$0 New Zealand Partner Visa Guide — Quick-Start Checklist

Switching to a NZ Partner Visa: Visitor, Working Holiday, and Student Visa Pathways

Switching to a NZ Partner Visa: Visitor, Working Holiday, and Student Visa Pathways

Most people who end up on a New Zealand partner visa did not start there. They arrived on a visitor visa, a working holiday, or a student visa — met or moved in with their Kiwi partner — and then had to figure out how to transition before their current status expired. The mechanics of that transition are specific and the timing matters more than most people realize.

This post covers the main pathways and what to expect from each one.

The Core Logic of Transitioning

New Zealand allows you to apply for a new visa while you are already onshore in many circumstances, including switching to a partner visa. The critical requirement is that you must still be lawfully in the country when you lodge — meaning your current visa must not have already expired.

Do not wait until the final week of your current visa to start the process. Partner visa applications require assembling a substantial evidence package, and the government fee alone is $1,630 for a work visa and $5,360 for a resident visa (as of October 2024). You want time to prepare properly, not scramble.

From Visitor Visa to Partner Visa

What is possible: You can apply for a Partner of a New Zealander Work Visa while on a standard visitor visa, provided your partner is a New Zealand citizen or resident and you can demonstrate that you have been living together.

The practical challenge: Visitor visas typically do not allow you to work, but more importantly, many visitor visa holders have only recently arrived in New Zealand and have not yet accumulated 12 months of cohabitation evidence. This usually means the work visa — not the resident visa — is the right immediate step.

What you need: Evidence of your relationship and cohabitation (any length is acceptable for a temporary visa, though the visa granted will typically be shorter for newer relationships), your partner's support form (INZ 1146), and the $1,630 application fee.

Visitor visa extension while you wait: If your visitor visa expires while your partner work visa application is being processed, you can usually apply for a visitor visa extension to bridge the gap. INZ does not expect you to leave mid-application, but you need to be proactive about this rather than letting status lapse.

From Working Holiday Visa to Partner Visa

This is one of the most common transition routes. Many couples meet while one partner is on a working holiday, they move in together, and they then need to convert to a more stable status as the working holiday approaches its end date.

What is possible: Working holiday visa holders can apply onshore for the Partner of a New Zealander Work Visa. There is no requirement to leave New Zealand to apply.

Timing: New Zealand working holiday visas are typically 12 months. If you moved in with your partner early in the working holiday period, you may be close to or past 12 months of cohabitation by the time it expires — which could put you in reach of a residence application. More commonly, couples have 6–10 months of living together by the time the working holiday ends, making the partner work visa the logical next step.

What makes this pathway clean: Working holiday visa holders generally have solid evidence of their time in New Zealand — bank accounts, employment records, address history. This makes it easier to document when you moved in together and build the cohabitation timeline from there.

Second working holiday: Some nationalities (UK, Germany, Canada, others) are eligible for a second working holiday visa in New Zealand. This gives an additional buffer, but using a second working holiday as a long-term immigration strategy is risky. Partner visas exist precisely for this situation — use them.

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From Student Visa to Partner Visa

What is possible: Student visa holders can apply for a partner visa while studying in New Zealand, provided they meet the standard requirements — primarily that they are living with their NZ citizen or resident partner.

The cohabitation evidence challenge: Many students live in university accommodation or flatshares early in their studies. If you moved in with your partner partway through your studies, your cohabitation evidence starts from that point. You cannot count the time before you were actually living together.

Work rights consideration: If you are on a partner work visa, you can work for any employer in any role. This is generally more flexible than the work conditions attached to a student visa. For students approaching the end of their study, transitioning to a partner work visa can provide better income flexibility while continuing to accumulate the 12-month cohabitation evidence needed for residence.

From Partner Work Visa to Resident Visa

This is the natural progression for most couples. You arrive in New Zealand on some form of temporary status, move in with your partner, apply for the partner work visa to legalize your status and get work rights, accumulate 12 months of cohabitation evidence, and then apply for permanent residence.

The key timing question: The 12-month cohabitation clock starts from when you actually began living together — not from when your partner work visa was granted. If you moved in together before you applied for the work visa, that earlier period counts, provided you can document it.

What residence requires that the work visa does not:

  • Exactly 12 months of cohabitation, documented continuously
  • Limited Medical Certificate (INZ 1201) from an approved Panel Physician
  • Police certificates from your country of citizenship and any country you have lived in for 12+ months in the past decade
  • Evidence of English language ability, or pre-purchased ESOL tuition if below the threshold
  • $5,360 government application fee

Can you go straight to residence without a partner work visa? Yes, if you already have 12 months of cohabitation evidence documented by the time you need to apply. Some couples arrive in New Zealand with strong evidence of a genuine relationship already established — in that case, going straight to a residence application can save the $1,630 work visa fee. But if your evidence is still building, the work visa gives you legal status, work rights, and time.

The Longer Pathway: Work Visa Then Residence

For most people transitioning from a temporary visa, the realistic timeline looks like this:

  1. Arrive in New Zealand on visitor, working holiday, or student visa
  2. Move in with NZ partner, begin generating cohabitation evidence
  3. Apply for Partner of a New Zealander Work Visa before current visa expires
  4. Live and work in NZ while accumulating 12 months of documented cohabitation
  5. Apply for Partnership-based Resident Visa once the 12-month threshold is met and evidence is complete

The total government fees across both stages — work visa plus resident visa — currently add up to $6,990 if applied separately. Factor that into your overall budget planning.

The New Zealand Partner Visa Guide covers the full pathway from temporary status through to residence, including what evidence to start collecting from day one and how to sequence your applications to avoid gaps in lawful status.

A Note on Working While Your Application Is Pending

Once you have lodged a partner visa application, you are generally able to remain in New Zealand while it is processed. Whether you can work during that period depends on whether your current visa permits work and what INZ grants as an interim arrangement. Do not assume you can automatically continue working without checking the conditions of your current visa and any bridging arrangement INZ provides.

The cleaner your transition — lodging your partner application before your current visa expires rather than after — the simpler this question becomes.

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