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PIE Tax NZ 2026 — Portfolio Investment Entity Tax Explained

Updated

Portfolio Investment Entities (PIEs) — including most KiwiSaver funds, managed funds, and some term deposits — use a special tax regime that taxes investors at their Prescribed Investor Rate (PIR) rather than their marginal income tax rate. For most investors, this results in a lower tax bill than investing directly.

Quick answer

PIE funds (KiwiSaver, most managed funds) tax you at your Prescribed Investor Rate (PIR) — either 10.5%, 17.5%, or 28%. The key benefit: even the top PIR rate is 28%, meaning investors on the 33% or 39% marginal rate save 5–11% on their fund's returns. Tax is deducted by the fund before you receive income. Choosing the correct PIR is your responsibility — using a rate that is too low results in a tax bill at year end.

What Is a PIE?

A Portfolio Investment Entity is a fund or investment vehicle that meets IRD’s criteria to use the PIE tax regime. Most common PIEs in NZ:

  • KiwiSaver funds (all major providers: Milford, Simplicity, Fisher Funds, Booster, etc.)
  • Managed investment funds (through InvestNow, Kernel, Milford, etc.)
  • Listed PIEs (certain NZX-listed funds structured as PIEs)
  • PIE-structured term deposits (some banks offer term deposits in PIE format)

The key distinction from regular investments: PIE income is taxed within the fund at the investor’s PIR before it is distributed or reinvested. You do not declare PIE income on your IR3 (in most cases — see below).


Prescribed Investor Rates (PIR)

There are three PIR rates:

PIRWho qualifies
10.5%Income (from all sources) of $14,000 or less for each of the last 2 years
17.5%Income of $14,001–$48,000 for each of the last 2 years
28%Income of $48,001 or more, OR if you don’t know your rate (default)

The rate is based on your taxable income from the two most recent tax years. Use the lower of the two years if they differ (subject to the income thresholds).

The 28% cap is the key advantage: Regardless of your marginal rate, PIE income is taxed at a maximum of 28%. If you earn $150,000 from employment (marginal rate 33%), your KiwiSaver returns are still only taxed at 28% — saving 5 percentage points.


How to Calculate Your Correct PIR

Step 1: Look at your taxable income in each of the last two tax years (your income after allowable deductions, but before PIE income).

Step 2: If income was $14,000 or below in both years → use 10.5%

Step 3: If income was $48,000 or below in both years → use 17.5%

Step 4: If income exceeded $48,000 in either year → use 28%

Step 5: When in doubt or if income is variable → use 28% (safe default; overpayment is refunded)


Setting Your PIR

You must notify each PIE fund of your PIR. Each provider (KiwiSaver manager, managed fund platform) holds your PIR on file and applies it when calculating your tax.

To update your PIR:

  • KiwiSaver: Contact your provider or update through their online portal
  • InvestNow / Kernel / Sharesies: Update through account settings
  • Bank PIE term deposits: Contact your bank

Review your PIR at the start of each tax year — especially if your income has changed significantly.


What Happens If Your PIR Is Wrong?

PIR Too High

You’ve overpaid tax within the PIE. The overpayment is refunded to you when IRD processes your tax year, typically added to any IR3 refund you receive.

PIR Too Low

You’ve underpaid tax. IRD calculates the shortfall and bills you. This appears on your tax assessment (non-IR3 filers) or IR3 at year end. You pay the difference — there are no penalties for an incorrect PIR as long as you used the rate in good faith.


PIE Income on Your IR3

For most PIE investors (who are not IR3 filers), PIE income is taxed within the fund and does not appear on an income tax assessment at all — it is fully settled within the PIE regime.

However, if you file an IR3 (because you have rental, self-employment, or other income), you must still disclose your PIE income on the IR3 — but it is reported separately and the tax is not recalculated at your marginal rate. It is only included to determine if your PIR was correct.


KiwiSaver as a PIE

All KiwiSaver funds are PIEs. This means:

  • Your KiwiSaver returns are taxed at your PIR (max 28%), not your marginal rate
  • Tax is deducted before returns are credited to your account
  • You never receive a tax bill or refund on KiwiSaver returns separately — it is all handled within the fund

When comparing KiwiSaver returns, funds generally report after-PIE-tax returns — the tax has already been deducted.


Listed PIEs

Some NZX-listed funds are structured as PIEs (e.g., certain exchange-traded funds). These work slightly differently:

  • You pay tax at your PIR on distributions
  • The fund may or may not handle this withholding automatically
  • Check the specific fund’s prospectus for its tax treatment

Frequently Asked Questions

Does PIE income count toward my income for other purposes?

PIE income is generally excluded from your “adjustable taxable income” for Working for Families and student loan purposes. This is another advantage — PIE income does not push you over WFF abatement thresholds.

My income varies. Should I use 17.5% or 28%?

If your income sometimes exceeds $48,000 and sometimes doesn’t, use 28% to be safe — overpayment at 28% is refunded; underpayment at 17.5% creates a tax bill. The refund mechanism makes 28% a low-risk default.

Are there any PIE funds outside KiwiSaver?

Yes. InvestNow, Kernel, Milford, and many other platforms offer non-KiwiSaver managed funds that are PIE-structured. These give you the same tax efficiency (28% max rate) with more flexibility on withdrawals compared to KiwiSaver.

Is the PIE regime the same for companies and trusts?

No. Companies’ PIR rate is 28% and trusts’ PIR rate is 28% by default. Individual-specific rates (10.5% and 17.5%) are only available to individual investors.