New Zealand’s eight universities span the country from Auckland to Dunedin. The University of Auckland leads with a QS ranking of 65 and is based in Auckland. The University of Otago, ranked 206, is located in Dunedin. Victoria University of Wellington holds a rank of 240 in the capital, while the University of Canterbury is ranked 261 in Christchurch. Massey University, ranked 239, operates from its main campus in Palmerston North alongside multiple other campuses. The University of Waikato, ranked 244, is situated in Hamilton. Lincoln University, ranked 403, is located in Lincoln near Christchurch, and AUT (Auckland University of Technology), ranked 407, is also based in Auckland.
Academic specialisations
- Medicine / Dentistry / Pharmacy: Otago (home to New Zealand’s oldest medical school)
- Law / Political Science / Public Policy: Victoria (capital city advantage)
- Engineering / Aerospace: Canterbury, Auckland
- Agriculture / Veterinary Medicine / Food Science: Massey, Lincoln
- Management / Finance / Accounting: Auckland, Otago, Victoria
- Creative Industries / Design: AUT, Massey
- Māori Studies / Anthropology: Waikato, Otago
Admission standards (Bachelor’s level entry)
- 985- and 211-sector backgrounds, or high school results above your province’s first-tier university cutoff (some institutions accept direct high school entry); or high school graduation plus one year of foundation study
- IELTS 6.0–6.5 (individual components no lower than 5.5–6.0)
- Some programmes (medicine, law, design) require additional assessments
Admission standards (Master’s level entry)
- Auckland, Victoria, Canterbury: 985/211-sector applicants with 80+ GPA, non-211 applicants with 85+ GPA
- Otago, Waikato, Massey, Lincoln, AUT: 985/211-sector applicants with 75+ GPA, non-211 applicants with 80+ GPA
- IELTS 6.5, individual components no lower than 6.0; research-focused programmes sometimes require 7.0
Tuition (international students, annual)

- Business Master’s: NZD 35,000–50,000
- Engineering Master’s: NZD 40,000–55,000
- Medicine-related programmes: NZD 75,000–85,000
- Annual living expenses: NZD 18,000–25,000 (Auckland, Wellington)
Post-graduation employment and residency
- Post-Study Work Visa: Bachelor’s (three-year programme) graduates get three years of open work visa; even a one-year Master’s confers three years of open work visa
- Skilled migration via Green List: occupations like medicine, engineering, architecture, IT, and teaching qualify for direct resident visa application
- Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV): employer-sponsored work visa pathway
- Key advantage over Australia: New Zealand’s three-year post-graduation work visa is statutory and stable — unlike Australia’s temporary visa schemes, it’s not subject to policy reversals
Application timeline (July 2026 intake as an example)
- December 2025 – January 2026: Submit applications
- February–March 2026: Receive offers, pay deposits
- April–May 2026: Health checks, police clearances, gather financial documentation
- May–June 2026: Submit student visa application
- June–July 2026: Visa approval, book flights
- July 2026: Arrive and enrol
UNILINK’s New Zealand service

- Full partnership network: all eight universities plus AUT are UNILINK, officially recognised by Education New Zealand (ENZ) as a MaiENZ platform member (June 2026), partner institutions
- Student visa (subclass) GS statements: included at no additional cost
- Migration-focused planning: we connect you with New Zealand immigration lawyers at application time, so your degree pathway aligns with your longer-term residency goals
Ready to explore New Zealand? Complete our intake form or get in touch via WeChat to discuss which universities match your background and ambitions.
Last updated: April 2026