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ACC Levy Guide NZ 2026 — ACC Earner Levy Rates and How ACC Works

Updated

The ACC earner levy is deducted from every New Zealand employee’s pay alongside PAYE income tax. Most NZ workers see the deduction on their payslip but few understand what it is, how it’s calculated, or what it funds. This guide covers everything.

Quick answer

The ACC earner levy rate for 2025–26 is 1.67 cents per dollar of income, applied to earnings up to $139,892/year. On a $70,000 salary, the levy is $1,169/year ($22.48/week). The maximum annual levy is $2,336 (for any income above $139,892). ACC covers the cost of treatment and income compensation for personal injuries in NZ.

ACC Earner Levy Rates 2025–26

IncomeAnnual ACC LevyWeekly ACC Levy
$30,000$501$9.64
$40,000$668$12.85
$50,000$835$16.06
$60,000$1,002$19.27
$70,000$1,169$22.48
$80,000$1,336$25.69
$90,000$1,503$28.90
$100,000$1,670$32.12
$120,000$2,004$38.54
$139,892+$2,336 (max)$44.92 (max)

Formula: Annual levy = min(gross income, $139,892) × 0.0167


What Is ACC?

The Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) is a New Zealand Crown entity that provides a no-fault personal injury insurance scheme. New Zealand’s ACC scheme is unique globally — it replaces the right to sue for personal injury with guaranteed, government-funded compensation.

What ACC covers:

  • Medical treatment costs (GP visits, hospital, surgery, physio, dentistry for injuries)
  • Weekly compensation for lost income (80% of pre-injury income, up to the scheme maximum)
  • Rehabilitation and retraining
  • Lump-sum payments for permanent impairments
  • Home and vehicle modification for serious injuries
  • 24/7 accident cover — any time, anywhere in NZ

What ACC does NOT cover:

  • Illness or disease (not caused by an accident)
  • Gradual process injuries that are work-related (have specific rules)
  • Elective or cosmetic procedures
  • Mental health conditions not linked to a physical injury (though work-related mental injury has limited cover)

How the ACC System Is Funded

ACC operates across three main accounts, funded by different levies:

AccountFundsLevied On
Earners’ AccountInjuries outside workEmployees (earner levy)
Work AccountWork-related injuriesEmployers (employer levy)
Motor Vehicle AccountRoad accident injuriesMotor vehicle registration + petrol
Non-Earners’ AccountInjuries to non-earners (children, retired)Government (general taxation)
Treatment Injury AccountMedical treatment injuriesGovernment

As an employee, you pay into the Earners’ Account through the earner levy. This covers you for injuries that happen outside work — at home, playing sport, or in a public place.

Your employer separately pays an employer levy into the Work Account (you don’t see this on your payslip). This covers you for work-related injuries.


Earner Levy vs Employer Levy

Earner LevyEmployer Levy
Who paysEmployeeEmployer
How collectedVia PAYE on your payslipEmployer ACC invoice (annual)
Rate (2025–26)1.67%Industry-specific (0.16%–3.21%)
CoversOff-work injuriesWork-related injuries
Cap$139,892 incomeVaries by industry

Employers in high-injury industries (construction, forestry, farming) pay higher employer levy rates. Office workers’ employers pay lower rates.


What Happens When You Make an ACC Claim

If you suffer a personal injury in NZ:

  1. Get treatment: Visit a GP, A&E, or relevant provider. They lodge the ACC claim on your behalf.
  2. Claim is assessed: ACC reviews whether your injury is covered (most are accepted)
  3. If accepted:
    • Medical costs are covered directly
    • If you cannot work: weekly compensation of 80% of your pre-injury income starts after the first week
  4. If declined: You can request a review — ACC’s decisions are reviewable and can be appealed to the District Court

Weekly compensation cap: 80% of income up to the maximum (approximately $129,680/year gross in 2025–26 — around $100,000/year weekly compensation).


ACC for Self-Employed People

If you are self-employed, the levy structure differs:

  • You pay both the earner levy and a work levy (combined into a single levy) through your IRD tax account
  • You must provide your previous year’s income (from your IR3 tax return) to calculate the levy
  • If your income changes significantly, you can apply for an estimate
  • The work levy rate for self-employed is industry-specific

KiwiSaver note: Self-employed people do not get employer KiwiSaver contributions but they do get ACC cover when contributing the levy.


ACC Levy History

ACC reviews levy rates annually. The earner levy rate has changed significantly over the past decade:

YearEarner Levy Rate
2018–191.39%
2019–201.39%
2020–211.39%
2021–221.39%
2022–231.46%
2023–241.53%
2024–251.60%
2025–261.67%

The trend has been gradually upward as medical costs, claim volumes, and the cost of catastrophic injury support increase. ACC levy rates are published annually at acc.co.nz.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ACC levy rate in NZ for 2025–26?

1.67% of gross earnings, applied on income up to $139,892/year. Maximum annual levy: $2,336. The levy is deducted by your employer through PAYE and appears on your payslip.

Is the ACC levy tax-deductible?

No. The ACC earner levy is not deductible from your taxable income. You pay it on your gross income before income tax is applied. It is not a tax — it is a levy for the ACC insurance scheme — but it is compulsory for all employees.

What does ACC cover vs health insurance?

ACC covers treatment and income replacement for personal injuries only — including road accidents, sports injuries, and falls. It does not cover illness or disease (cancer, heart disease, infection). Private health insurance covers illness and may supplement ACC for injuries (covering wait times, specialist access, or costs exceeding ACC funding).

Can I opt out of ACC?

No. ACC cover and the earner levy are compulsory for all NZ employees and self-employed people. There is no opt-out option. The no-fault scheme replaced the right to sue for personal injury in NZ — the trade-off is universal, automatic cover.

Does ACC cover me overseas?

Limited cover applies for NZ residents temporarily overseas — ACC may cover emergency treatment costs for injuries sustained abroad. However, cover is limited and you should have travel insurance for overseas trips. ACC full cover applies from the moment you return to NZ.