my-server
← Wiki

2025 in New Zealand

The following lists events that happened during 2025 in New Zealand.

Incumbents

Regal and vice-regal

Government

Legislature term: 54th New Zealand Parliament.

The Sixth National Government, elected in 2023, continues.

Other party leaders in parliament

Judiciary

Main centre leaders

Events

January

  • 1 January – A driver runs over two police officers on a foot patrol in Nelson, killing one and injuring the other. A 32-year-old man is arrested.
  • 3 January:
  • A 32-year old man is charged with the murder of Nelson police officer Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming.
  • Biosecurity New Zealand launches a major biosecurity operation after an oriental fruit fly is detected in South Auckland.
  • Thousands attend a vigil in Nelson for slain police officer Lyn Fleming.
  • Air New Zealand flight NZ677 from Auckland to Dunedin is cancelled due to a phone threat, affecting 170 passengers.
  • 4 January – Interislander and Bluebridge cancel a total of seven ferry crossings in response to rough weather conditions in the Cook Strait.
  • 5 January – Interislander and Bluebridge cancel five ferry crossings in response to continuing rough weather in the Cook Strait.
  • 6 January:
  • The Desert Road closes for two months of repairs.
  • Interislander and Bluebridge suspend ferry crossings due to rough weather in the Cook Strait.
  • 8 January – Over 2,070 customers in the Kaipara District experience internet outages after a digger damages the main fibre optic cable between Whangārei and Dargaville.
  • 9 January:
  • In response to significant public interest, New Zealand Parliament's justice select committee extends the submission deadline for the Treaty Principles Bill to 1pm on 14 January.
  • A fire engulfs of scrubland in Whangārei, leading to the evacuation of two houses.
  • 11 January – A scrub fire breaks out in KÅ«aotunu in the Coromandel Peninsula, consuming by the following day.
  • 12 January – Mayor of Hamilton Paula Southgate announces that she would not be running for a third term during the 2025 New Zealand local elections.
  • 13 January:
  • New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates sign a comprehensive economic partnership agreement, cutting tariffs on 98.5% of New Zealand exports to that country.
  • 14 January – Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming is suspended from duties due to a criminal investigation by the Independent Police Conduct Authority and the New Zealand Police.
  • 16 January:
  • Hundreds including Police Commissioner Richard Chambers attend the funeral of slain Nelson Police officer Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming.
  • Health New Zealand confirms a baby who died in November 2024 as the first death caused by whooping cough since a whooping cough epidemic was declared on 22 November 2024.
  • 17 January – Minister of Māori Development Tama Potaka announces an overhaul of the Waitangi Tribunal's membership.
  • 18 January:
  • A pod of about 30 whales are stranded near Pākawau in Golden Bay / Mohua, prompting a response from local iwi, the Department of Conservation(DOC) and Project Jonah.
  • A juvenile beaked whale is stranded and refloated at New Brighton, Christchurch.
  • 19 January:
  • Prime Minister Christopher Luxon implements a cabinet reshuffle, resulting in the replacement of Shane Reti as health minister by Simeon Brown, and the promotion of James Meager to the new position of Minister for the South Island.
  • Three whales die after the pod of about 30 whales re-stranded at PÅ«ponga Beach in Golden Bay despite efforts to refloat them.
  • 20 January – A second pod of about 11 whales is stranded near Taupata Point in the Golden Bay.
  • 21 January – DOC staff and volunteers succeed in refloating the initial pod of 30 whales and ten whales from the second pod. One of the whales from the second pod dies.
  • 22 January:
  • Ten whales are re-stranded in Golden Bay, prompting a response from DOC and volunteers.
  • The Body Shop NZ goes into voluntary administration.
  • Media company NZME announces plans to cut 14 reporting and 24 production jobs as part of a restructuring process.
  • 23 January:
  • DOC staff, Project Jonah and community volunteers succeed in refloating the ten stranded whales in Golden Bay.
  • Prime Minister Luxon gives his State of the Nation address. He announces that the existing Crown Research Institutes will be merged into three new Public Research Organisations and that the Government will establish a new foreign investment agency.
  • 25 January – A tornado and severe storm hits Mangawhai and surrounding areas, causing two serious injuries, damage to about 50 properties and power outages affecting 4,700 homes.
  • 27 January:
  • In order to attract digital nomads, a 'digital nomad' visa is announced to allow non-residents to work in New Zealand for up to nine months, given they work entirely remotely for a non-New Zealand company. The work will be untaxed for up to 90 days.
  • An outbreak of avian botulism leads to the deaths of about 1,000 birds at the Waikouaiti wastewater treatment plant near Dunedin and the Washdyke Lagoon near Timaru.
  • 27 January – New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters' suspends New Zealand's aid programme to Kiribati after Kiribati President Taneti Maamau cancelled three pre-arranged meetings including one scheduled for mid January 2025. The New Zealand Government had wanted to discuss how NZ$102 million worth of aid money allocated to Kiribati between 2021 and 2024 was being spent.
  • 29 January:
  • Prime Minister Luxon and Transport Minister Chris Bishop announces plans by the Government to reverse blanket speed limits on 38 sections of the New Zealand state highway network and seek public consultation on raising the speed limits for another 49 state highway sections.
  • Advocacy group ToitÅ« te Tiriti files an urgent Waitangi Tribunal claim against proposed Regulatory Standards Bill, claiming it would undermine the Treaty of Waitangi.
  • 30 January:
  • Mount Taranaki is officially recognised as a person under the name Taranaki Maunga.
  • The $130 million Queenstown Town Centre arterial road opens.
  • 31 January:
  • Health Minister Simeon Brown confirms that a new Dunedin Hospital will be built on the site of the former Cadbury factory at a cost of NZ$1.9 billion.
  • A power outage affects 22,000 Transpower customers in Rotorua.
  • The Royal New Zealand Air Force formally retires its fleet of five C-130H Hercules planes.
  • Save the Children New Zealand launches a 'Boot the Bill' campaign to oppose the Government's proposed legislation establishing youth offender boot camps.

February

  • 2 February – Auckland Transport raises fares on buses, trains and ferries by 5.2% and ends the 10% off-peak discount.
  • 3 February – The Tāhuna Glenorchy area of Central Otago is certified a Dark Sky Sanctuary, the 23rd such designation in the world and fifth in New Zealand.
  • 4 February – 900 private sector laboratory workers strike to protest poor conditions and a lack of pay parity with their public sector counterparts.
  • 5 February:
  • The New Zealand Government confirms it will invest between NZ$100–150 million in upgrading State Highway 76 in Christchurch.
  • It is announced that New Zealand's unemployment rate reaches 5.1%, the highest level since September 2020.
  • Several Māori leaders and attendees protest against several government ministers including David Seymour, Paul Goldsmith and Shane Jones during a pōwhiri leading up to Waitangi Day. Seymour's speech is disrupted while Jones threatens to cut government funding to the Waitangi National Trust.
  • 6 February:
  • Prime Minister Christopher Luxon attends Waitangi Day celebrations at Ngāi Tahu's Ōnuku marae in Akaroa.
  • The town hall in Roxburgh, Otago, which included the country's longest-running cinema, is destroyed by fire.
  • The former building for New Zealand's sole Jewish school "Kadimah School" is vandalised with antisemitic graffiti referencing the Gaza war.
  • 7 February:
  • Health New Zealand chief executive Margie Apa resigns four months before the end of her contract.
  • Taupō experiences heavy showers and thunderstorms, resulting in surface flooding and power outages.
  • 9 February – The New Zealand Government announces plans to revise the Active Investor Plus visa to attract more wealthy investors.
  • 10 February:
  • Driven by "pollution, degraded waterways, and over-allocation of water", Ngāi Tahu begins proceedings in the High Court against the Crown. The tribe argues that it has never lost (sovereignty, or the right to exercise authority) over freshwater, but control has been encumbered by the Crown. The Crown's argument is that it has the right to control freshwater through the Resource Management Act 1991 and other acts. The lawsuit has been given the name "Tau v AG", with historian Te Maire Tau as the lead plaintiff, and the Attorney-General (currently Judith Collins) representing the Crown.
  • ACT leader David Seymour drives a Land Rover up the New Zealand Parliament's steps as part of a fundraiser for a heart valve development programme at the University of Auckland.
  • The Director of the Public Health Agency Nicholas Jones resigns.
  • 11 February – The Australian company Millari Group announces plans to acquire and reopen Juken's former Gisborne saw mill, which closed in late 2023.
  • 12 February:
  • The Whangārei District Council led by Mayor Vince Cocurullo reiterates its refusal to comply with an order by Director-General of Health Diana Sarfati to fluoridate its water supply.
  • The Salvation Army releases its annual State of the Nation report, which identifies food insecurity, unaffordable housing and domestic violence against children as major issues facing New Zealand in 2025. The report also finds over 400,000 New Zealanders receiving welfare.
  • McDonald's New Zealand is denied resource consent to build a restaurant in Wānaka due to strong local opposition.
  • 13 February:
  • The Public Service Association challenges Health New Zealand's proposed digital and IT job cuts, claiming they breached employment law.
  • Crown Research Institute Callaghan Innovation proposes slashing 63 jobs in response to Government plans to disestablish the organisation.
  • 14 February – Director-General of Health Diana Sarfati resigns.
  • 15 February:
  • A bush fire in North Canterbury causes a section of State Highway 7 to close and several homes to evacuate.
  • Members of Destiny Church's "Man Up" group disrupt a "Pride and Rainbow" event at Te AtatÅ«'s library. The church's actions were condemned by Prime Minister Luxon, Mayor of Auckland Wayne Brown, Acting Waitematā District Commander Inspector Simon Walker and Labour leader Chris Hipkins.
  • Foreign Minister Winston Peters announces that New Zealand will be considering the newly ratified Chinese–Cook Islands strategic partnership agreement in light of its national interests and constitutional relationship with the Cook Islands.
  • 17 February:
  • The New Zealand Police launch an investigation into assault complaints during a protest by Destiny Church members against a rainbow event at Te AtatÅ«'s library.
  • Immigration New Zealand temporarily suspends deportation proceedings against New Zealand-born teenager Daman Kumar and his mother Sunita Devi (who both hold Indian citizenship) pending a ministerial review. Prior to a law change in 2006, babies of non-citizens born in New Zealand were entitled to New Zealand citizenship.
  • 18 February:
  • Government Statistician Mark Sowden confirms he will resign on 30 March after an inquiry by the Public Service Commission into data breach allegations at Manurewa Marae in 2023 criticised Statistics New Zealand's handling of personal information and management of conflicts of interest.
  • Torrential rain leads to flash flooding in parts of Otago including Beaumont.
  • 19 February:
  • The New Zealand Government establishes a NZ$2 million dual purpose fund to honour children who died in care and were buried in unmarked graves.
  • A group of abuse survivors picket the Accident Compensation Corporation's Christchurch office, demanding the company reform eligibility coverage policies for abuse survivors.
  • 20 February:
  • Associate Immigration Minister Chris Penk uses his discretionary powers to grant Davan Kumar a residency visa but upholds the deportation order against his overstayer parents.
  • Australian and New Zealand Defence Ministers Richard Marles and Judith Collins confirm that the Australian and New Zealand Defence Forces are monitoring three Chinese warships that are sailing through international waters near Sydney.
  • New Zealand Media and Entertainment confirms plans to layoff several senior reporters and create a new Free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) channel.
  • 21 February:
  • Flights between Australia and New Zealand are diverted after the Chinese Navy conducts live fire drills using warships 340 nautical miles east of Sydney, in international waters. The drills continued the following day and were closely monitored by the militaries of both Australia and New Zealand.
  • The New Zealand Government allocates NZ$200 million of funding for the City Rail Link to removing level crossings in order to ease traffic congestion in Auckland.
  • Andrew Bayly resigns as Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs after he "placed a hand" on a staff member's upper arm on 18 February, in what Bayly acknowledges as "overbearing" behavior.
  • 22 February:
  • Police investigate five suspected overnight church arson attempts in Masterton.
  • Chinese warships conduct a second live firing exercise in the Tasman Sea. Prime Minister Luxon confirms that Australian and New Zealand naval forces including HMNZS Te Kaha are monitoring the Chinese vessels.
  • 23 February:
  • LGBT supporters gather in Auckland's Albert Park to protest against Destiny Church's disruption of Pride events on 15 February.
  • The New Zealand Police confirm they are investigating graffiti at the former location of Auckland's Kadimah School, which was discovered on 6 February.
  • 24 February – The Police confirmed they have seized 76 gang patches and filed 337 charges for alleged insignia breaches under the Gangs Act 2024.
  • 25 February:
  • Immigration Minister Erica Stanford announces the Government will ease residency rules to recruit more primary school teachers from overseas.
  • Executive director Helen Potiki and legal counsels Nick Whittington and Kristy McDonald KC resign from the second phase of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into COVID-19 Lessons Learned.
  • 26 February:
  • A wildfire engulfs over 70 hectares of land near Waipoua Settlement, leading to the evacuation of local residents.
  • Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith and Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee confirm the Government will introduce legislation expanding citizen's arrest powers that they claim will combat retail crime.
  • Foreign Minister Winston Peters met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to raise concerns about Chinese naval exercises in the Tasman Sea.
  • Police confirm they have issued a warrant to arrest a 44-year old man in connection with the arson of four Masterton churches on 22 February.
  • 27 February – The New Zealand Government confirms it will introduce legislation to extend the parliamentary term from three to four years, subject to a referendum.
  • 28 February:
  • High Court Justice Simon Moore quashes Whakaari Management Limited's conviction for its role in the 2019 Whakaari / White Island eruption.
  • Sarah Fitt resigns as chief executive of state pharmaceutical agency Pharmac.
  • Oranga Tamariki workers affiliated with Public Service Association launch a seven-week strike avoiding double shifts, being on-call, and working overtime to protest unsatisfactory pay and work conditions.

March

April

May

  • 1 May:
  • 5,000 senior doctors affiliated with the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists strike in response to a pay dispute with national health service Health New Zealand.
  • States of emergency are declared in Selwyn District, Christchurch and Banks Peninsula due to flooding and landslides, amid poor weather affecting most of the country. About a thousand properties in Wellington experience power outages. Most flights to and from the city are cancelled, and so are Cook Strait ferry crossings. Wind gusts in the city reach up to 150 km/h.
  • 2 May – The state of emergency is lifted in the Selwyn District. States of emergency remain in effect in Christchurch and Banks Peninsula.
  • 3 May – 400 protesters gather in Dunedin's Octagon to protest against the New Zealand First party's member's bill defining women and men based on their sexual biology.
  • 6 May – The Commerce Commission files criminal charges against supermarket giant Woolworths New Zealand for alleged inaccurate pricing and misleading discounts.
  • 7 May:
  • Convicted murderer Mark Lundy is released on parole after serving 23 years of a life sentence for the murders of his wife Christine and daughter Amber in August 2000.
  • The New Zealand Government ends the requirement for overseas visitors to provide certified translations of supporting documents in a bid to boost tourism.
  • The New Zealand Parliament passes urgent legislation raising the threshold for making pay equity claims. As a result, 33 claims representing thousands of workers have to be dropped and refiled.
  • 9 May – Protesters gather in several centres including Auckland, Dunedin, Christchurch, Rolleston and New Plymouth to protest against the Government's new Pay Equality Amendment Act 2025.
  • 10 May – Protest against the Government's new Pay Equity legislation are held in Nelson and Ōtaki.
  • 11 May – The Christchurch City Council extends the state of emergency in Banks Peninsula in response to a landslip in Akaroa.
  • 12 May:
  • Mayor of Christchurch Phil Mauger lifts Banks Peninsula's local state of emergency.
  • Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming resigns following a four-month Police and Independent Police Conduct Authority investigation into serious misconduct including pornography being found on a Police-issued device.
  • 14 May – A parliamentary committee approves a motion against Te Pāti Māori MPs Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke, Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer censuring and banning them from entering the parliamentary buildings for up to 21 days for their performance of a haka against their opponents during a parliamentary debate over the Treaty Principles Bill.
  • 15 May – The New Zealand Government apologises to the Māori iwi Ngāti Ranginui for land confiscations and a scorched earth campaign during the New Zealand Wars. Parliament also passes legislation compensating the tribe NZ$38 million and designating 15 sites of significances to the tribe.
  • 16 May:
  • The USS Blue Ridge visited Wellington to reaffirm bilateral relations with New Zealand. This marked the first visit to Wellington by a US warship since 2021.
  • The Waitangi Tribunal releases an interim report urging the New Zealand Crown to halt work on the proposed Regulatory Standards Bill and to engage in "meaningful consultation" with Māori.
  • Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones, Labour Party MP Ingrid Leary attend a reopening ceremony at Hillside Engineering. Pro-Palestine, transgender rights, pay equity and climate change protesters picket the event.
  • 20 May:
  • Foreign Minister Winston Peters joins 22 other foreign ministers and the European Union in calling on Israel to allow a full resumption of aid to the Gaza Strip.
  • Two groups of protesters gather outside the New Zealand Parliament to call for the NZ Government to lower the bowel cancer screening age and oppose the suspension of three Te Pāti Māori MPs.
  • The New Zealand Parliament votes to postpone a debate on the Privileges Committee's decision to suspend three Te Pāti Māori MPs until 5 June, allowing them to participate in an upcoming debate around the 2025 New Zealand budget.
  • 22 May:
  • Finance Minister Nicola Willis releases the 2025 New Zealand budget.
  • The Wellington City Council votes to preserve the historic Begonia House and Khandallah Pool, while making cutbacks in transport infrastructure and renovations to Wellington Zoo. The Council also introduces parking fees for motorcycles in the Wellington CBD.
  • 23 May – The New Zealand Geographic Board and Land Information Minister Chris Penk decline a proposal by the Kororāreka Marae Society to rename Russell to its Māori language name "Kororāreka".
  • 24 May – Three crew members are injured in an engine room explosion aboard a ship berthed in Bluff.
  • 26 May:
  • Two of the New Zealand Government's "non-financial benefit sanctions" come into force: namely money management payment cards and community work experience activities.
  • Heavy rain leads to flooding in Nelson and Westport.
  • 27 May:
  • Police Commissioner Richard Chambers overturns a directive from March 2025 instructing Police officers not to investigate "lower value" thefts, petrol drive-offs, shoplifting and fraud crimes.
  • The Department of Conservation proposes axing 84 jobs to meet a Government directive for a 6.5 percent reduction in spending.
  • 28 May:
  • Health Minister Simeon Brown and Finance Minister Nicola Willis announce that the Government will invest in 126 additional beds and treatment spaces at Wellington Hospital.
  • Anti-mining protesters picket ANZ Bank branches in Dunedin and other centres to protest against the bank's relationship with coal company Bathurst Resources, which has applied for a fast-track consent to mine the Denniston Plateau.
  • 29 May:
  • The Transport Accident Investigation Commission (TAIC) launches an explosion into a boiler room explosion aboard a ship berthed in Bluff that occurred on 24 May.
  • A car crash causes a power outage and traffic disruption in Rotorua's Pukehangi suburb.
  • 30 May:
  • Police launch a review into how many cases of retail crime were filed after the rescindment of a controversial directive directing the Police not to investigate lower-value retail crimes.
  • 50 pay equity protesters picket a post-budget business lunch featuring Finance Minister Nicola Willis outside the Addington Raceway event centre.
  • Accident Compensation Corporation chair Tracey Batten resigns effective immediately,
  • Four separate ruptures to Dargaville's water pipeline causes disruptions to the town's water supply.

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Holidays and observances

Public holidays in New Zealand in 2025 are as follows:

Weather

Highest annual sunshine hours

Highest annual rainfall Lowest annual rainfall Highest recorded temperatures Lowest recorded temperature Highest recorded wind gust

Sport

Cricket

January
December
  • 19 December – Following a prolonged disagreement with New Zealand Cricket's board and key cricket stakeholders, Scott Weenink resigned from his position as its chief executive.

Football

Horse racing

Harness racing

Thoroughbred racing

Lawn bowls

Netball

  • 10 September - Netball New Zealand suspends the Silver Ferns' coach Dame Noeline Taurua over concerns over her management style and bullying allegations.
  • 25 October – Following an internal investigation and protracted negotiations, Netball New Zealand reinstates Dame Taurua as the Silver Ferns' coach, effective late 2025.

Rowing

Rugby union

Shooting

  • Ballinger Belt – Ross Geange (Hamilton Whatawhata)

Tennis

The ASB Classic tournament is held in Auckland from 28 December 2024 to 11 January 2025:

Deaths

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

Local government

Boundaries

References