New Zealand's 275-Day Tax Break for Remote Workers

New Zealand has quietly made itself a lot friendlier to remote workers.
The country’s Taxation Act 2026 now treats eligible digital nomads as nonresident visitors and that can keep their foreign work income outside New Zealand tax, so long as they stay under 275 days in any 18-month rolling period and meet the other residency tests.
The program
This rule took effect on April 1, 2026 and it matters because the old tax-free window was much shorter.
For people paid by a non-resident employer or working for foreign clients, the exemption can cover income tax, plus some fringe benefit tax and employer superannuation charges, which, surprisingly, also means a foreign company’s presence in-country won’t automatically drag it into New Zealand corporate tax residency.
Who it affects
This is good news for digital nomads, remote employees and some expats planning a longer stay.
It’s not for everyone, though, because you can’t be paid by a New Zealand resident, can’t be doing work that needs physical presence in New Zealand and can’t have recently been a New Zealand tax resident.
What to do
Check your facts before you book.
You’ll need to be a natural person lawfully in New Zealand, a tax resident of a country with a comparable tax system and outside the family support rules, because the Working for Families and Best Start entitlements are off the table here.
A few practical points matter fast:
- Keep your stay at 275 days or less
- Keep income tied to foreign clients or employers
- Track your 18-month rolling count carefully
- Watch the GST threshold if you sell services abroad
This is a real upgrade, honestly and it makes New Zealand one of the more generous long-stay bases in the region for remote workers who want scenery without a tax headache. Read our full New Zealand guide for the complete picture and keep an eye on visa updates for more policy shifts.
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