NZ Expression of Interest: How the Skilled Migrant Category 6-Point System Works
NZ Expression of Interest: How the Skilled Migrant Category 6-Point System Works
The Expression of Interest (EOI) is the first formal step in applying for New Zealand residence through the Skilled Migrant Category. Before you spend months accumulating work experience and thousands of dollars on qualification assessments, you need to know whether your EOI will succeed. Here's exactly how the points calculation works and what happens once you submit.
What an EOI Is — and What It Isn't
An EOI for the Skilled Migrant Category is a declaration of eligibility, not a full application. You are telling Immigration New Zealand: "I meet the 6-point threshold, I have a skilled job offer from an accredited employer, and I am ready to proceed."
If your EOI meets the requirements, an Invitation to Apply (ITA) is issued immediately. You then have 4 months to lodge the full residence application with all supporting documents.
The EOI itself costs nothing to submit under the current system. This is a deliberate design choice — INZ removed the EOI fee to reduce the barrier for qualified applicants. But it is not a soft process. EOIs that don't meet the threshold are declined without ceremony, and the assessment of your points is based entirely on what you declare and document.
The 6-Point Calculation: A Worked Breakdown
The Skilled Migrant Category operates on a simple but rigid binary: you need exactly 6 points from your declared skills, plus a qualifying job offer. The 6 points come from one of three primary pillars — you cannot mix and match across pillars.
Option A: Qualify Through Academic Qualifications
| NZQF Level | Qualification | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Level 10 | PhD | 6 — apply immediately |
| Level 9 | Master's degree | 5 — need 1 year NZ experience |
| Level 8 | Bachelor Honours or PG Diploma | 4 — need 2 years NZ experience |
| Level 7 | Bachelor's degree | 3 — need 3 years NZ experience |
Important: your overseas degree must be assessed by NZQA (International Qualification Assessment) to confirm it maps to the correct NZQF level. Most degrees from India, South Africa, the Philippines, and many other countries require this assessment. The IQA costs $445–$746 depending on the type. If your degree appears on the List of Qualifications Exempt from Assessment (LQEA), you can skip the IQA and claim points directly — but you must verify this before assuming you are exempt.
A common trap: a 4-year engineering degree from India might be assessed as Level 7 (3 points) rather than Level 8 (4 points) if it does not include an honours component. Check the NZQA outcome before building your points plan around a specific level.
Option B: Qualify Through Occupational Registration
If you hold registration with a New Zealand statutory professional body, points are based on the training requirement for that registration — not your personal years of experience.
| Registration Training Level | Points | Example Professions |
|---|---|---|
| 6+ years required | 6 — apply immediately | Surgeon, medical consultant |
| 5 years required | 5 — need 1 year NZ experience | Registered teachers, some allied health |
| 4 years required | 4 — need 2 years NZ experience | Specialist nurses, registered engineers |
| 2 years required | 3 — need 3 years NZ experience | Electricians, plumbers |
This pillar is most useful for health and engineering professionals whose registration effectively signals a high level of training without requiring a separate NZQA assessment.
Option C: Qualify Through High Income
Income points are based on your current (or offered) hourly wage in New Zealand, updated as of March 2026:
| Pay Rate | Multiplier of Median Wage | Points |
|---|---|---|
| $105.00/hr | 3x | 6 — apply immediately |
| $70.00/hr | 2x | 4 — need 2 years NZ experience |
| $52.50/hr | 1.5x | 3 — need 3 years NZ experience |
If your income puts you at 3x the median wage, you don't need a degree or professional registration — the salary alone signals sufficient economic contribution. This pathway is most relevant for high-earning IT specialists, senior managers, or finance professionals.
Bridging the Gap: NZ Work Experience Points
If your chosen pillar gives you 3, 4, or 5 points, you earn the remaining points through skilled work experience in New Zealand:
- 1 point: 12 months of NZ work in the last 24 months
- 2 points: 24 months of NZ work in the last 48 months
- 3 points: 36 months of NZ work in the last 60 months
This work must be:
- Full-time (30+ hours per week)
- In a skilled role (ANZSCO Level 1–3 at the median wage; ANZSCO Level 4–5 at 1.5x the median wage)
- With a current or past accredited employer
The work experience is not just about time served — INZ will verify that your actual duties matched the ANZSCO classification throughout, and that your pay met the threshold throughout the entire period.
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What the 6-Point System Changed
Prior to October 2023, the Skilled Migrant Category used a 160-point sliding scale with dozens of point categories and a competitive pool. Applications sat in the pool for months waiting for a selection draw.
The current system eliminated the pool entirely. If you meet the 6-point threshold, you get an ITA immediately — no draw, no queue, no uncertainty. This is a significant change that many online resources haven't caught up with. If you're reading advice that mentions "selection draws" or "160 points," it's describing the old system that no longer applies.
The EOI Process Step by Step
Prepare your evidence: Before submitting the EOI, gather your IQA outcome, registration certificate (if claiming Pillar 1 points), pay slips and employment agreement (if claiming income or work experience points), and your employer's NZQA accreditation confirmation.
Submit via RealMe: The EOI is lodged through Immigration New Zealand's online system, which requires a RealMe identity verification account. The system accepts PDF uploads for all supporting documents.
Receive ITA: If your EOI is complete and meets the 6-point threshold, an Invitation to Apply is issued. This gives you 4 months to submit your full residence application.
Lodge the residence application: This is where the full document set is required — employment agreement, IQA, police certificates, medical results, and relationship evidence if including family members.
Processing: Priority cases (Green List and high earners) can be decided in 4–7 weeks. Standard SMC cases can take up to 18 months. An interim visa is issued if your current work visa expires during processing.
Common EOI Errors That Cause Rejections
Wrong ANZSCO code: Claiming the wrong occupational classification — either because you searched by job title rather than duties, or because your employer's HR team selected a code that doesn't accurately describe your role.
Qualification level misjudged: Claiming 5 points for a Master's when the IQA outcome mapped it to Level 8 (4 points), or claiming a qualification before the IQA is complete.
Wage threshold not met throughout: If your pay varied during the work experience period and dipped below the threshold even briefly, that period may not count.
Experience not in the right time window: Work experience older than the allowable window (24 months for 1-point experience, 48 months for 2-point experience, 60 months for 3-point experience) doesn't count.
The New Zealand Skilled Migrant Category Guide includes a points calculator worksheet, ANZSCO classification guidance for common professions, and a complete EOI preparation checklist so you can verify eligibility before submitting.
Get Your Free New Zealand Skilled Migrant Category Guide — Quick-Start Checklist
Download the New Zealand Skilled Migrant Category Guide — Quick-Start Checklist — a printable guide with checklists, scripts, and action plans you can start using today.