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Visas Statistics

Immigration New Zealand publishes new stats on illegal migrants

Matt Paff
Matt Paff |

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Immigration New Zealand recently released its updated estimate of the number of people currently in New Zealand who have overstayed their visa.

The latest estimate shows that as of 1 July 2025, there were around 20,980 people in New Zealand who had overstayed their visa.  

Ultimately employers need to ensure they are not employing anyone from group, lest they be in breach of their compliance obligations.

The data which was released on the Immigration New Zealand website, makes for interesting reading, with a breakdown by nationality, age, visa type and more.

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Steve Watson, General Manager of Immigration Compliance and Investigations, says: 

“Each year, New Zealand processes around one million visa applications and 1.6 million New Zealand Electronic Travel Authority requests and sees approximately 3.6 million arrivals from non-New Zealand citizens each year,” Mr Watson says.  “While the vast majority of people comply with their visa conditions and leave before the expiry of their visa, unfortunately some people do not leave and consequently remain in New Zealand unlawfully.”  

The latest estimate of 20,980 overstayers as at July 1, 2025 is up from the previous statistics provided by Immigration New Zealand of 14,000 back in 2017. They do note the latest number was derived using a different methodology which they believe to more accurately reflect the actual number of people in New Zealand who have remained after their visa expiry date. 

Some of the interesting breakdowns of the overstayers include:

Statistic 1: Nationality

The article published on the Immigration New Zealand's website included a breakdown of the top 10 nationalities who have currently overstayed their visas, ranked in order:

Rank Nationality Estimate
1 Tonga 2,599
2 China 2,577
3 United States of America 2,213
4 Samoa 1,697
5 India 1,582
6 Great Britain 1,256
7 Philippines 938
8 Malaysia 753
9 Canada 510
10 Germany 498
11 Other 6,356
  Total 20,979*

The top 10 nationalities of people who had overstayed their visas as at 1 July 2025 account for 69.7% of the total estimate. 

Statistic 2: Overstayers as a percentage of arrivals

Table 2: Number of people who have arrived in New Zealand on a temporary visa between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2025 who have overstayed their visa

Nationality Total temporary visa arrivals between 1/7/2023 and 30/6/2025 Individuals who arrived between 1/7/2023 and 30/6/2025 and were recorded as having overstayed their visas as of 1/7/2025 Percentage
Tonga 24,425 472 1.93%
Samoa 23,075 382 1.66%
Malaysia 64,865 220 0.34%
Fiji 53,061 163 0.31%
India 222,436 428 0.19%
Canada 115,727 219 0.19%
Great Britain 314,773 504 0.16%
United States of America 656,684 894 0.14%
Germany 142,802 184 0.13%
China 472,041 369 0.08%
Other 1,313,716 2,018 0.15%
Total 3,403,605 5,853 0.17%

Note: This is a snapshot of the last 2 years of is not directly comparable to the total number of people who have overstayed their visa.

Statistic 3: Overstayers by visa type

Table 3: A breakdown of the main visa categories and subcategories held at the most recent arrival for those identified as overstaying their visa

Visa held at most recent arrival Estimate
Visitor 15,472
General Visitor Visa 5,623
Visa Waiver 8,018
Other Visitor 1,831
Work 2,219
Skilled Work 390
Working Holiday 347
Recognised Seasonal Employer 134
Other Work 1,348
Student 1,031
Fee Paying Student 838

 

Statistic 4: Overstayers By Age

Table 4: Number of people who have overstayed their visa, by age

Age group Estimate
0-19 years 1,733
20-64 years 16,164
65-99 years 3,082
Total 20,979

 

Statistic 5: Deportations from New Zealand

Table 5: Deportation numbers
Breakdown of those deported in each of the last 5 financial years

Financial year (1 July - 30 June)  Deportation Self-deportation Voluntary departure Total
2020/2021 260 178 273 711
2021/2022 158 163 227 548
2022/2023 225 250 247 722
2023/2024 288 262 357 907
2024/2025 440 376 443 1259

 




CONCLUSION:

Employers need to be aware that there are not an insignificant number of illegal non-citizens currently residing in New Zealand. These people generally have jobs that allow them to financially remain in the country. This is a major reason New Zealand Immigration enforce adherence by employers to Migration Laws, that mean employers need to be checking and monitoring employee work rights. Cut off the financial means and these overstayers generally won't be able to remain in the country.

And this is where vSure helps New Zealand employers, by making work rights compliance easy! Request A Demo today!



 

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