Nepal student guide

Travelling to New Zealand from Nepal

Verified 2026-01-01πŸ‡³πŸ‡ΏNew Zealand guide
✦Quick summary

Before departing Nepal: get your NOC from MoEST (2–4 weeks), send tuition via NRB-approved bank forex in NZD, carry notarised academic documents. After arriving: open an NZ bank account within your first week (ANZ, Kiwibank, or BNZ), apply for your IRD (tax) number online, and register with your university health centre. NZ immigration is entirely online β€” no embassy visit required.

1

NOC and NRB Forex for New Zealand

The No Objection Certificate (NOC) from Nepal's Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MoEST) is mandatory for all Nepali students studying in New Zealand. Apply at the MoEST Foreign Education Division in Sano-Thimi, Bhaktapur after receiving your NZ university Offer of Place. Required documents: Offer of Place (formal acceptance letter from NZ university), NEB +2 or bachelor's original certificates, and passport. Processing: 2–4 weeks.

NRB-approved forex remittance: tuition fee payments to NZ universities must go through authorised bank forex counters. Bring your NOC, university fee schedule, and Offer of Place to Himalayan Bank, Nabil Bank, NIC Asia, Standard Chartered Nepal, or Nepal SBI Bank. NZD is a convertible currency β€” Nepali banks convert NPR β†’ USD β†’ NZD or directly to NZD in some cases. The education-purpose forex allowance under NRB rules covers your full annual tuition plus the NZD 15,000 living expenses as required by Immigration NZ.

After arriving in NZ: open an NZ bank account (see below), and future transfers from Nepal can be done directly via SWIFT wire transfer to your NZ bank account. Kiwibank and ANZ are most commonly used by Nepali students. Western Union and Wise are also used for smaller amounts but check NRB regulations on personal remittance limits.

2

Documents to Prepare Before Departure

Essential originals to carry: passport (valid throughout your course + 3 months beyond), NZ eVisa confirmation (printed on paper), Offer of Place from NZ university, NEB +2 or bachelor's original certificates and official transcripts, IELTS score report, NOC from MoEST, 10–12 passport-sized photos.

Notarised copies: prepare 5–7 notarised sets of your academic certificates and transcripts. NZ universities, NZQA, and some employers request these. Notarising in Nepal before departure saves significant time and cost compared to getting documents authenticated once in NZ. Police clearance certificate (valid for 6 months) β€” you submitted one for your visa but bring a spare original.

For the first week in NZ: your Offer of Place, enrollment letter (confirming you are a current student, issued by university after enrollment), and passport are the most frequently required documents. Download the Immigration NZ app to your phone to access your visa details digitally.

3

What to Pack for New Zealand

Climate: NZ has a temperate maritime climate β€” mild and changeable. Auckland (North Island): warm summers (22–28Β°C December–February), mild winters (10–15Β°C June–August). Dunedin (South Island): cooler β€” winters can reach 0–5Β°C, occasional frost. Pack layers rather than heavy single items: a medium-weight waterproof jacket is more useful than a heavy down coat in most NZ cities. Good walking shoes are essential β€” NZ is an outdoor-oriented country.

Electronics: NZ uses Type I plugs (flat 3-pin, same as Australia) at 230V. Bring a Type I adapter or buy one at Kathmandu or Auckland airport. Your Nepali phone may need an adapter. Buy a local SIM card on arrival: Spark, One NZ (Vodafone), or 2degrees are the main carriers. Prepaid SIM with data: NZD 30–50/month for 10–20GB. A SIM from Auckland Airport is convenient on arrival.

Food and essentials: standard Nepali groceries (dal, rice, spices) are available at Indian/Asian grocery stores in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch. Pack a 2–3 month supply of harder-to-find items: masala mixes, specific lentils (gahat, tori), ghee. Bread, eggs, chicken, and vegetables are inexpensive in NZ. Budget NZD 300–500/month for groceries. Flat-sharing with other Nepali students significantly reduces food costs.

4

Nepali Community in New Zealand

The Nepali community in New Zealand is estimated at 30,000–40,000, concentrated in Auckland (the largest Nepali community in NZ), Wellington, and Christchurch. Non-Resident Nepali Association (NRNA) NZ chapter is active and organises events for Dashain, Tihar, Holi, and New Year. The community has active Facebook groups: "Nepali in New Zealand", "Nepali Students NZ", and university-specific Nepali groups.

University Nepali student associations: Auckland, AUT, Massey, Otago, Canterbury, and VUW all have active Nepali student groups that provide peer support, event organisation, and help for newly arrived students. Contact the student association before arrival through social media β€” seniors often help with accommodation, SIM cards, and first-week orientation.

Nepali restaurants and cultural spaces: Auckland has several Nepali restaurants (dal bhat, momo, Nepali tea). Wellington and Christchurch have smaller Nepali food options. Saturday and Sunday Nepali cultural events, especially around Dashain and Tihar, are attended by hundreds of Nepali New Zealanders. The Nepali community is generally very welcoming and supports newly arrived students.

5

First Weeks Checklist After Arriving in New Zealand

Day 1–3: Check in at your university international student office (bring passport, enrollment confirmation, and Offer of Place). Collect student ID. Attend international student orientation β€” NZ universities provide detailed practical guidance on banking, IRD numbers, accommodation, health insurance, and transport. If staying in halls: meet your floor warden and explore the campus.

Week 1: Open an NZ bank account. ANZ, Kiwibank, and BNZ are all student-friendly and can be opened online or in-branch with your passport and enrollment letter. Get your IRD number (tax number) β€” apply online at ird.govt.nz or at your local IRD office. You need your IRD number to work legally in NZ. Get health insurance: most NZ universities require international student health insurance β€” check if your university has a group policy included in fees.

Week 2–4: Register with a local GP (general practitioner, doctor) near your university or in your suburb. NZ healthcare is free for some services with a Community Services Card, but standard GP visits cost NZD 30–80 β€” health insurance covers most of this. If working, set up PAYE (pay-as-you-earn) with your employer using your IRD number. Explore the city: NZ is extraordinarily scenic β€” a weekend trip to the nearest national park or beach is worth the effort early in your stay.

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Information verified by Studination counselors Β· Last reviewed: 2026-01-01 Β· Always verify details on official university and government websites before applying.