Migrant communities celebrate parent visa, amid concerns it'll lock many out
Parents and their sponsor will need to meet a range of health and income requirements to qualify for the new visa.
Photo:
RNZ
Migrant communities are hailing a new visa which will allow parents of New Zealand citizens and residents to visit multiple times over a five-year period.
Applications for the visa -
announced by the government yesterday
- will open from 29 September, with parents and their sponsor needing to meet a range of health and income requirements.
But the Green Party has concerns it would lock out all but the most wealthy.
The Parent Boost visa allows migrants to sponsor their parents to visit and stay in New Zealand for up to five years, with the option to extend for five more.
The prime minister said it would mean a lot for many families.
"Many, many other countries around the world have started to back off from visas like this. But it's so important to our migrant community, when we know how hard they work, and what they're doing to try and raise their families and strengthen their communities, and we want to be able to support them in this way," Christopher Luxon said.
To get the visa, parents will need to have an eligible sponsor, meet acceptable character and health standards, and have at least one year of health insurance coverage providing emergency medical cover, repatriation, return of remains, and cancer treatment.
While offshore during the third year of their visa, the parent would need to complete a new medical assessment and demonstrate they had maintained their insurance.
The sponsor must also earn the median wage to sponsor one parent, or one and a half times the median wage for both parents.
Otherwise, the parent or parents must have an ongoing income aligning with the superannuation rate, or have available funds of $160,000 for a single parent or $250,000 for both, to see them through the duration of their visa.
Both National and ACT campaigned on a parent visitor visa in 2023.
The policy was secured in the coalition agreement, although ACT wanted an annual $3500 fee, which would go into a public health fund, and ensure the visa was self-funding.
ACT immigration spokesperson Parmjeet Parmar was at the announcement and while she was celebrating it, she said she did not want to see any situations where migrants were forced to remortgage their house to pay for emergency hospital bills.
"Having a health insurance component is helpful, but sometimes it can also be a risk if the health insurance co-pay doesn't cover the cost, because I don't want to see any sponsor in any kind of debt," she said.
Immigration minister Erica Stanford said the insurance component was necessary.
"When you come to New Zealand on a visitor visa, there is no ability for you to go into the public service and receive healthcare. That's why, when you're here for five years, there needs to be that insurance component," she said.
Insurance from an overseas provider would also be eligible.
Luxon was confident the right balance had been struck.
"We have to find the balance where you've got visitors from overseas who then want to access public services in New Zealand, but yet they haven't been taxpayers for 40 years, and that's not fair on New Zealanders who are here. But equally, we don't want it to be so onerous and unachievable," Luxon said.
Ethnic and Faith Communities Network convenor Abdur Razzaq said the announcement was a long time coming, and was a significant step towards ensuring ethnic minorities in New Zealand would feel like they were part of New Zealand's fabric.
"What we have got now is families who can be actually families," he said.
He said many doctors, engineers, and IT professionals had been leaving New Zealand because their parents could not come.
"Canada has had this for a long time, and it's worked."
Razzaq believed it struck the right balance so there would not be burdens on the health and housing sectors.
Daljit Singh from the Supreme Sikh Society said he had been lobbying Parliament for this kind of visa for years.
"It's a benefit to every migrant in this country. It is the opportunity for parents to stay with their children," he said.
But Singh continued to have concerns about the income thresholds.
"There is still a gap between rich and poor. Everybody wants, actually, to stay with their parents."
The Green Party's immigration spokesperson Ricardo Menéndez March said the income requirements would lock out thousands of migrant families.
"Low-waged workers that National called essential during the pandemic will be missing out on being able to have their parents living with them in their new homeland," he said.
Menéndez March had concerns that when the visas expired, migrants would end up sending more money offshore instead of in New Zealand, and using up weeks of leave to see their ageing parents.
The visa is not a pathway to residency.
Parents would not be able to work in New Zealand, but would be able to do remote work for their offshore employer.
Luxon said checks and balances would be in place to ensure parents and their sponsors met their obligations.
"I know people will respect it, but it's really important that people meet their obligations, and so there will be stronger enforcement as well associated to make sure that people are not abusing the system or taking advantage of the system," he said.
The existing $441 Parent and Grandparent visitor visa allows relatives to stay for six months at a time, for a maximum of 18 months over a three year period.
A separate Parent Resident visa lets parents live in New Zealand indefinitely, but comes with English language requirements, costs $5810, and needs an expression of interest before being invited to apply. They can apply for permanent residence after ten years.
There is also a Parent Retirement Resident visa which costs $12,850, and requires parents to have an adult child who is a New Zealand citizen or resident living in New Zealand, have at least $1 million to invest in New Zealand for four years and at least $500,000 for settlement, and an annual income of at least $60,000. After the four years, the parent can apply for permanent residence.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
37 minutes ago
- RNZ News
Judith Collins looking into how Australian warship was able to knock parts of New Zealand offline
HMAS Canberra. Photo: ABC News / Department of Defence Prime Minister Christopher Luxon remains unaware of how an Australian warship was allowed accidentally to knock out mobile internet access across Taranaki and Marlborough last week. Navigation radar interference from HMAS Canberra, the Royal Australian Navy's largest warship, disrupted 5 GHz wireless access points on Wednesday as it sailed through the Cook Strait. The interference triggered in-built switches in the devices that caused them to go offline, ABC News reported - a safety precaution to prevent wireless signals interfering with radar systems in New Zealand's airspace. Luxon told Morning Report on Monday he was yet to have an explanation how the situation was allowed to happen, but he was "sure" Defence Minister Judith Collins would find out. He said it was not a "deliberate" act from the Australians. "Look, we are very pleased that they're here. They are our only ally. We work very closely with the Australians, as you know, I'm not sure what's happened here. Again, that'll be something the defense minister will look into." Asked if it had exposed a vulnerability in our communications network, Luxon said it was "the nature" of it. "There's a whole bunch of technology… in the defence space and the cyberspace and how wars are being fought, and will be fought in the future will be a big component of it… "Judith Collins will be checking into that and understanding exactly what has happened there, but I'm very proud of that relationship. I'm very proud that they're here. It's great that they've come." The blackout came the same week "human error" knocked out fibre-based internet to much of the lower North Island . Communications Minister Paul Goldsmith told RNZ last week he would be discussing the Australian warship situation with officials. Helen Clark and Don Brash. Photo: RNZ Also last week, two former prime ministers and an ex-governor of the Reserve Bank put their names to a letter questioning the government's foreign policy - in particular "positioning New Zealand alongside the United States as an adversary of China". It was signed, among others, by Helen Clark, Sir Geoffrey Palmer and Dr Don Brash, questioning whether New Zealand was risking its economic and trade relationship with China by aligning itself closer with the US . "Like 192 other countries, we've got an independent foreign policy. There'll be lots of different views on foreign policy, I get that," Luxon told Morning Report . "But, you know, frankly, my job as prime minister is to advance our national interests - that is both… around our security and our economic interests. And I think you've also got to acknowledge that the strategic environment from 25 or 35 years ago is very different from what we have today, and it will continue to evolve." He said he disagreed with the view that working more closely with the US on defence, under the adversarial Trump administration, would sour New Zealand's relationship with China. I think, you know, we have important relationships with both the US and China. We will make our own assessment based on our own needs, as to, you know, how we navigate those relationships. "But in both cases, you know, we have, you know, deep engagement and cooperation. We also have differences with the US - we've raised concerns around tariffs. With the Chinese, we've raised concerns around cyber attacks on our parliamentary system." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Fears of a state house blacklist: 'You'll never get back in to that level'
Of the 63 people evicted from state houses in the past 10 months, more than half were in Auckland. File photo. Photo: RNZ / Luke McPake Social workers are worried state house tenants who have been evicted are then blacklisted - and end up on the street. Kāinga Ora has evicted five times more unruly tenants in the past 10 months compared with the whole of last year, but denies those families are out in the cold for ever. Auckland man Scott San Quentin was living under a bridge in Grafton for six months last year. He is still recovering from a biking injury that left him with concussion, and left a rental last February when the rent became unaffordable. "So I ended up on the street in Auckland CBD, in Grafton, stayed there for about six months and only because I went to see the doctor in Auckland City Mission I got a referral to a key worker and they were part of a programme Street to Home and I got social housing through Kainga Ora from them." He spent a couple of months on a wait list for housing, still sleeping rough before a unit became available. Now living in a Kāinga Ora apartment in the central city, San Quentin said his primary aim is to stay housed and get a job. "The biggest prerogative is not to get evicted in the first place," he said. "There were quite a few people late last year getting evicted from my building, in the KO units and that was really getting under the skin of the case workers because they thought the body corp and Kainga Ora was stepping over the mark or being too tough." Scott San Quentin with some artwork he created. Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi Of the 63 people evicted from state houses in the past 10 months, more than half - 37 - were in Auckland, 10 were in Christchurch, four in Northland and one in Wellington. The government is reducing the number of motels used for emergency housing - there are now fewer than 45, about a dozen in Auckland and just one to three remaining in other regions. Meanwhile, a third of those applying for emergency or transitional housing are being declined. Salvation Army mission officer Ian Hutson is worried evicted tenants are blacklisted from re-entering state social housing. "Once you're evicted it's almost like you've got a red mark against you, you'll never get back in to that level. Some of our services say they've got people coming in, they try to get them in one way or the other but once their record [of eviction] is made clear they just cannot get into any emergency or any other kind of accommodation." Hutson said some social workers were reporting it was better for tenants under threat of eviction to leave voluntarily. "When they've got somebody who's on the verge of needing to be evicted because of their behaviour or whatever, they try hard to encourage them to leave voluntarily so it doesn't end up with an official eviction record." Kāinga Ora general manager of national services Nick Maling said its new approach to managing disruptive tenants is providing more clarity to tenants and its frontline teams. "In the majority of cases, tenants are changing their behaviour and the issues for communities are improving. Where tenants aren't responding, we are being firm and consistent in ending tenancies," he said. "It is possible someone who has had their Kāinga Ora tenancy terminated could be assessed as being eligible to receive social housing again, and the Ministry of Social Development [MSD] could place them back on the Housing Register. If that were to happen and they were matched to a Kāinga Ora home, we would manage their tenancy closely to ensure they were meeting their obligations as a tenant." Auckland City Missioner Helen Robinson. Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi Auckland City Missioner Helen Robinson is concerned a person can be denied emergency, or transitional, housing if they are somehow to blame for their lack of shelter - a policy she said is leading to people ending up homeless. "The process has been made so difficult that people either don't or try to apply and are denied access. Often they are referred to what's called low cost housing, so into boarding houses," she said. "What we regularly hear is that it is safer for people to not be in a boarding house than it is to be in one. It becomes a real problem because often the first question people are asked when they do go to MSD is have you tried low cost housing?" She said those who felt unsafe living in a boarding house could have that count against them. "I might got along and say I've gone to this boarding house but it's unsafe. If there's no evidence to back-up that lack of safety, I have been deemed as contributing to my own homelessness so therefore will be denied access to emergency housing." MSD's acting group general manager of housing George Van Ooyen said people who are evicted from Kāinga Ora housing are still eligible to be matched to suitable social housing properties. "Decisions by housing providers about their tenants are made by them, and don't affect eligibility for the housing register. There is also no stand down period until a client can be assessed again," he said. "Clients who have been asked to leave their housing can be immediately assessed for social housing and referred to other suitable housing providers. It is possible an eviction will have an impact on a housing providers willingness to provide that person with housing, but that is at their discretion." Looking ahead, Scott San Quentin said tenants should stick to the rules but many need more support to maintain a tenancy. When he moved into his home after living on the street, it was a big adjustment. "It was actually hard to get used to sleeping on a bed again because I was sleeping for six months mostly on concrete and three layers of cardboard and maybe a blanket or a sleeping bag here or there," he said. "I'm lucky I think there are a lot of people who have transitioned from emergency housing into Kainga Ora and they're still going through a lot of difficulties in life, a lot more than I ever had and unless they're in a place where they've got access to all the support that they need that can be a difficult transition." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
NBR releases 2025 rich list
The National Business Review has released its 2025 rich list, painting a picture of Aotearoa's rich and powerful. NBR co-editor Hamish McNicol spoke to Corin Dann. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.