# New Zealand: Investor Residency, No-CGT Taxes and Citizenship > Active Investor Plus residency (NZD 5m, 21 days of presence over 3 years), citizenship in 5 years, taxes with no CGT or inheritance tax, the 4-year exemption and the year-five FIF trap. Author: Алёна Дунаева — юрист, Family Office (https://wiki.private.law/authors/dunaeva) Last modified: 2026-07-10T17:26:00.000Z Canonical: https://wiki.private.law/en/new-zealand-residence Topics: migration, investments Jurisdictions: new-zealand Semantic tags: tax-regime, permanent-residence, residence-permit --- ## The Concept New Zealand is one of the most underrated jurisdictions for private capital. It combines: an Anglo-Saxon legal system with genuinely independent courts, a top-10 passport with no renunciation requirement, investor residency with the world's lightest presence requirement (21 days over three years) — and a tax system with no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax and no social security contributions, with four exempt years for a new resident at the start. The geographic isolation usually filed under "minuses" is, for part of the clientele, the main plus: this is where the "backup country" genre was born. Below: the routes, the taxes and the limits of the construction. ## Active Investor Plus: the Golden Visa Relaunched From 1 April 2025 the investor visa was radically simplified. Two categories: **Growth** — NZD 5m for three years into direct investments in New Zealand businesses or approved active funds, with just **21 days** of physical presence over three years; **Balanced** — NZD 10m over five years with more conservative options (bonds, listed equities, development) and 105 days of presence. The English-language requirement is gone, there is no age cap, the government fee is NZD 27,470, and the family files in one application. Demand exploded. Per official INZ statistics as of 20 May 2026: 730 applications covering 2,390 people (Growth — 608), a potential minimum of NZ$4.26bn, of which NZ$1.69bn is already invested; average approval in principle — 35 working days. The largest applicant group is Americans (252), followed by China and Hong Kong. For comparison: the old settings drew 115 applications in two and a half years. > ⚙️ Since 6 March 2026 the long-awaited carve-out from the 2018 ban is live: investor-visa holders may buy or build one home worth more than NZD 5m through a fast OIO pathway (~5 working days in practice). The legal nuance the press releases lose: your own home can create a permanent place of abode — and make you a New Zealand tax resident even at 21 days of presence a year. ## The Other Routes, Citizenship and the Nomad Rule Beyond the investor track run the points-based Skilled Migrant Category (six points: qualification/income + experience + a job offer), Straight to Residence for Green List occupations, and the new Parent Boost (from September 2025 — up to 10 years for parents). Citizenship is earned the honest way: five years of residence with 1,350 days of presence (and at least 240 days in each year); dual citizenship is allowed. The passport ranks sixth in the Henley 2026 index with 183 visa-free destinations. Exceptional naturalisations "past the day count" are no longer practised — the resonance of the 2010s cases (below) closed that door politically. For remote workers, a quiet but important rule has run since 27 January 2025: any visitor visa and NZeTA now permit remote work for a foreign employer or foreign clients. There is no "working days" cap — the only limit is the visit itself (typically 6–9 months); the tax thresholds are separate: up to 92 days in 12 months employment income generally stays outside NZ tax, with a tax treaty — up to 183. ## Taxes: a Quiet Haven with a Year-Five Trap The baseline picture for a wealthy family is unexpectedly gentle: New Zealand has **no general capital gains tax** (only the bright-line test on residential property — back to 2 years since July 2024), no inheritance tax, no stamp duty, no social security contributions (only the ~1.75% ACC levy). Rates: top 39% above NZD 180k, companies 28%, GST 15%. The main gift to a new resident is the **transitional resident exemption**: for 48 months most foreign passive income (dividends, interest, rents, FIF/CFC attribution, offshore trust distributions) is not taxed at all. Foreign employment and services income is not covered; the option is once-in-a-lifetime. In year five the main trap switches on — the **FIF regime**: offshore portfolios above NZD 50k by default are taxed on a deemed 5% annual return — tax on unrealised, "phantom" income. The 2026 reform added the Revenue Account Method for new migrants (with effect from 1 April 2025): dividends in full plus 70% of realised gains at marginal rates, with an exit tax on departure; for US citizens (double-taxed by citizenship) the coverage extends to the whole FIF portfolio. Tax residency runs on the classic tests: 183 days in 12 months or a permanent place of abode; exit — 325 days of absence without a PPOA. > ⚙️ The political risk on the horizon: Labour goes into the 2026 election promising a 28% CGT on investment property from 1 July 2027. Nobody guarantees an "eternal zero" on gains — build the electoral cycle into the plan. ## The "Backup Country" Reputation: How It Happened The genre was invented not by marketers but by the buyers themselves. The best-known reference is Peter Thiel: permanent residence in 2007, citizenship on 30 June 2011 by ministerial decision under s 9(1)(c) of the Citizenship Act 1977 ("exceptional circumstances… public interest"), bypassing the standard 1,350 days — at **12 days** of actual presence over five years; the justification was his fund Valar's investments (Xero, Pacific Fibre) and a NZ$1m Christchurch earthquake donation. The story surfaced only in 2017 through NZ Herald reporting and turned the country into the symbol of the billionaire bolthole: Bloomberg canonised it in the famous "doomsday preppers" feature, Sam Altman described the plan to "fly with Thiel to his New Zealand house" in a pandemic, and in 2021 residency under the old investor category went to Larry Page. The country's reaction cut both ways — and is just as instructive. Since October 2018 foreigners are banned from buying existing residential property (Australians and Singaporeans exempt). And in 2022–2024 commissioners, then the Environment Court, refused Thiel consent for a Kengo Kuma-designed lodge on his 193 hectares at Lake Wānaka — an "inappropriately dominant" structure in an Outstanding Natural Landscape. The planning takeaway: New Zealand gladly takes capital through transparent programs and reacts hard to attempts to buy an exception; the 2011 route cannot be repeated — count on the honest five years. The genre itself has since spread worldwide — the freshest example is dissected in the [Argentina guide](https://wiki.private.law/en/argentina-residence). ## The Honest Context The 2025–2026 paradox: millionaires arrive, citizens leave. In the year to September 2025 a record 72,700 New Zealanders departed (a net citizen loss of 46,400, two thirds to Australia), and overall net migration fell to a decade low. The economy is small and remote, the NZD is volatile, and actively deploying NZD 5m in a shallow market is a task requiring real expertise. The seismic risk is real but regionalised (Wellington/Christchurch versus Auckland/Queenstown). Why go, then? For what people have come here for over twenty years: Anglo-Saxon legal predictability, geographic isolation as insurance, and one of the developed world's gentlest tax systems for capital. ## Typical Mistakes 1. **Treating 21 days of presence as tax safety.** A NZD 5m home easily becomes a permanent place of abode — and residency arrives without 183 days. 2. **Sleeping through the end of the 4-year exemption.** In year five FIF starts taxing a deemed 5% of the portfolio — restructure in advance, especially now that the RAM method exists. 3. **Reading the nomad rule as a "90-day work visa".** There is no working-day cap; 92/183 are tax thresholds, not immigration ones. 4. **Waiting for the old passive NZD 10m Investor Plus.** Since April 2025 the money must work: Growth means active investments only. 5. **Ignoring the 2026 election.** The CGT debate is back; the tax picture can shift from 2027. 6. **Overrating the 2010s precedents.** The 2011 exceptional naturalisation is politically unrepeatable — count on the honest 1,350 days. ## Place in the Flag System > 🔗 **Related** > [A second passport and Plan B](https://wiki.private.law/en/second-passport-plan-b) · [Milei's Argentina](https://wiki.private.law/en/argentina-residence) · [Citizenship by Investment](https://wiki.private.law/en/citizenship-by-investment) · [Greece Golden Visa](https://wiki.private.law/en/greece-golden-visa) · [Passport indices](https://wiki.private.law/en/passport-index) · [Tax residency: basics](https://wiki.private.law/en/tax-residency-basics) · [CRS](https://wiki.private.law/en/crs-overview) · [Exit taxes](https://wiki.private.law/en/exit-taxes-overview) · [Five Flags theory](https://wiki.private.law/en/five-flags) In the [Five Flags theory](https://wiki.private.law/en/five-flags) New Zealand is the benchmark "spare airfield": Flag 1 on a five-year horizon (a top-10 passport with no renunciation), Flag 5 with minimal presence (21 days over three years on Growth), and a temporary Flag 2 through the four-year exemption. The construction's weak point is year five: FIF turns a passive portfolio into a source of phantom tax, and that is where it is decided whether NZ stays your tax base or remains insurance while the base sits elsewhere. --- ## Factual claims - From 1 April 2025 the investor visa was radically simplified. - For remote workers, a quiet but important rule has run since 27 January 2025: any visitor visa and NZeTA now permit remote work for a foreign employer or foreign clients. - In year five the main trap switches on — the FIF regime: offshore portfolios above NZD 50k by default are taxed on a deemed 5% annual return — tax on unrealised, "phantom" income. - The 2025–2026 paradox: millionaires arrive, citizens leave.