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Working Holiday NZ 2026 — Finance and Money Guide

Updated

A working holiday in New Zealand is one of the most popular choices for young people from the UK, Germany, Japan, South Korea, France, Ireland, Canada, the United States, and many other countries. Getting your finances sorted in the first week makes a real difference to how much you take home.

Quick answer

Three things to do in your first week: (1) open a NZ bank account, (2) apply for an IRD number, (3) give your employer the right tax code (usually M). If your employer auto-enrols you in KiwiSaver, opt out within 56 days — you can claim a refund of contributions when you leave, but employer contributions will not be refunded.

Working Holiday Visa NZ — Who’s Eligible?

NZ has bilateral working holiday agreements with over 40 countries. Key ones include:

CountryMax stayAge limitNotes
United Kingdom23 months35Extended from 12 months (post-Brexit deal)
Germany12 months30Extendable to 23 months in some circumstances
France12 months30
Ireland12 months30
Japan12 months30
South Korea12 months30
Canada12 months35
United States12 months30
Netherlands12 months30
China12 months30Quota applies

Check Immigration NZ for the current full list and quota availability.


Step 1 — Open a NZ Bank Account

Open a NZ bank account as soon as possible after arrival. You need it to:

  • Receive wages from your employer
  • Apply for your IRD number online
  • Access NZ payment systems (EFTPOS, internet banking)

Fastest options for working holiday visitors:

BankHowNotes
ASBVia mobile appCan be opened overseas before arrival
ANZIn-branch or onlineBring passport and visa
KiwibankIn-branch (NZ Post)Often quickest in-person option
WestpacIn-branch or online
BNZIn-branch

Bring your passport, working holiday visa stamp/evidence, and proof of address (a hostel or accommodation letter is usually accepted for new arrivals).

See our full guide to opening a NZ bank account before you arrive.


Step 2 — Apply for an IRD Number

Your IRD number is your NZ tax number. Without it, your employer must tax you at 45% (the no-declaration rate) until it’s issued.

How to apply:

  • Online via the IRD website (myIR) — requires a NZ bank account number and passport details
  • Takes 1–3 working days online

Working holiday visa holders are entitled to an IRD number. You do not need a permanent or residency visa — your working holiday visa is sufficient.


Step 3 — Choose the Right Tax Code

When you start work, complete a IR330 tax code declaration and give it to your employer.

Your situationTax code
One job onlyM
Second or additional jobS
No NZ student loanNo SL suffix needed

The M tax code means your employer deducts the correct amount of income tax. Working holiday visitors on M code typically pay the same PAYE rates as NZ residents:

Income (annual NZD)Tax rate
Up to $14,00010.5%
$14,001–$48,00017.5%
$48,001–$70,00030%
$70,001–$180,00033%
Over $180,00039%

KiwiSaver on a Working Holiday — What to Do

Should you join KiwiSaver?

For most working holiday visitors, opting out of KiwiSaver makes financial sense. Here’s why:

  • Your employer will auto-enrol you unless you opt out within 56 days of starting
  • You can only access KiwiSaver money at age 65 (unless buying first home in NZ, or significant financial hardship)
  • When you leave NZ permanently, you can claim a KiwiSaver refund — but only your own contributions and investment returns, not employer contributions
  • Employer contributions (3% of your salary) are not refundable when you leave NZ on a temporary visa

The maths: If you contribute 3% of a $60,000 salary for 12 months, you contribute ~$1,800. You’ll get this back (plus earnings) when you leave. But your employer contributes another $1,800 that stays in the fund forever — it won’t be refunded to you.

How to opt out

  1. Complete the KiwiSaver opt-out form (KS10) — available from IRD or your KiwiSaver provider
  2. Submit to IRD within 56 days of your enrolment date
  3. Any contributions deducted before opt-out are refunded

If you’re planning to stay in NZ long-term or apply for residency, joining KiwiSaver makes more sense — the employer contribution and government top-up (if eligible) are valuable.


Tax at the End of Your Working Holiday

Working holiday visitors are NZ tax residents if they spend more than 183 days in NZ in a 12-month period. As a tax resident, you may be entitled to a tax refund at the end of the year if:

  • You worked for only part of the year (income was lower than the annual equivalent)
  • You had multiple jobs with different rates applied
  • You had too much tax withheld

How to claim a tax refund:

  1. File an IR3 tax return via the myIR portal at ird.govt.nz
  2. IRD will assess your income and refund any overpaid tax
  3. Refund goes directly to your NZ bank account

Many working holiday visitors are owed $200–$800+ at year end due to seasonal work patterns — it’s worth filing.


Seasonal Work — Horticulture and Agriculture

NZ’s Recognised Seasonal Employer (RSE) scheme brings workers from Pacific Island nations specifically for horticulture. Working holiday visa holders can also find seasonal work in:

  • Hawke’s Bay apple orchards (March–May)
  • Marlborough grape harvest (February–April)
  • Bay of Plenty kiwifruit (May–July)
  • Canterbury cherry and stone fruit (December–February)
  • Southland onion harvest (March–May)

Pay rates: Seasonal work typically pays the minimum wage ($23.15/hour as of April 2026). Some orchards offer piece rates (pay per bin) which can significantly increase earnings for fast pickers.

Accommodation: Many orchards provide on-site or nearby accommodation — deducted from pay. Check deductions before accepting.


Cost of Living on a Working Holiday

ExpenseMonthly estimate (NZD)
Rent (flat share, city)$900 – $1,400
Groceries$300 – $450
Phone (prepay)$15 – $30
Transport (bus pass or car)$100 – $400
Eating out / entertainment$200 – $500
Total$1,515 – $2,780

Working holiday minimum wage income (40 hrs/wk): ~$3,800/month before tax (~$3,200 after tax on M code).

Budget for $1,500–$2,000/month in expenses and you can save $1,000–$1,500/month in a city — more if you’re doing seasonal work with cheap or free accommodation.

See our cost of living NZ guide for city-by-city breakdowns.


Leaving NZ — Financial Checklist for Working Holiday Visitors

When your working holiday ends:

TaskNotes
File a NZ tax returnClaim any tax refund owed — worth doing even after you leave
Apply for KiwiSaver withdrawalNotify your KiwiSaver provider and IRD — your own contributions + returns will be refunded
Close NZ bank accountOr keep open for the tax refund — easier to receive refund via NZ account
Cancel any direct debits or subscriptionsPhone plan, streaming services, etc.

The KiwiSaver withdrawal for departing temporary visa holders typically takes 4–6 weeks after you lodge the application.