Below are lessons, mistakes and turning points that real applicants and official
sources have publicly documented on the journey from India to New
Zealand. Each one links to where it was reported. These are other people’s
experiences, shared so you can learn from them, not instructions for your own case.
Rules and figures change. Visa fees, thresholds and processing rules
are updated often. Items marked “confirm with Immigration NZ” were accurate
when reviewed, but always check the current rule on
immigration.govt.nz
before relying on them.
Accredited Employer Work Visa
Paying for a job offer is the most-documented disaster
Migrants have documented paying intermediaries roughly NZ$15,000 to NZ$50,000 to "secure" a job and work visa, then arriving to little or no work. In one case the Employment Relations Authority ordered NZ$44,750 repaid. Immigration New Zealand states an employer cannot charge for a job or for recruitment costs, directly or through a third party.
Verify the employer and the visa are genuine before relocating
Several arrivals documented finding the company that offered the job was in liquidation or did not exist. Immigration New Zealand publishes an accredited-employer list and a Visa Verification Service to check an offer, and notes it only takes fees by card, never into a personal bank account.
Workers who arrived with an offer documented still being asked for "local experience and certificates" they did not have, and some had to re-interview through support agencies. "No New Zealand experience" is the obstacle migrants most commonly describe when looking for work.
Personal networks, not portals, produced the actual job
One fabricator documented securing construction work through a friend while others around him stayed jobless, and observed that very short visa durations made employers hesitant to hire. Immigration New Zealand’s own guidance emphasises networking to find work.
Applicants documented receiving a Potentially Prejudicial Information (PPI) letter, which Immigration New Zealand describes as an opportunity to respond to its concerns by a deadline rather than a refusal. The documented triggers included employment credibility, qualification mismatches and unclear finances.
Qualifications were not always recognised at face value
A skilled-migrant blogger documented his engineering degree being reassessed to a lower level because his institution was not on the accredited list, which changed his points. From June 2025 India was added to Immigration New Zealand’s qualification exemption (LQEA) list, removing the mandatory qualification assessment for most Indian degree-holders.
Complete the Expression of Interest correctly and honestly
The same blogger stressed completing the Expression of Interest "correctly and honestly", documenting that inconsistencies and false statements cause declines and can create lasting character problems. When a former employer had closed, he had to supply tax and contribution records to substantiate his work history.
Immigration New Zealand reports prioritised Skilled Migrant applications averaging around 4 to 7 weeks, while non-prioritised ones have run from 2 to 18 months. Migrants describe planning their finances and visa validity around a long, uncertain wait.
Applicants describe the published structure: 3 to 6 points from one of occupational registration, qualification or income, plus up to 3 points from skilled New Zealand work experience. The documented catch is that one category cannot be "topped up" with more of itself; only New Zealand work experience adds the remaining points.
Student funds are a concrete, frequently-tripped requirement
Immigration New Zealand publishes a student funds threshold of NZ$20,000 per year of study (or NZ$1,667 per month for shorter courses), supported by a genuine, traceable funds history. Applicants describe preparing this well ahead rather than at the last minute.
Study to residence is the slow-but-reliable route people describe
Migrants describe a Bachelor’s, postgraduate diploma or Master’s commonly leading to an open Post-Study Work Visa, with the New Zealand work experience then feeding Skilled Migrant points. The post-study application must be made within three months of the student visa expiring (six months for doctoral study).
Indian Police Clearance Certificate: new format rule and long lead time
From 1 December 2025, Immigration New Zealand accepts an Indian Police Clearance Certificate only when issued by a Regional Passport Office (MEA), not by a local police station. Processing can take around 5 to 6 weeks, and the certificate must be less than six months old at submission, so applicants describe starting it early.
Proof of funds: the "unexplained large deposit" trap
Documented decline reasons include bank balance certificates with no transaction history, locked term deposits with no maturity date, and large unexplained deposits that prompt questions about the source. Applicants describe providing at least three consecutive months of statements with no surprise lump sums.
A reference letter alone may not prove work experience
A certificate of employment or reference letter, on its own, has been documented as insufficient to prove work experience; payslips or tax records are expected as corroboration. This matters most when a former employer has since closed.
Migrants documented that near minimum wage "half your salary will go to rent", with rent around NZ$300 a week and a family of four budgeting roughly NZ$3,000 to NZ$4,000 a month. Several describe arriving with "show money" and underestimating early living costs.