Applying for someone else

Immigration advisers, employers, and education agents and providers, and travel agents can use the Immigration Online system to help others apply for visas.

Who can apply on behalf of others

Those who can help others submit an online application include:

  • licensed immigration advisers
  • lawyers
  • education agents 
  • education providers
  • employers
  • travel agents.

If you are giving advice about immigration matters when helping someone with their application, you must be licensed to do so, or be exempt from holding a licence. 

Who can give immigration advice

If you are not licensed to give advice or exempt from licensing, you can help with applications only if it is part of your job and you are recording information given to you by the applicant. This includes education providers, employers and travel agents.

If you have concerns that you may be providing ‘immigration advice’ without a licence, you should seek legal advice or consider getting a licence.

Visit the Immigration Advisers Authority website for more information about licensing and exemptions.

Immigration Advisers Authority

Rules for approved education providers

Immigration Online

To apply for a visa on behalf of others, you need your own Immigration Online account and ‘RealMe’ login.

How to create a RealMe account

RealMe login

Your account will show a list of the applications you are submitting to Immigration Online on behalf of your clients. 

In the enhanced Immigration Online system, people can quickly and easily apply for and manage their applications.

Maria needs to apply for a visa.

On the Immigration New Zealand website, she can click the ‘I want to’ options to guide her to the right smart application form. Or she can log into her Immigration Online dashboard, using her RealMe login.

Maria can easily follow this link to create a RealMe account if she doesn’t have one. Her account doesn’t need to be verified so she can get started on her application straight away.

Once logged in, Maria is taken to her dashboard.

Maria has a unique sharing ID. She can use this to share her application with others, like a friend or family member, or a professional like an immigration adviser.

Professionals like immigration advisers can use networks to share applications with others in their organisation, and collaborate on applications.

Maria clicks ‘My Visas’ to start her application.

These are all the applications Maria has made, including those that are in draft or submitted, and any visas issued.

Maria clicks here to apply for a visa.

Maria is applying for a Visitor Visa. Answering these questions before she starts her application helps her check she’s picked the right visa type and will minimise any potential delays when INZ starts processing her application.

Maria is the principal applicant so these are her details. She can add her partner or children, if the visa type allows.

This is the first page of the smart application form.

First, Maria must complete her identity details. After that she can move around the application using the progress bar.

Not all tabs, sections and fields will appear for all applicants. For example, the purpose of visit tab only appears for the principal applicant. Some appear or disappear depending on the previous responses.

If Maria is working with a licensed immigration adviser or an exempt person, they will need to state they are providing immigration advice in the ‘immigration assistance’ tab. Licensed advisers will need to provide their licence number.

If Maria had any help completing her application, she will need to complete a declaration form which authorises for someone to assist her. This will need to be uploaded under the ‘supporting documents’ tab.

When the application is complete, including all mandatory fields, the progress bar turns dark blue.

The form lets Maria know if she’s missed a mandatory field or made a mistake when she clicked submit. This means Maria can feel confident she has provided everything required. Her application will be ready for assessment and reduce the likelihood of INZ asking for further information.

When Maria submits her application, she’s prompted to pay a fee and the application enters the system for processing.

Once submitted, Maria can keep an eye on her application’s progress in her dashboard. She can also view a summary of her application – or of any other application she has submitted.

If Maria needs to provide further information to INZ, she will receive an email telling her to log into her account.

Maria can click to read the letter, which outlines what she needs to provide. She can then upload her evidence by clicking ‘respond’.

Once Maria’s application has been fully assessed, she will receive an email to let her know if her visa has been approved. She can log into her dashboard and check the ‘My Visas’ section to view her issued visa.

That’s the end of the application process. It gives Maria an easy to use form where she always knows where she’s at in the process. And it gives INZ assessment ready applications that are complete and correct, and should reduce the need for customers to call our contact centre.

Benefits for education agents and providers

List of applications

As well as being able to view a list of the students for whom an application has been submitted, education providers and agents can also access PDF versions of the application forms and any supporting documents.

Communication with agents

Immigration New Zealand can communicate with education agents through their online accounts about individual student applications. We cannot, however, communicate with education providers in this way.

Viewing student status

Even though a passport may not contain a visa label, employers and education providers can check if someone is eligible to work or study in New Zealand through the VisaView system.

Using VisaView to check if someone can study at your organisation

VisaView for employers