
How crypto gains are taxed:
Gains are taxed as income at your marginal rate (up to 39%). There is no PIE structure, no FIF threshold exemption, and no 12-month CGT discount (unlike Australia).
Example:
- Buy 0.1 BTC at NZD $60,000 → cost: $6,000
- Sell 0.1 BTC at NZD $90,000 → proceeds: $9,000
- Taxable gain: $3,000 — taxed at marginal rate (e.g., 33% = $990 tax)
Record-keeping: IRD requires you to track the NZD value of every crypto transaction (purchase, sale, swap, receipt). Use a crypto tax tool like Koinly, CryptoTaxCalculator, or CoinTracker — these integrate with major exchanges and generate an IRD-compatible tax report.
Crypto in an NZ Investment Portfolio
Most financial advisers suggest limiting crypto to a small satellite position (1–5% of portfolio) if including it at all. The reasons:
Arguments for including crypto:
- Bitcoin has low correlation to shares (sometimes — but this varies)
- Historical return profile has been high (with extreme volatility)
- Growing institutional adoption and fixed supply (Bitcoin)
Arguments against:
- Extreme volatility — Bitcoin has fallen 80%+ multiple times
- No intrinsic cash flow (no dividends, no earnings to value against)
- Regulatory risk in NZ and globally remains
- Tax treatment is unfavourable vs PIE funds (marginal rate, every disposal)
- No NZ PIE or supervised structure — no SIPO, no Crown guarantee
The NZ investor position: A 2–5% Bitcoin allocation is defensible for investors with strong conviction and who understand the risk. More than 5–10% in any crypto is speculation, not investing.
How to Securely Hold Crypto
Once purchased, crypto can be held:
On the exchange (custodial):
- Convenient, but exchange hacks and failures are a real risk
- Not your keys, not your coins (the crypto saying)
- Appropriate for small amounts or active trading
In a personal wallet (self-custody):
- Hardware wallet (Ledger, Trezor): Physical device stores private keys offline. Best for long-term holders of meaningful amounts.
- Software wallet: App on your phone/computer. Convenient but less secure.
For any crypto holding over NZD $1,000: consider a hardware wallet. Ledger Nano S Plus (~$150) or Trezor Model One (~$100) are the standard options.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is crypto legal in NZ? Yes. Buying, selling, and holding cryptocurrency is legal in NZ. There are no restrictions on NZ residents using registered crypto exchanges.
Do I have to declare crypto on my tax return? Yes. All crypto gains must be declared in your IR3. Many people fail to do this — IRD has been increasing its crypto compliance focus and shares data with exchanges.
Can I put crypto in KiwiSaver? No. KiwiSaver funds cannot invest in crypto.
Does the $50,000 FIF threshold apply to crypto? No. FIF applies to overseas shares. Crypto is taxed under separate IRD property rules, not FIF.