New Zealand courts digital nomads with new ‘relaxed’ tourist visa
By Amelia Nierenberg
New Zealand has relaxed its visa requirements for remote workers as the country looks to spur economic growth by courting “digital nomads”, the skilled professionals who can work from anywhere in the world with an internet connection.
With the new policy, a New Zealand visitor visa, which allows foreigners to remain for up to nine months, now also permits them to work for overseas employers during that time, which had been forbidden. The visitor visa still does not allow people to work for New Zealand employers, so “they won’t be competing for Kiwi jobs,” said Finance Minister Nicola Willis.
“The visa will open the doors to a whole new category of visitors,” she told reporters. “The government’s ambition is that new visa rules will put New Zealand boldly on the map as a welcoming haven for the world’s talent,” she added.
The visa change follows a difficult economic period for New Zealand, whose economy sank into recession in the third quarter of 2024.
Willis presented the new visa rules as a strategy to shift New Zealand “onto a faster growth track” and said that advertising campaigns would specifically target skilled tech workers from the United States and East Asia. The government hopes to draw the interest not only of those workers but also of their companies.
“We want more of the world’s wealthy and super-talented people,” she said.
The number of people working remotely full-time – either within their own countries or internationally – boomed during the coronavirus pandemic and has continued to rise since then. Digital nomads tend to have higher incomes, which translates into spending in shops, restaurants and lodging.
About 200,000 people work in New Zealand’s tourism industry, and in the year ending in March 2024, international visitors spent about $US6.3 billion ($10 billion) in the country.
“The new visa will also enable more visitors to New Zealand to extend their stays,” Willis said, adding, “Those longer stays mean more income for local businesses.”
There are some catches. Officials said that digital nomads who stay for longer than 90 days could face an added tax burden. And a worker in New Zealand would likely have to keep strange hours to be in meetings with colleagues in Europe or the United States but not in Australia.
The remote work visa rules are simpler than those in many other countries. Immigration Minister Erica Stanford noted that other countries have specific visas for remote workers, while New Zealand now lets anyone on a visitor visa be a digital nomad.
New Zealand has a long history of carefully controlling immigration, and even as it tries to attract affluent remote workers for limited stays, it moved in April to tighten work visas for low-skilled workers seeking to move to and work there, including introducing an English language requirement, among others.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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