
NZ Partner of a Worker Work Visa 2026: Eligibility, Fees, Process and Residence Pathway
If your partner already has a job in New Zealand, or is already a citizen or resident there, you may be eligible for a visa that lets you live and work in the country too - without needing your own job offer first. But New Zealand's partner-based work visa system is more layered than most articles explain, and getting the wrong category can cost you months of delay.
There are two distinct pathways here, and they get confused constantly: the Partner of a New Zealander Work Visa (for partners of NZ citizens or residents) and the Partner of a Worker Work Visa (for partners of someone on an Accredited Employer Work Visa in a role that meets the median wage threshold). The eligibility rules, evidence requirements, and processing expectations differ between the two - and applying under the wrong one is one of the most common and costly mistakes applicants make.
This guide breaks down both pathways in full: who qualifies, what evidence Immigration New Zealand actually wants to see, current fees and processing times, and what the realistic path to residence looks like from here.
Quick Summary
New Zealand offers two partner-based work visas. If your partner is an NZ citizen or resident, you apply for the Partner of a New Zealander Work Visa. If your partner holds an Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV) in a role paid at or above the median wage, you may qualify as a Partner of a Worker. Both require proof of a genuine, stable relationship of at least 12 months (for de facto couples). Processing typically takes 4-10 weeks. Fees and exact requirements differ by category.
The Two Partner Work Visa Pathways - Which One Applies to You?
Before anything else, confirm which category actually fits your situation. This single decision determines your evidence requirements, fees, and processing expectations.
| Feature | Partner of a New Zealander | Partner of a Worker |
|---|---|---|
| Your partner's status | NZ citizen or resident visa holder | Holds an Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV) |
| Key requirement on partner's job | Not applicable | Partner's role must be paid at or above the median wage (NZRSE threshold) |
| Work rights granted to you | Open work visa - any employer, any role | Open work visa - any employer, any role (conditions apply) |
| Visa duration | Typically matches your partner's visa/residence status | Typically matches your partner's AEWV expiry |
| Leads to residence? | Yes - via Partner of a New Zealander Resident Visa | Indirectly - tied to your partner's own pathway to residence |
If your partner is on a temporary work visa earning below the median wage threshold, you generally will not qualify for an open partner work visa under either category - this is the gap that catches many applicants by surprise. Check your partner's exact visa type and salary before applying.
NZRSE Median Wage Threshold (2026)
For the Partner of a Worker pathway, your partner's role must be remunerated at or above the median wage threshold set by Immigration New Zealand, currently reviewed annually. This threshold is updated periodically - always confirm the current figure on immigration.govt.nz before applying, as applying based on an outdated threshold is a common cause of refusal.
Eligibility Requirements - Full Breakdown
Across both pathways, Immigration New Zealand assesses two things above all else: the genuineness of your relationship, and your partner's eligibility to sponsor you.
Relationship Requirements
- Relationship type recognised: marriage, civil union, or de facto partnership.
- Minimum duration: at least 12 months together in a genuine and stable partnership (de facto couples specifically must meet this threshold; married and civil union couples have more flexibility but still need to show genuineness).
- Living together: you must be living together, or have lived together for a meaningful period, as part of demonstrating commitment.
- Exclusivity: the relationship must be genuine and exclusive - not one of convenience for immigration purposes.
Sponsor (Partner) Requirements
- Status: must be an NZ citizen, resident, or AEWV holder in a qualifying role (depending on pathway).
- Character: must meet character requirements - a sponsor with a relevant criminal history may affect your application.
- Sponsorship history: Immigration New Zealand checks whether your partner has previously sponsored other partners within a restricted timeframe (generally within the last 5 years), which can affect eligibility.
- Financial undertaking: in some cases your partner may need to provide an undertaking of support.
Your (Applicant) Requirements
- Health: you must meet health requirements, which may include a medical examination depending on your intended length of stay and country of origin.
- Character: police clearance certificates are required from any country you have lived in for 12+ months in the last 10 years.
- Genuine intention: you must demonstrate genuine intention to live with your partner in New Zealand, not simply to obtain work rights.
For related guidance on how children under 18 are handled in visa contexts, our guide covers the broader family considerations.
Fees and Costs (2026)
| Cost Item | Approximate Cost (NZD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Partner Work Visa application fee | $750 - $900 | Varies by application channel (online vs paper) |
| Immigration Levy | $50 - $100 | Additional mandatory levy on top of the application fee |
| Medical examination (if required) | $300 - $500 | Depends on country and panel physician rates |
| Police clearance certificates | $0 - $150 per country | Cost varies by issuing country |
| Document translation (if required) | $50 - $200 per document | Required for non-English documents |
| Total estimated cost | $1,000 - $1,800+ | Excludes agent/lawyer fees if used |
New Zealand visa fees are reviewed periodically by Immigration New Zealand and can change without extensive notice. Always confirm the current fee on immigration.govt.nz before submitting payment. For context on health-related visa requirements in the NZ system, see our guide on New Zealand's health insurance rules for seasonal workers.
Processing Times - What to Realistically Expect
| Application Type | Typical Processing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Straightforward, complete evidence | 4-8 weeks | Most common outcome with well-prepared applications |
| Application requiring further info | 8-14 weeks | Immigration NZ may request additional relationship evidence |
| Application from offshore | 6-12 weeks | Slightly longer due to additional verification steps |
| Complex cases (prior refusals, character) | 3-6 months+ | May require legal or migration agent involvement |
Practical Tip
Submit your relationship evidence in a clear, chronological, well-organised format. A poorly organised but genuine application is processed more slowly than a well-organised one, simply because case officers need to request clarification. A short cover letter summarising your relationship timeline alongside your evidence can meaningfully reduce processing delays.
Relationship Evidence - What Actually Strengthens an Application
This is the single most scrutinised part of any partner-based visa application. Immigration New Zealand case officers see thousands of applications and are trained to spot weak or inconsistent evidence.
| Evidence Category | Strong Examples | Weak / Insufficient Alone |
|---|---|---|
| Shared living | Joint tenancy agreement, joint mortgage, utility bills in both names | A single utility bill with only one name |
| Financial interdependence | Joint bank account with regular transactions, shared loans, joint insurance | One-off money transfers between partners |
| Social proof | Photos spanning the relationship timeline, statements from family/friends, joint event attendance | A handful of recent photos with no timeline context |
| Communication history | Consistent messaging history over time, especially during periods apart | Screenshots from a single week |
| Third-party recognition | Joint invitations, being listed as next-of-kin, shared health insurance | Verbal claims with no documentation |
The strongest applications combine evidence across all five categories, spanning the full duration of the relationship - not just recent months. If you and your partner have spent time apart (common when one partner moves to NZ first), include evidence of how you maintained the relationship during that period: travel records, call/message logs, and visit documentation.
Step-by-Step Application Process
- Confirm your pathway. Determine whether you qualify under Partner of a New Zealander or Partner of a Worker based on your partner's current status and (if applicable) their AEWV role and salary.
- Gather relationship evidence. Compile documentation across all five evidence categories outlined in the evidence section above, organised chronologically.
- Complete the online application via Immigration New Zealand's ADDS portal. Most applications are submitted through Immigration New Zealand's online system.
- Pay the application fee and immigration levy. Payment is required at the time of submission - see the fees section for current cost estimates.
- Undergo health examination if required. This depends on your country of origin and intended length of stay. Immigration NZ will notify you if this is needed.
- Provide police clearance certificates. Required for any country where you have lived 12+ months in the past 10 years.
- Respond promptly to any requests for further information. Case officers may request additional evidence - delays in responding directly extend processing time.
- Await the decision. You will be notified via the online portal once a decision is made.
Benefits and Limitations
Benefits
- Open work rights - no employer or role restriction in most cases
- No requirement to secure your own job offer before applying
- Ability to live with your partner while building toward residence
- Flexibility to change jobs, employers, or industries freely
Limitations
- The visa is temporary and tied to the ongoing genuineness of the relationship
- If the relationship ends, your work visa conditions may be affected - see the section below
- Partner of a Worker visa is indirectly dependent on your partner's own AEWV status remaining valid
- Renewal or transition to residence requires continued evidence of the relationship over time
What Happens If the Relationship Ends While You Hold This Visa?
If your relationship ends while you hold a Partner Work Visa, you are generally required to notify Immigration New Zealand. Your visa was granted on the basis of that relationship, and continuing to hold it without disclosure can affect future applications and character assessments.
In most cases, your existing work visa remains valid until its expiry date even if the relationship ends - but you will not be able to renew it on the same partnership basis, and you would need to explore an alternative visa pathway (a different work visa category, a student visa, or another basis for remaining in New Zealand) before your current visa expires.
Always Disclose Changes in Circumstances
Failing to notify Immigration New Zealand of a significant change in circumstances - including the end of a relationship that your visa was based on - can be treated as misleading the Department and may affect future visa applications, including residence. If your relationship ends, seek advice on your options promptly rather than waiting.
Can This Visa Lead to Residence in New Zealand?
For many applicants, the partner work visa is a step toward permanent residence rather than the end goal.
Partner of a New Zealander - Residence
If your partner is an NZ citizen or resident, and your relationship remains genuine and stable, you may become eligible to apply for the Partner of a New Zealander Resident Visa. Key requirements typically include living together in a genuine and stable partnership for at least 12 months at the time of application, continued evidence of the relationship spanning the period since your work visa was granted, your partner continuing to meet sponsor eligibility requirements, and meeting health and character requirements at the time of the residence application.
Partner of a Worker - Residence
This pathway is less direct. Your residence prospects under this category are generally tied to your partner's own progress toward residence - for example, if your partner's AEWV role leads to a Skilled Migrant Category application or another residence pathway, you may be included as a partner on that application, rather than applying independently through a dedicated "partner of a worker" residence category. For more on how temporary visa holders can bring family to NZ, see our guide on NZ temporary visa family sponsorship.
Plan the Long Game Early
If residence is your ultimate goal, start building your relationship evidence file from day one - do not wait until you are ready to apply for residence to start organising documentation. Continuous, well-documented evidence across the full duration of your relationship is significantly stronger than a rushed compilation assembled just before a residence application.
Frequently Asked Questions
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