Tag Archives: New Zealand Green List 2026

Australia Or New Zealand? The Brutal Choice African Skilled Workers Must Make

For African skilled workers weighing the move to the southern hemisphere, the question is no longer “should I go” but “should I land in Auckland or Sydney?” The New Zealand Green List 2026 versus Australia Subclass 189 comparison decides whether your file moves on speed, salary or settlement permanence — and the answer is genuinely different for different occupations. This post compares both routes head-to-head on eligibility, processing speed, family rights, settlement timeline and post-arrival realities for Nigerian nurses, South African engineers, Kenyan ICT specialists, Ghanaian teachers and Egyptian medical doctors.

Read in order

Headline differences at a glance

New Zealand’s Green List offers direct residence on arrival (Tier 1) or two-year work-to-residence (Tier 2) for over 80 occupations — including registered nurses, civil engineers, ICT security specialists, secondary maths and science teachers, and medical specialists. Australia’s Subclass 189 is a points-tested permanent visa with no employer or state nomination, granting full PR on arrival but only after invitation. NZ rewards occupation; Australia rewards points. NZ moves faster on Tier 1 (often weeks); Australia is invitation-rounded.

The NZ Green List route in 2026

The Green List has two tiers. Tier 1 (Straight to Residence) gives direct residence visas to applicants with a job offer in an eligible role, the relevant qualification or experience, and registration where applicable. Tier 2 (Work to Residence) gives a 2-year work visa first; after 24 months of skilled employment, you apply for residence. Roles include senior secondary teachers, civil engineers (eligible after work-to-residence period), registered nurses, midwives, dairy farm managers, ICT security specialists and many medical specialties.

Real example: Yvette, a Cameroonian registered nurse with five years of experience and IELTS Academic 7.0, accepts an offer from an Auckland hospital. As an RN on Tier 1, she files Straight to Residence and lands in Auckland with permanent residence on arrival. The same role in Australia would put her on either a 482 employer-sponsored or a 189 points-based path with a much longer runway to permanent status.

The Australia 189 route in 2026

Australia 189 is purely points-based — no sponsor, no state nomination. Submit an Expression of Interest (EOI), accumulate points (age, English, education, experience, partner skills), wait to be invited from the pool. Cut-offs in 2026 sit at 75-90 EOI points depending on occupation tier. On invitation, you file the substantive visa and receive permanent residence on grant. The 2026-27 cohort is signalled to grow substantially with the formal four-tier prioritisation system favouring critical-shortage occupations.

Stuck between two routes? Our team maps the cleanest one at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Decision framework: which fits which African profile

If you are a registered nurse, midwife, secondary maths/science teacher, or specialist medical doctor with a job offer: NZ Green List Tier 1 wins outright. Direct residence beats invitation-based PR every time.

If you are an ICT specialist, civil engineer or mechanical engineer with 75+ EOI points but no job offer: Australia 189 wins. The pure points test rewards your profile without the friction of finding an NZ employer first.

If you are early-career (under 30) with strong English but only 65-70 EOI points: Australia 491 regional provisional or NZ Tier 2 work-to-residence. Neither 189 nor Green List Tier 1 will activate.

If your spouse will also work: Australia’s labour market is larger and pays better in aggregate. NZ’s salaries are lower but the cost of living in Auckland and Wellington is also lower than Sydney and Melbourne.

Post-arrival realities nobody mentions

Both countries are expensive. Auckland house prices are 8-10x median income; Sydney’s are 11-13x. Renting in either central city consumes 35-45% of post-tax income for a one-bedroom apartment. The African diaspora is meaningfully larger and longer-established in Australia (Sydney, Melbourne, Perth) than in NZ — which matters for community, faith spaces and cultural belonging. Conversely, NZ’s racial demographics and recent immigration history mean black African families often report easier social settlement in smaller NZ cities than in equivalent Australian regional centres.

If your timeline is tight, escalate before you apply — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Carry these forward

  • NZ Green List Tier 1 = direct residence; Australia 189 = invitation-based.
  • Nurses, teachers and medical specialists are best served by NZ Green List.
  • ICT specialists and engineers without a job offer should aim at Australia 189.
  • NZ Tier 2 work-to-residence is the safety valve for sub-189-threshold candidates.
  • Diaspora and cost-of-living trade-offs matter as much as the visa choice.

Frequently asked questions

Q: Can I apply for both NZ Green List and Australia 189 at the same time?
Yes — there is no exclusivity. Many African candidates run both pipelines in parallel and accept the first viable outcome.

Q: Do NZ Green List candidates pay the visa first?
The Straight to Residence visa fee for Tier 1 is around NZD 6,450 for the principal applicant including INZ levy.

Q: What IELTS score do I need for NZ Green List?
IELTS General or Academic 6.5 overall for Tier 1 (with no band under 6.5) for most occupations; specific occupational registrations may require higher.

Q: Can my African qualification skip recognition?
No. Both countries require a positive skills assessment / registration before residence is granted.

Q: Which country gives citizenship faster?
Australia: 4 years of lawful residence with at least 12 months as PR. NZ: 5 years of permanent residence. Australia is faster by approximately 12 months on average.

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Build your path with us

When you’re ready to stop researching and start filing, we’re at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Sources

  • Immigration New Zealand (immigration.govt.nz) — Green List occupations and pathways (T0, ongoing)
  • Australian Department of Home Affairs (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au) — Skilled Independent visa subclass 189 (T0, ongoing)
  • VisaHQ — Internal Home Affairs briefing on 189 revival (T1, 2026-05)

Further reading

New Zealand Green List 2026: Fast-Track Residence Pathways for African Nurses, Engineers and IT Professionals

While Australia, Canada and the UK have all tightened in 2026, New Zealand has held an unusually open door for skilled African applicants — and the New Zealand Green List 2026 is the proof. The Green List names occupations where INZ allows either Straight-to-Residence or Work-to-Residence pathways. African nurses, IT professionals, civil engineers, electricians and senior teachers continue to be in the top decile of approvals, and 2026 has so far been a strong year for African Green List grants.

  1. What is the Green List
  2. Tier 1 vs Tier 2 — what differs
  3. African-relevant Green List occupations
  4. Application process step-by-step
  5. When AEWV is a faster route
  6. FAQs from African candidates

What is the Green List

The Green List is INZ’s named list of occupations in shortage. It comes with two streams:

  • Straight to Residence — direct PR if you have a job offer in a Tier 1 role, meet the salary floor and clear skills, health and character.
  • Work to Residence — a 2-year work visa for Tier 2 occupations, with PR available after 24 months in role.

Tier 1 vs Tier 2 — what differs

Tier 1 occupations get the Straight-to-Residence pathway: file once, land with PR. Tier 2 occupations get Work-to-Residence: file for a 2-year visa first, then file for PR after the 2-year mark. Tier 1 examples relevant to African applicants:

  • Registered nurses (all branches).
  • Medical specialists, GPs.
  • Civil, structural, environmental engineers.
  • ICT security specialists, devops, software engineers.
  • Secondary teachers in maths, physics, science.

Tier 2 examples:

  • Electricians, plumbers, gasfitters.
  • Heavy vehicle mechanics, automotive technicians.
  • Carpenters, joiners.
  • Early childhood teachers.

African-relevant Green List occupations

The full list runs to roughly 80 occupations. African applicants with confirmed approvals in 2025-26 commonly come from:

  • Nigeria — civil engineers, registered nurses, telecoms specialists.
  • South Africa — software engineers, electricians, IT security.
  • Kenya — registered nurses, civil engineers, secondary teachers.
  • Zimbabwe — registered nurses, GPs, heavy vehicle mechanics.
  • Ghana — IT professionals, secondary teachers.
  • Egypt — civil engineers, urban planners, IT.

Application process step-by-step

  1. Get your occupation registered or licensed in NZ — Nursing Council, Engineering NZ, Teaching Council, EWRB.
  2. Find a New Zealand employer accredited for AEWV sponsorship.
  3. Confirm your salary meets the floor — NZD 31.61/hour for AEWV from February 2026 (the median wage may change later in the year).
  4. Submit the AEWV (work visa) if Tier 2, or Straight to Residence if Tier 1.
  5. Provide police certificates, medical exam, full CV and qualification evidence.
  6. For Tier 2 applicants, complete 24 months in role then apply for residence.

👉 Travel Explore’s NZ desk runs a registration shortlist tailored to your occupation. Start at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

When AEWV is a faster route

The Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV) is the main work pathway in NZ. For African candidates whose occupation is not on the Green List, AEWV may still offer a route — and certain AEWV roles convert to residence after the Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) rebuild later in 2026. The trade-offs:

  • Green List Tier 1: best — PR on arrival.
  • Green List Tier 2: solid — PR in 2 years.
  • AEWV only: faster to get into NZ if you do not yet meet Green List criteria, but PR is via SMC points later.

Linet, a Kenyan registered nurse, was offered a contract at Auckland City Hospital in March 2026 at NZD 78,000/year. Her Straight-to-Residence application was approved 47 days after submission and she now lives in Auckland with her husband (full work rights) and two children (free public schooling).

Pre-screen your Green List eligibility

Most Green List rejections trace back to a missed registration or a salary just below the floor. Travel Explore can pre-screen both at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

FAQs from African candidates

Do I need a job offer before applying?
Yes for both Tier 1 and Tier 2.

Can my partner work in NZ on a dependant visa?
Yes. Partners of Green List visa holders typically receive open work rights.

What is the minimum salary for Green List?
It varies by occupation. Most Tier 1 roles require salary at or above NZ’s median wage.

How long until I can apply for NZ citizenship?
Five years of holding residence, with physical presence requirements.

Do African nursing qualifications need re-validation?
Yes. Nursing Council registration is required, and you may need to complete a Competence Assessment Programme depending on your country.

What is the IELTS score required?
An overall IELTS 6.5 (with no band below 6.5) is the typical baseline for skilled-occupation applications.

Bottom line

  • Tier 1 = Straight to Residence; Tier 2 = 2-year Work to Residence.
  • Registered nurses, engineers, IT and secondary teachers are the African sweet spot.
  • Get your NZ occupation registration sorted before applying.
  • Partner gets open work rights and children get free public schooling.

More from Travel Explore

Share this story

  • “New Zealand Green List 2026 — straight to residence for African nurses, engineers, IT.”
  • “Tier 1 vs Tier 2: the only difference that matters for African applicants.”
  • “Auckland City Hospital approves African nurses in 47 days. Here is how.”

Sources: immigration.govt.nz · beehive.govt.nz