Overview for US expats
English-speaking country with strong universal healthcare, good safety, and excellent work-life balance—well-suited to skilled workers and short-term remote workers. Cost of living and housing are high in main cities (Numbeo COL ~61 vs US ~69); no retirement visa for under 66, and the Temporary Retirement Visitor requires significant income, investment, and health insurance.
City and regional guides
Visas and permits are national (New Zealand) rules. We keep one country profile for New Zealand and separate pages for North Island hubs and South Island towns below.
Everyday life
- Healthcare quality (1–5)
- 5
- Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
- 2
- Safety (1–5)
- 4
- Ease of living in English (1–5)
- 5
Data points (where available)
- Numbeo cost of living index
- 60.8
- Safety index
- 51.2
- Healthcare index
- 68.1
Schooling for families (1–5)
- Early childhood
- 4
- Primary (elementary)
- 4
- Secondary (middle/high)
- 4
Why New Zealand works well for expats
- Native English; no language barrier for US expats
- High-quality public healthcare (Numbeo healthcare index ~68) and strong public education; good international school options in Auckland and Wellington
- Generally safe by global standards (Numbeo safety index ~51); clean environment and rule of law
- Skilled Migrant and Accredited Employer routes offer a clear path to residence for qualified workers; from Aug 2026, new SMC pathways (e.g. Skilled Work Experience, Trades)
- Visitor/NZeTA remote-work policy allows up to 9 months for digital nomads without a job offer
- Outdoor lifestyle and diverse geography from cities to mountains and coast
Tradeoffs and challenges
- Cost of living and housing are high in Auckland and Wellington (Numbeo COL index ~61; slightly below US average but acute in main centres)
- No retirement visa for under 66; Temporary Retirement Visitor (66+) requires NZD $60k/year income, $500k for stay, $750k to invest, and health insurance
- Remote from the US; long flights and time-zone differences for family and work
- Job market smaller than in the US; employer accreditation required for work visas; public healthcare can have wait times for non-urgent care
Visa routes for US citizens
digital nomad
Difficulty: easy
Remote work allowed on visitor visa or NZeTA: US citizens declare remote-work intent when applying. Stay up to 90 days initially, extendable to a total of up to 9 months. Proof of remote work, NZD $4,200 funds, and health insurance required. No path to residence; income may be tax-exempt under treaty rules for short stays.
work permit
Difficulty: medium
Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) resident visa and Accredited Employer Work Visa: job offer from an accredited employer, full-time skilled work. SMC uses 6-point eligibility (qualifications, salary, or registration); from Aug 2026, new pathways include Skilled Work Experience and Trades/Technician. Leads to residence and eventual citizenship.
retirement
Difficulty: hard
Temporary Retirement Visitor Visa for those 66+: minimum NZD $60,000/year income, NZD $500,000 available for your stay, NZD $750,000 to invest in acceptable investments (e.g. bonds, equities) for the visa period, and health insurance with minimum NZD $500,000 coverage. Valid up to 2 years, multiple entries; no general retirement visa for under 66. Partner can be included; dependent children cannot.
entrepreneur
Difficulty: hard
Investor and entrepreneur visa categories require substantial capital, detailed business plans, and often nomination; eligibility is selective and competitive.
family reunification
Difficulty: medium
Partnership and dependent-child visas for family of NZ residents or citizens; evidence of genuine relationship and meeting financial and health requirements.
Example cities to explore
Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Queenstown, Dunedin, Tauranga