Why NZ is different — no quarantine on arrival
New Zealand and Australia have an approved reciprocal arrangement. Pets coming from Australia — provided they meet all health requirements — do not need to undergo post-entry quarantine on arrival in New Zealand. This makes it significantly simpler than destinations like the UK or USA.
That said, New Zealand has some of the world's strictest biosecurity rules to protect its unique ecosystem, and MPI (the Ministry for Primary Industries) checks documentation carefully on arrival. Getting any step wrong can mean your pet is held at the border at your expense.
The NZ pet import requirements
Pets travelling from Australia to New Zealand must meet MPI biosecurity import requirements. The good news: it's far simpler than most international routes.
- ISO 15-digit microchip — must be implanted and readable before any veterinary work
- Current rabies vaccination is NOT required (Australia is rabies-free, and so is NZ)
- Internal and external parasite treatment within 4 days of departure
- Veterinary health certificate from an MPI-accredited Australian vet
- Pets must be over 3 months of age
- IATA-compliant travel crate for cargo transport
How the process works
The Australia → New Zealand pathway typically takes 4–6 weeks to organise, mostly driven by vet appointments and biosecurity certificate processing times.
Approved airlines and routing
Direct flights from Australian capitals to Auckland are operated by:
- Air New Zealand — direct cargo from Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane to Auckland
- Qantas Freight — Sydney/Melbourne/Brisbane to Auckland direct
- Virgin Australia Cargo — limited routes
Direct flights are strongly preferred for the pet's wellbeing — most NZ routes from Australian cities are under 4 hours.