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Short Description: Complete 2026 guide to New Zealand’s Partner of a Student Work Visa: eligibility, work rights, documents, fees, process, risks, and family rules.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-05

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country New Zealand
Visa name Partner of a Student Work Visa
Visa short name Partner of a Student
Category Temporary work visa / family-linked visa
Main purpose Let the partner of an eligible New Zealand student live in New Zealand and work
Typical applicant Spouse or partner of an international student studying an eligible course in New Zealand
Validity Usually aligned to the student partner’s visa length, subject to decision
Stay duration Usually for the same period as the supporting student’s visa, or a shorter period if decided by Immigration New Zealand
Entries allowed Check visa conditions; New Zealand visas commonly specify travel conditions individually
Extension possible? Yes, in some cases, if the supporting student remains eligible and the relationship and other requirements continue to be met
Work allowed? Yes, generally open work rights, but always subject to visa conditions shown on the granted visa
Study allowed? Limited; short study may be allowed, but longer study usually requires a student visa
Family allowed? Not automatically as a bundle; dependent children may need their own visas
PR path? Possible indirectly; this visa itself is temporary, but it may support later residence pathways depending on family circumstances
Citizenship path? Indirect only; no direct citizenship route from this temporary visa

The Partner of a Student Work Visa is a New Zealand temporary visa that allows the partner of an eligible student visa holder to live in New Zealand and work.

It exists to support family unity where a student is studying in New Zealand in a course that Immigration New Zealand treats as eligible for partner work rights.

This visa is meant for: – married spouses – civil union partners – de facto partners, including unmarried partners, if they can prove the relationship is genuine and stable

In New Zealand’s immigration system, this is a temporary work visa connected to: – the applicant’s relationship with the student, and – the student’s course level or qualification eligibility

It is a visa, not permanent residence. New Zealand generally operates an eVisa-based system for many applicants, though some passport handling requirements can still apply depending on the case and location.

Official naming

The official current name is generally presented by Immigration New Zealand as:

  • Partner of a Student Work Visa

People also confuse it with: – Partner of a Worker Work VisaPartner of a New Zealander Visitor VisaPartner of a New Zealander Resident VisaDependent Child Student VisaVisitor Visa based on partnership

2. Who should apply for this visa?

This visa is best for: – spouses or partners of eligible student visa holders in New Zealand – couples who want to live together in New Zealand while one partner studies – partners who want legal work rights while accompanying the student

Ideal applicants

Spouses/partners

Yes. This is the core target group.

Employees / job seekers

Yes, if they are the partner of an eligible student and want work rights in New Zealand.

Children/dependents

Not directly. Children usually need their own visa, such as a dependent child visa or student/visitor visa depending on age and schooling.

Students

Possibly, but only if their main basis is partnership and they want work rights rather than a full student visa.

Tourists

Usually no, unless they are actually the eligible partner of a student and want to stay on that basis rather than visit casually.

Business visitors / founders / investors / researchers / artists / digital nomads / retirees

Only if they independently qualify as the partner of an eligible student. This visa is not designed primarily for those activities.

Medical travelers / transit passengers / diplomats

Normally not the right visa class.

Who should not use this visa?

Do not use this visa if: – your partner’s student visa or course does not qualify you for partner work rights – you only want to visit briefly and do not need work rights – you are not in a genuine and stable relationship – you are a child dependent rather than a partner

Consider these instead

If this is not the right route, consider: – Visitor Visa if you are visiting and not working – Student Visa if you want to study full-time – Accredited Employer Work Visa if you have your own job offer – Partner of a Worker Work Visa if your supporting partner is a worker, not a student – Dependent child visas for children

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purposes

This visa is generally used for: – living in New Zealand with your student partner – working in New Zealand, usually with open work rights if granted that way – short-term study, where permitted by conditions – tourism and normal personal travel within the visa period – family reunion with the student partner

Prohibited or restricted purposes

This visa is generally not for: – staying with a partner whose course does not qualify for this visa – full-time long-course study without the correct student visa – using a false or weak partnership claim – working if your granted visa conditions restrict the type of work – remaining in New Zealand beyond visa expiry

Grey areas and common misunderstandings

Remote work

New Zealand immigration rules focus on visa conditions and work activity in New Zealand. If you are physically in New Zealand and working remotely, that can still be considered work for immigration purposes. On this visa, that is usually less problematic because it is a work visa, but tax and employment-law issues may still arise.

Volunteering

Usually fine if genuinely unpaid and not displacing paid work, but this is not always clearly spelled out in a visa-specific way. If the activity looks like normal employment, it may be treated as work.

Study

Short study may be permitted, but substantial study usually needs a student visa. Always check the conditions written on the granted visa.

Marriage in New Zealand

You can marry in New Zealand if otherwise lawful, but marriage itself does not automatically give immigration status.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Type Name
Official program name Partner of a Student Work Visa
Short name Partner of a Student
Long name Partner of a Student Work Visa
Broad class Temporary work visa
Linked category Partnership-based temporary visa
Related categories Partner of a Worker Work Visa, Partner of a New Zealander visas, visitor visas, student visas

There is no widely public subclass code in the way some countries use subclass numbers. New Zealand generally uses named visa products rather than public-facing subclass numbers.

Old vs current naming

Naming can change over time in web content and operational guidance. The current official public-facing term is Partner of a Student Work Visa.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility

To qualify, you generally must: – be the partner of a student visa holder – prove the relationship is genuine and stable – meet health and character requirements – hold a valid passport – have the supporting student hold an eligible student visa for an eligible course or qualification – show that the student can support the partnership basis under current INZ rules

Relationship requirement

New Zealand partnership visas usually require evidence that: – the relationship is genuine – the relationship is stable – you live together, or have lived together, unless an exception is accepted – you intend to live together in New Zealand

Accepted relationship types can include: – marriage – civil union – de facto partnership

Same-sex relationships are recognized under New Zealand immigration rules.

Student eligibility matters

This is one of the most important parts. Not every student visa holder can support a partner for this work visa.

Eligibility depends on the student’s course. Officially, this can depend on: – qualification level – whether the qualification is on an eligible list – whether it is a “Green List” linked qualification – whether it is a level and field that currently supports partner work rights – whether the student is studying towards an occupation/qualification specified in current policy

Warning: These student-course rules have changed multiple times in recent years. Applicants must verify the latest official criteria on the current Immigration New Zealand page before applying.

Nationality rules

There is no general nationality restriction publicly stated as the main rule for this visa. However: – document requirements – police certificate requirements – medical requirements – application location rules – visa application centre procedures

may vary by nationality or place of application.

Passport validity

You need a valid passport. Immigration New Zealand commonly expects passports to remain valid for the duration of travel and visa processing, and ideally beyond intended stay. Exact minimum validity wording may vary by case and airline/travel requirements.

Age

There is no standard public minimum age specifically because it is a partner visa, but applicants must have legal capacity and meet relationship law standards. If very young marriages or relationships are involved, there may be extra scrutiny.

Education, language, work experience, points

Usually not required for the partner applicant under this visa: – no points test – no English-language threshold is generally listed for the partner applicant – no work experience requirement – no direct education requirement

Sponsorship / job offer / invitation

Usually: – no separate job offer is required – no labour market test – no points invitation – no employer sponsorship required

The supporting basis is the relationship to the eligible student.

Financial support

Immigration New Zealand may require evidence that: – you can support yourself, or – your partner can support you, or – you have sufficient funds/access to funds

Exact amounts can vary by visa type and evidence pattern. The public visa page should be checked for current requirements.

Health

You may need: – a chest X-ray certificate – a medical examination

depending on length of stay, country history, and current INZ instructions.

Character

You may need: – police certificates – to disclose criminal convictions – to disclose past immigration issues

Insurance

A separate private insurance requirement is not always stated as a universal condition for this visa in the way student visas often require coverage, but healthcare costs in New Zealand can be high, and some applicants may still need or strongly benefit from insurance.

Biometrics

Biometrics requirements can vary by nationality and submission route. New Zealand does not use a universal one-rule-for-all biometric model across all cases in the same way some countries do. Follow the instructions for your application location.

Intent requirements

This is a temporary visa. You should be able to show that: – your relationship is real – your stay matches the visa purpose – you will comply with conditions

New Zealand accepts that some temporary visa holders may later qualify for another visa, but you must still be genuine in the current application.

Quotas/caps/ballots

Not generally applicable for this visa.

Embassy-specific rules

Application logistics may vary by: – where you are applying from – whether passport submission is requested – whether local VAC procedures apply

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Likely ineligibility factors

You may not be eligible if: – your partner’s course does not qualify – your relationship evidence is weak – you are not actually living together and cannot explain why – you cannot meet health or character requirements – you previously gave false information – your supporting partner does not hold valid student status

Common refusal triggers

  • insufficient proof of genuine and stable relationship
  • inconsistent dates across forms and evidence
  • weak cohabitation evidence
  • marriage certificate only, with no real-life evidence
  • student partner’s qualification not eligible for partner work rights
  • incomplete documents
  • unverifiable documents
  • undeclared prior refusals or overstays
  • poor explanations for long periods apart
  • passport validity issues
  • health/character issues

Common Mistake: Many couples assume a marriage certificate alone is enough. For New Zealand partnership cases, it usually is not.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits can include: – living with your student partner in New Zealand – work rights, often open work rights – flexibility to seek employment without a separate employer-specific work visa, if granted with open conditions – ability to remain for the student’s study period, subject to visa length granted – possibility of later moving to another visa if you independently qualify

Family benefit

It supports family unity during the student’s stay.

Practical benefit

You may be able to work for most employers, reducing financial pressure on the family.

Future migration benefit

It does not itself grant residence, but time in New Zealand and family unity can support future lawful pathways.

8. Limitations and restrictions

This visa is temporary and condition-based.

Possible restrictions include: – visa length tied to the student partner’s visa – no guarantee of renewal – work rights only as stated in visa conditions – not a direct residence visa – long-term study may require a separate student visa – dependent children need separate visas – loss of eligibility if the relationship ends or the student loses status – possible travel-condition limits depending on grant details

You must also: – comply with all visa conditions – not overstay – keep immigration information truthful and updated where required

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Duration

Usually granted for a period linked to the supporting student’s visa, often up to the end date of that student’s permitted stay.

Validity vs stay

New Zealand visas commonly show: – the visa expiry or travel conditions, and – the period you may remain

Read the grant letter carefully.

Entries

Travel conditions can be: – multiple-entry for a period, or – limited by the visa grant

Do not assume unlimited re-entry without checking the visa.

When the clock starts

The effective use period starts according to the visa grant. If offshore, the grant may include travel conditions and a date by which you must enter.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying can lead to: – unlawful status – deportation liability – future visa refusals

Interim status

If you apply for another visa while in New Zealand before your current visa expires, you may in some cases receive an Interim Visa. This depends on your situation and application type.

10. Complete document checklist

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Completed application Official visa application form or online submission Starts the legal process Wrong visa type selected, missing declarations
Relationship statement Written explanation of relationship history Helps prove genuine and stable partnership Vague timeline, contradictions
Visa fee payment Proof of paid fee Required for processing Assuming fee is refundable

B. Identity/travel documents

  • current passport
  • passport biodata page scan
  • passport-style photos if requested
  • national ID card if relevant
  • previous passports if needed for travel history or identity consistency

Common mistakes: – expired passport – poor-quality scans – name mismatch across documents

C. Financial documents

  • bank statements
  • savings evidence
  • proof of income
  • sponsor support evidence if relied on
  • explanation for large deposits

D. Employment/business documents

Usually optional unless used to show finances or background: – employment letter – payslips – tax records – business registration records if self-employed

E. Education documents

Usually not central for the partner applicant, but may help with identity/history consistency: – degree certificates – enrollment records if relevant

F. Relationship/family documents

This is the key section.

Possible evidence: – marriage certificate or civil union certificate – proof of living together – joint tenancy or lease – joint bank account statements – utility bills – shared mail to same address – photos over time – chat/call records – travel history together – affidavits or letters of support where relevant – birth certificates of shared children – evidence of shared financial responsibilities – evidence of public recognition of relationship

Warning: New Zealand partnership cases often expect more than ceremonial proof.

G. Accommodation/travel documents

  • proof of where you will live in New Zealand, if available
  • student partner’s address evidence
  • travel itinerary only if relevant or requested

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

From the student partner: – passport identity page – current student visa – offer of place or enrollment confirmation – evidence of current course and provider – evidence the course is eligible under current INZ rules

I. Health/insurance documents

  • chest X-ray certificate if requested
  • medical certificate if requested
  • insurance evidence if relevant to your case or prudent for travel

J. Country-specific extras

May include: – police certificates from specific countries – certified translations – local civil documents – military records – household registration records

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

If children apply separately: – birth certificates – custody orders – parental consent – school-related documents

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

If documents are not in English: – provide certified translations as required by INZ – check whether original-language copy plus translation is required

Apostille/legalization is not always universally required for every document, but authenticity concerns can lead to requests for formal certification.

M. Photo specifications

Use current INZ photo instructions if photos are required. Digital photo rules can be strict on: – size – background – recentness – facial visibility

11. Financial requirements

Financial evidence in this visa is often less formulaic than some student routes, but you should be prepared to show that you can maintain yourself.

What may be required

  • access to sufficient funds
  • support from the student partner
  • evidence of ongoing income or savings

Acceptable proof

  • personal bank statements
  • joint bank statements
  • payslips
  • employment letter
  • sponsor support letter with evidence
  • scholarship/support evidence if linked to the student’s overall funding

Large deposits

If there are recent large deposits: – explain them clearly – include source documents – match amounts to sale deeds, gifts, salary bonuses, or transfers

Currency issues

Use statements in original currency, and if helpful, add a simple conversion note. Do not alter bank documents.

Hidden costs

Budget for: – medicals – police certificates – translations – relocation – rent bond – emergency funds before first salary

12. Fees and total cost

Check the latest official fee page before applying. New Zealand visa fees vary by: – visa type – nationality – application location – whether an International Visitor Conservation and Tourism Levy applies in the case category

For this visa, cost components may include:

Cost item Notes
Visa application fee Varies by location and channel
Immigration levy May apply depending on current rules and route
Biometrics fee If applicable by location
Medical exam fee Paid to panel physician, not usually part of visa fee
Police certificate cost Paid to issuing authority
Translation/notary cost Varies widely
VAC/service charge If a visa application centre is used
Courier/passport handling May apply
Insurance Optional or practical cost depending on circumstances
Legal/consultant fee Optional, not government-mandated
Travel/relocation cost Airfare, temporary accommodation, transport
Renewal/new application fee Pay again if applying later for a fresh visa

Warning: Government fees can change without much notice. Always use the official fee finder/page.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm correct visa

First confirm: – your partner’s student visa is valid – the student’s course currently qualifies for partner work rights – your relationship evidence is strong enough

2. Gather documents

Collect: – identity documents – relationship evidence – student partner’s visa and course evidence – financial evidence – police/medical documents if required

3. Create account / complete form

Apply through Immigration New Zealand’s online system where available.

4. Pay fees

Pay the required fee and any related charges.

5. Book biometrics/interview if needed

Only if instructed for your case or application location.

6. Submit application

Upload documents carefully and submit.

7. Upload more documents / send passport if requested

Some applicants may later be asked for: – passport submission – additional relationship evidence – updated financial evidence

8. Medicals/police checks if needed

Complete these through approved channels if instructed.

9. Track application

Use your online account and official communication channels.

10. Respond to requests promptly

If INZ asks for more information, reply clearly and before the deadline.

11. Decision

You will receive: – approval with visa conditions, or – a decline decision explaining reasons

12. Visa issuance

Many applicants receive an eVisa or digital decision record.

13. Arrival steps

Carry key supporting documents when travelling.

14. Post-arrival registration

No universal residence card pickup applies like some countries. Follow any visa-specific conditions.

15. Permit activation

Not usually a separate physical permit activation process in the way some countries use BRP cards.

14. Processing time

Processing times change often. Immigration New Zealand publishes visa processing information, and you should check the official page for current estimates.

What affects timing

  • completeness of application
  • quality of relationship evidence
  • medical or police certificate delays
  • nationality and residence country
  • peak student seasons
  • requests for extra information
  • verification checks

Practical expectation

A well-prepared application is usually processed faster than one with missing or confusing evidence, but there is no guaranteed outcome or exact timeframe.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

May be required depending on: – nationality – application location – current operational arrangements

Interview

Not every applicant is interviewed. If interviewed, questions may cover: – relationship history – cohabitation – future plans in New Zealand – student partner’s course details – previous immigration history

Medical

You may need a medical exam and/or chest X-ray depending on: – intended length of stay – countries lived in – health history – INZ instructions

Police checks

Police certificates may be required depending on: – age – intended stay duration – country residence history

Use the official INZ guidance on police certificates and panel physicians.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Public official approval-rate statistics specifically for this exact visa are not always presented in a simple public dashboard. If no official current approval percentage is published, applicants should not rely on internet estimates.

Practical refusal patterns

Officially and practically, refusals often relate to: – weak partnership evidence – ineligible student course – inconsistent documents – poor response to INZ requests – character or health problems – missing cohabitation proof

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Use a relationship timeline

Create a simple chronology: – when you met – when relationship became serious – periods living together – engagement/marriage if applicable – travel together – current living arrangements – New Zealand plans

Make cohabitation evidence easy to read

Upload evidence that clearly shows: – same address – same periods – both names where possible

Explain gaps

If you lived apart because of: – studies – visa issues – work obligations – family obligations

explain it clearly and support it with evidence.

Show the student’s course eligibility

Do not assume INZ will connect the dots. Include: – student visa – offer of place/enrolment – course level – qualification details – evidence that the qualification is one that currently supports partner work rights

Present finances cleanly

Use: – 3–6 months of statements where helpful – source explanations for unusual credits – labelled PDF files

Be consistent

Dates, addresses, and relationship history must match across: – application form – cover letter – partner statement – tenancy records – chats/travel history

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

1. Build the file around the decision-maker’s questions

A case officer will usually want to know: – Is the relationship real and stable? – Is the student eligible to support this visa? – Is the applicant admissible?

Organize evidence around those questions.

2. Use a document index

Submit an index page listing: – identity – relationship evidence – cohabitation evidence – student eligibility evidence – finances – health/character

3. Group relationship evidence by category

Instead of uploading random files, create grouped PDFs: – Relationship Timeline – Cohabitation Proof – Financial Interdependence – Communication Evidence – Photos and Travel Together

4. Explain large deposits before INZ asks

A short note can prevent delays.

5. Do not overload with useless screenshots

Quality beats quantity. Fifty pages of random chats are less useful than: – a relationship summary – representative chat excerpts across time – address-linked proof – financial sharing evidence

6. Apply early in peak student seasons

Processing can slow near major academic intakes.

7. Check the student’s course eligibility twice

This is a frequent failure point because rules change.

8. Answer old refusals honestly

If you had a prior refusal anywhere, disclose it if asked and explain briefly.

9. Use certified translations properly

Upload: – original document – full translation – translator certification if required

10. If reapplying after refusal, fix the actual reason

Do not simply resubmit the same pack.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

A cover letter is often helpful even if not strictly mandatory.

What to include

  • who you are
  • who your student partner is
  • what visa you are applying for
  • summary of relationship history
  • evidence of living together
  • details of partner’s student status and eligible course
  • confirmation you understand visa conditions
  • summary of attached evidence

What not to say

  • anything exaggerated or untrue
  • emotional arguments without evidence
  • statements suggesting you will ignore visa conditions
  • contradictory plans

Simple outline

  1. Introduction
  2. Visa requested
  3. Relationship history
  4. Cohabitation and shared life evidence
  5. Student partner’s visa and course
  6. Financial/support position
  7. Compliance statement
  8. Document list attached

Tone should be: – factual – calm – organized – honest

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

This visa does not usually rely on an employer sponsor. The key supporting person is the student partner.

The student partner should provide

  • passport copy
  • current visa copy
  • enrollment or offer documentation
  • evidence of course level/eligibility
  • relationship statement
  • proof of living together/shared life
  • support letter if financially assisting

Common sponsor-side mistakes

  • failing to prove current enrollment
  • assuming a student visa alone is enough
  • weak course eligibility proof
  • giving inconsistent relationship history

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Who qualifies as partner?

Usually: – spouse – civil union partner – de facto partner

Marriage vs unmarried partner

Marriage helps, but does not replace the need to show a genuine and stable relationship. Unmarried partners can qualify if they can prove the relationship properly.

Same-sex partners

Recognized.

Children

Children do not get included automatically under one partner work visa. They usually need separate visas.

Proof required

For the partner: – relationship evidence – cohabitation/shared life evidence – identity and civil documents

For children: – birth certificates – custody/consent documents – separate visa applications as required

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

This visa is designed to allow work. In many cases it provides open work rights, meaning the holder can work for most employers without a separate job offer. But always read the granted visa conditions.

Self-employment

If the visa conditions are open enough, self-employment may be possible, but check whether any condition limits this. Also consider tax and business registration obligations.

Remote work

Usually permitted from an immigration perspective because this is a work visa, but tax residency and employer compliance can still matter.

Internships

Paid internships are usually work. On this visa that may be allowed if not otherwise restricted by conditions.

Volunteering

Usually acceptable if genuinely unpaid.

Study rights

Short study may be allowed incidentally. Longer or formal study often needs a student visa.

Business activity

Normal lawful business activity may be possible if your work visa conditions do not prohibit it.

Taxable activity

Income earned while in New Zealand may trigger tax obligations. See tax section below.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

A New Zealand visa does not remove border discretion. On arrival, an officer may still check: – your passport – visa status – purpose of entry – relationship and contact details if needed

Documents to carry

Bring copies of: – visa grant letter – student partner’s visa – student’s enrollment/course evidence – relationship evidence summary – accommodation details – return/onward plans if relevant

Re-entry

Check travel conditions on the visa. If travel conditions expire before you return, you may have a problem even if your visa itself has not fully ended.

New passport

If you get a new passport, check INZ instructions on linking or transferring visa records.

Dual nationality

Travel using the passport connected to your visa record unless official guidance says otherwise.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

There is no automatic extension, but you may apply again or apply for another visa if: – your partner remains an eligible student – the relationship continues – you still meet all criteria

Inside New Zealand

Often possible to apply for a new visa from within New Zealand before expiry.

Switching

You may be able to switch to another visa type if independently eligible, such as: – work visa based on your own job – student visa – partnership-based visa under another category if your partner’s status changes

Risks

  • do not let current visa expire before applying
  • do not assume interim status without confirmation
  • if the student changes course, the partner’s eligibility may be affected

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Direct PR route?

No. This is a temporary visa.

Indirect PR route?

Yes, potentially.

Examples: – your partner later qualifies for residence and you later become eligible through family/residence pathways – you qualify independently for a work-to-residence or skilled residence route – you later move into a partnership-based residence category if eligible

Citizenship

No direct path from this visa. Citizenship comes much later and usually only after: – becoming a resident – then a permanent resident or holding residence long enough – meeting physical presence and other citizenship requirements

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Taxes

If you work in New Zealand, you may need: – an IRD number – to pay New Zealand tax

Tax residence depends on facts, not just visa type. Check Inland Revenue rules.

Compliance obligations

You must: – obey visa conditions – stop work if your visa no longer permits it – leave or apply for a new visa before expiry – provide truthful information to immigration authorities

Health

If you are not publicly funded for healthcare, private cover may be wise.

Overstays

Overstaying can seriously damage future immigration options.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

For this visa, there is no broad public rule that certain nationalities are exempt from the partnership requirement. But nationality can affect: – police certificate rules – medical documentation – visa application centre procedures – passport handling – translation/document standards

If you are from a visa-waiver country, that does not mean you can ignore the proper visa if you want to live and work as a partner of a student.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Rare and more complex. Extra legal and relationship-capacity issues may arise.

Same-sex spouses/partners

Accepted under New Zealand immigration rules.

Stateless persons / refugees

Possible, but documentation issues can make applications more complex. Case-by-case assessment is likely.

Applying from a third country

Often possible, but local submission logistics may vary.

Prior refusals

Must be disclosed if asked. They do not automatically bar approval, but hiding them can.

Overstays / removals / deportation

These can seriously affect eligibility and credibility.

Gender marker mismatch / name changes

Provide: – legal name-change documents – clear identity linking documents – explanatory note if records differ

Expired passport but valid visa

Do not travel on assumptions. Check with INZ on passport and visa record linkage before travel.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
A marriage certificate guarantees approval. No. You still must prove a genuine and stable relationship.
Any student in New Zealand can support a partner work visa. No. The student’s course must meet current eligibility rules.
This visa gives permanent residency. No. It is a temporary visa.
You can study anything you want on this visa. Not necessarily. Longer study may require a student visa.
If refused once, you can just reapply with the same file. Usually a bad idea unless the refusal issue is fixed.
Remote work never counts as work. Immigration and tax treatment can still matter.
You do not need cohabitation proof if married. Usually false for New Zealand partnership cases.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

You will usually receive a written decision or letter explaining the reasons.

Appeal / review

For temporary visas, formal appeal rights are often limited compared with residence decisions. Whether reconsideration, complaint, or review options exist depends on: – where you applied – the type of decision – whether there was a case-processing error – your immigration status at the time

Check the refusal notice carefully.

Fee refund

Usually visa fees are not refunded after processing has started, even if refused.

Reapplication

You can often reapply if you fix the refusal issues.

Good reapplication approach

  • read the refusal reasons line by line
  • address each point directly
  • add better evidence
  • explain prior refusal honestly
  • avoid emotional repetition

31. Arrival in New Zealand: what happens next?

At immigration check

You may be asked: – why you are coming – who your partner is – where you will live – what your partner is studying

First practical steps

Within the first days/weeks, many applicants will need to: – secure accommodation – apply for an IRD number if working – open a bank account – get a local SIM – understand healthcare access – keep copies of visa conditions

No standard BRP card system

New Zealand generally does not use a UK-style BRP collection process for this visa.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Scenario 1: spouse of master’s student

  • Week 1–2: confirm student course eligibility
  • Week 2–4: gather relationship/cohabitation evidence
  • Week 4: submit application
  • Week 5–10+: INZ processes, may ask for more proof
  • Decision: visa granted
  • Travel: arrive before student’s program midpoint or as planned

Scenario 2: de facto partner with weaker paper trail

  • Week 1–3: rebuild evidence pack from leases, mail, photos, chats
  • Week 4: get certified translations
  • Week 5: submit
  • Week 7–12+: likely request for more information
  • Decision depends heavily on cohabitation proof quality

Scenario 3: family with child

  • Prepare partner work visa plus child visa separately
  • Add custody/birth/schooling documents
  • Expect more document coordination and possible longer review

33. Ideal document pack structure

Use a clean structure.

Suggested naming convention

  • 01_Passport_Applicant
  • 02_Photos
  • 03_Application_Form_Summary
  • 04_Relationship_Timeline
  • 05_Marriage_Certificate
  • 06_Cohabitation_Evidence_2023_2024
  • 07_Communication_Evidence
  • 08_Photos_Together
  • 09_Student_Partner_Passport_Visa
  • 10_Student_Course_Eligibility
  • 11_Financial_Documents
  • 12_Police_Medical
  • 13_Cover_Letter

PDF tips

  • merge by topic, not random order
  • keep scans clear and upright
  • avoid blurry screenshots
  • label dates and addresses where helpful

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm correct visa type
  • Confirm student partner’s course is eligible
  • Check passport validity
  • Gather relationship and cohabitation evidence
  • Gather student visa and enrollment evidence
  • Prepare financial documents
  • Check medical/police requirements
  • Review current fee page

Submission-day checklist

  • Form complete
  • Declarations answered honestly
  • Files readable
  • Translations attached
  • Fee paid
  • Contact details correct

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment confirmation
  • Requested originals
  • Relationship summary
  • Student partner details
  • Be ready to answer clearly and consistently

Arrival checklist

  • Passport
  • Visa grant copy
  • Student partner contact and address
  • Accommodation details
  • Important relationship documents copies
  • Funds access

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Current visa still valid
  • Relationship still ongoing
  • Student still holds valid eligible status
  • Updated financials
  • Updated cohabitation proof

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal letter fully
  • Identify each missing or weak issue
  • Obtain stronger evidence
  • Draft concise explanation
  • Recheck visa category before reapplying

35. FAQs

1. Can I work full-time on a Partner of a Student Work Visa?

Usually yes, if the granted visa has open work conditions. Always check your actual visa conditions.

2. Does every student in New Zealand qualify their partner for this visa?

No. The student’s course must meet current eligibility rules.

3. Can an unmarried partner apply?

Yes, if they can prove a genuine and stable partnership.

4. Is a marriage certificate enough?

No. New Zealand usually expects broader partnership evidence.

5. Do we need to have lived together?

Usually yes, partnership cases commonly require evidence of living together, unless exceptional circumstances are accepted.

6. Can same-sex couples apply?

Yes.

7. Can I include my child in the same application?

Usually the child needs a separate visa application.

8. Can I study on this visa?

Short study may be possible, but longer study usually needs a student visa.

9. Can I be self-employed?

Often possible if your work conditions are open, but check your visa wording and tax obligations.

10. Can I work remotely for a foreign employer?

Immigration-wise this is usually less problematic on a work visa, but tax and employment compliance still matter.

11. What if my partner changes courses?

That can affect your visa basis if the new course is not eligible.

12. What if my relationship ends?

Your visa basis may be affected. Seek advice and act before your status is impacted.

13. How long is the visa granted for?

Usually up to the student partner’s visa length, but not guaranteed.

14. Is there an age limit?

No standard age cap is publicly central to this visa, but legal-capacity issues can matter.

15. Do I need IELTS?

Generally no, not for this partner work visa.

16. Do I need a job offer?

No, not usually.

17. Do I need health insurance?

Not always listed as a universal condition, but it is often wise.

18. Do I need police clearance?

Possibly, depending on your age, stay length, and residence history.

19. Will I be interviewed?

Not always. Some applicants are; many are not.

20. Can I apply from inside New Zealand?

Often yes, if you are lawfully in New Zealand and eligible to apply.

21. What if I was previously refused a visa for another country?

Disclose it if asked and explain honestly.

22. Can I travel in and out of New Zealand freely?

Only within your visa’s travel conditions.

23. Can I switch to another visa later?

Yes, if you qualify independently or under a new basis.

24. Does this visa lead to permanent residence?

Not directly, only indirectly through later qualifying pathways.

25. Can my partner support me if they are studying a lower-level course?

Only if that course is on the currently eligible list/rules. Check official guidance.

26. Do we need joint bank statements?

Not always mandatory, but they can strongly help show shared life.

27. What if we lived apart temporarily?

Explain why and provide evidence of the ongoing relationship.

28. Can I apply before my partner enters New Zealand?

Possibly, but the practical timing and strength of evidence depend on the student’s visa and enrollment status.

29. Are online relationship chats enough?

No. They help, but cohabitation and shared-life evidence are usually more important.

30. Can I volunteer?

Usually yes if genuinely unpaid, but avoid roles that look like regular paid work if unclear.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are key official sources. Because New Zealand immigration rules change, always verify the latest wording before applying.

37. Final verdict

The Partner of a Student Work Visa is best for genuine spouses and partners of international students whose New Zealand study program currently qualifies for partner work rights.

Biggest benefits

  • live together in New Zealand
  • work lawfully, often with open work conditions
  • support the family financially while the student studies

Biggest risks

  • applying when the student’s course is not actually eligible
  • weak partnership evidence
  • assuming marriage alone is enough
  • not checking updated rules before applying

Top preparation advice

  1. Confirm the student’s course eligibility first.
  2. Build a strong relationship-and-cohabitation evidence pack.
  3. Keep documents consistent and clearly labeled.
  4. Explain unusual facts before INZ asks.
  5. Verify current fees, processing times, and document rules on official pages right before submission.

When to consider another visa

Consider another visa if: – you only want to visit, not work – the student’s course is not eligible – you have your own job offer and qualify for a direct work visa – you want to study long-term yourself

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

Some important items can vary and should be checked right before applying:

  • whether the supporting student’s exact qualification currently qualifies for partner work rights
  • whether “Green List” or qualification-level rules have been updated
  • current visa fees by nationality and application location
  • current processing times
  • whether medicals or police certificates are required in your exact case
  • whether biometrics are required in your country of application
  • whether travel conditions will be single or multiple entry in your visa grant
  • whether your intended study on this visa is allowed or whether you need a student visa
  • whether your dependent children need visitor or student visas based on age and schooling
  • local visa application centre procedures, service fees, and passport handling rules
  • whether any recent policy changes affect partners of students in lower-level or non-priority courses

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