WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s net migration fell to its lowest level in more than a decade, excluding the pandemic, as arrivals cooled and kiwis sought better opportunities in Australia - a result that’s likely to figure in this year’s election campaign.
The country recorded a net migration gain of 14,200 in 2025, down 9,600 from a year earlier, Statistics New Zealand said Friday (Feb 13) in Wellington. That marked the smallest annual increase since 2013, outside 2021, when borders were largely closed during the Covid-19 outbreak.
The result stands in sharp contrast to a record net gain of 135,500 in the year ended October 2023, and less than half the annual average of 30,600 over the past 25 years. The data also showed 66,300 New Zealand citizens left the country, with 61% headed to Australia.
The Kiwi exodus across the Tasman Sea is emerging as a key issue in New Zealand’s Nov. 7 general election, with many moving in search of higher wages and a better standard of living - intensifying pressure on lawmakers to make New Zealand more competitive and attractive.
Offering some relief for the economy, overseas visitor arrivals climbed to 3.51 million in 2025 - the first annual period to exceed 3.5 million since the year ended March 2020. - Bloomberg
