If you do not leave New Zealand before your visa expires
You are not allowed to stay after your visa expires. Find out what to do if you need to stay past your visa expiry.
Managing your visa and passport
- Transferring your visa to a new passport
- Application for transfer or confirmation of a visa
- If your passport is lost or stolen
- If you cannot get a passport
- If you do not leave New Zealand before your visa expires
- Deportation and how you can appeal
- Application for a transfer of a visa for Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) Interim Visa holders
- New Zealand citizens travelling on a foreign passport
Find out when your visa expires
You can find the date your visa expires in your passport or the eVisa letter we sent you when we granted your visa. You must leave New Zealand on or before this date.
If you need to stay longer
If you are in New Zealand and need to stay past the date your visa expires, you cannot extend your visa — instead, you must apply for another visa or a temporary visa before your current one expires.
To apply for a temporary visa, you must:
- be in New Zealand
- hold a current visa that is not a limited, interim or transit visa.
You should apply for another visa at least 1 month before your current visa’s expiry date.
How long it takes to process a visa application
If you stay after your visa expires
You are breaking the law if you stay after your visa expires. You:
- cannot work or study, and will have no access to health care
- may not be able to come back to New Zealand again if you are here without a visa for 42 days or longer
- risk being detained or deported.
Your actions can also affect other people. For example, if family members or other people help you to stay in New Zealand they:
- commit an offence under the Immigration Act 2009, and
- may put their own immigration status at risk.
The longer you stay after your visa expires, the greater the risk you run of being deported and of not being able to return to New Zealand in the future.
Actions you can take after your visa expires
If you are still in New Zealand after your visa expires, you can:
- leave the country immediately, or
- make a request for a special temporary or resident visa under section 61 of the Immigration Act 2009, but only if you believe you have a special case.
Making a Section 61 request
Requests under section 61 are only granted in some cases.
We cannot grant you a visa under section 61 if a deportation order has already been issued to you.
Section 61 of the Immigration Act 2009: Grant of visa in special case - New Zealand Legislation
How to make a request
Put your request in writing and email it to:
Explain your circumstances as fully as possible and attach to your email any evidence to support your request.
Do not provide credit card details with your request. We will contact you for payment once your request is assessed and we decide to grant you a visa.
In your request include:
- your personal details — your name, date of birth and Immigration New Zealand (INZ) client number
- your contact details — email address, phone number and postal address
- an explanation of why you are still in New Zealand after your visa has expired — for example, tell us why you could not return to your home country or go to another country to apply for a new New Zealand visa
- details of your personal circumstances, such as your family or work, that support your reasons for wanting to stay in New Zealand
- how staying in New Zealand could contribute to our country, particularly if you would like to stay here for a long time
- what type of visa you would like — for example a visitor or study visa — and how long you would like to stay.
Supporting documents
When you email your request attach a copy of the personal details page in your passport.
There are no other documents you must provide, but it is recommended to attach copies of any supporting evidence to back up any claims in your request.
How we assess your Section 61 request
The process for assessing a Section 61 request is different from assessing a visa application. All requests are handled by a senior immigration officer at the INZ Manukau Area Office.
Under the law, the officer has no obligation to consider your request and does not have to:
- provide any reasons for their decision
- make any enquiries about the information you provide in support of the request or about other information Immigration New Zealand (INZ) holds about you
- grant a visa of the type or length you asked for — for example, they can give you a visitor visa instead of a work visa
- grant a specific visa even if you seem to meet the criteria for that visa.
How long it takes to assess your request
Each case is different and there is no time frame for assessing Section 61 requests.
If we refuse your request
You must leave New Zealand immediately. If you do not depart voluntarily, we can serve you with a deportation order and deport you.
Deportation liability and appeal rights
Appealing the decision
You cannot appeal a Section 61 decision. You can apply to the High Court for judicial review of the decision, but the judge can only consider Immigration New Zealand's decision-making process and not your circumstances.
If we approve your request
We approve your request in principle. You must pay the correct fee for your visa, and for anyone else included in your request, before we issue your visa.
Use our online 'Fees, decision times and where to apply' tool to find out what you will pay for your visa if we approve your request in principle. Search for 'section 61' and select the visa type that applies to you.
Fees, decision times and where to apply
We will contact you to ask for the fee.