Migrants can bring parents for 10 years,  but they’ll pay the costs

Summarised by Centrist

The new “Parent Boost Visa” announced by Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Immigration Minister Erica Stanford, will offer migrants’ parents an initial five-year stay in New Zealand with one five-year renewal allowed (ten years total).  

However, applicants must secure comprehensive health insurance, meet character and medical tests, and show they have either substantial savings or a sponsor earning at least the median wage.

“This is about economic growth,” said Luxon. “We need to incentivise skilled migrants to choose New Zealand.” But the policy also reflects a shift in risk management. ACT’s Parmjeet Parmar noted the visa “serves a similar purpose” to ACT’s original plan for an annual healthcare levy – by pushing responsibility onto individuals, not the health system.

Stanford said long-term visas for parents were a major drawcard for skilled workers: “There is nothing quite like having family support close by,” especially for childcare or during medical events. 

Under current rules, parent visitors can only stay 18 months across three years. This new visa lifts that to a decade, without creating permanent residency rights.

To get a second visa term, parents must spend three months offshore and re-qualify with updated health documentation and insurance. Sponsors must remain in New Zealand and are liable for any costs incurred.

Read more over at NewstalkZB

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