New Zealand's higher education landscape is undergoing a significant shift with the confirmation that the Fees Free scheme for university students will end after 2026. Finance Minister Nicola Willis announced this decision amid ongoing budget negotiations, marking the close of a policy that has shaped tertiary access for nearly a decade. Originally launched in 2018 to ease financial barriers, the scheme provided up to $12,000 in tuition relief, first for new entrants and later for those in their final year. While it offered some debt relief, critics argue it fell short on broader goals like boosting enrollment among underrepresented groups.
This change reflects fiscal priorities in the upcoming Budget, set for release on May 28, 2026. Students completing qualifications in 2026 remain eligible, but those starting or continuing afterward will revert to full fees covered by loans or personal funds. Universities across the country, from Auckland to Otago, now face questions about enrollment trends and support mechanisms as the policy sunsets.
Tracing the Evolution of the Fees Free Policy
The Fees Free initiative debuted under the Labour-led government in 2018, targeting first-year tertiary students to encourage lifelong learning and widen access. It covered tuition fees up to $12,000 for eligible New Zealanders and permanent residents without prior significant post-school study. By 2023, annual costs reached around $350 million, with payments disbursed upon enrollment.
In a pivot during Budget 2024, the National-led coalition relocated the benefit to the final year of a first qualification, aiming to incentivize completion rates. Tertiary Education Minister Penny Simmonds highlighted this as rewarding 'hard work and dedication.' The adjustment sought to address critiques that upfront relief didn't curb high dropout rates, which peak in the early years of study.
Implementation involved tweaks to eligibility: prior work-based learning or short courses could still qualify learners, but the focus narrowed to programme completers. This step-by-step refinement—from broad entry support to targeted finish-line aid—underscored evolving views on what drives student success in New Zealand's eight universities.
Why the Scheme Didn't Deliver as Promised
Despite good intentions, data revealed limited impact. Tertiary participation rates remained flat from 2017 to 2023, hovering around 15-16% for European/Pākehā students and lower for Māori (16%) and Pacific (11%) groups. A Ministry of Education analysis found no noticeable enrollment surge attributable to the policy; fees constituted just 20-30% of total study costs, overshadowed by living expenses and opportunity costs.
Equity gaps persisted: students from high-decile schools were up to seven times more likely to commence degrees than those from low-decile areas. In 2024, the final year under the original first-year model saw the lowest uptake among disadvantaged learners. Wealthier households captured a disproportionate share, prompting Winston Peters to label it 'wasteful spending' with better alternatives for trades training.
Completion rates offered mixed signals—61% overall within five years—but attrition hit hardest early on, diminishing the final-year incentive's reach. ACT leader David Seymour noted it reduced some loans but ballooned government debt from non-completers, costing $350 million yearly without closing access divides.

Financial Implications: Costs, Savings, and Student Debt
The policy's $350 million annual price tag strained budgets amid post-COVID recovery. Scrapping it promises savings—estimated at $879 million from 2023/24 to 2027/28, peaking at $268 million in 2025/26—freeing funds for targeted initiatives. However, it shifts burden back to the Student Loan Scheme, potentially raising average graduate debt by $10,000-$12,000.
Student loans already cover most fees interest-free while studying, with repayments at 12% of income above $24,128 (2026 threshold). Post-policy, completers lose that waiver, but living costs like Auckland rents ($600+/week) remain the bigger hurdle. A table outlines projected shifts:
| Aspect | With Fees Free | Without (Post-2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Cost to Govt | $350m | Savings $133m/year long-term |
| Student Debt (Avg Bachelor) | $25k-$30k | + $12k |
| Loan Borrowing | Lower upfront | Higher across programme |
These dynamics highlight trade-offs: fiscal relief for the Crown versus added pressure on young graduates entering a tight job market.
Photo by Marija Zaric on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives: From Campuses to Parliament
Universities have been pragmatic. At the University of Canterbury, 60% of 2018-2019 entrants cited the scheme as influential, with 26% saying they wouldn't have enrolled otherwise. Yet sector leaders note it didn't reverse declining domestic numbers, down amid international visa changes and housing woes.
Student unions express concern over debt hikes, urging alternatives like expanded allowances ($302/week max). NZUSA warns of completion risks for low-income whānau, while Universities New Zealand eyes efficiency gains. Opposition Labour calls it a 'gut punch' to rangatahi, prioritizing tax cuts over education.
- Govt view: Rewards completion, cuts waste.
- Students: Loses motivation for final push.
- Experts: Fees minor barrier; target support better.
Real-World Effects on New Zealand Universities
Eight public universities—University of Auckland, Otago, Canterbury, Victoria, Waikato, Massey, Lincoln, AUT—enroll ~170,000 EFTS annually. Fees Free covered ~20,000 students yearly, but enrollment dipped post-2020 regardless. Post-scrapping, expect stable or slight domestic declines, offset by internationals (30% of revenue).
Regional impacts vary: Otago's health sciences may see resilience via scholarships; Auckland's urban costs amplify debt fears. Universities NZ briefing predicts flat numbers, urging TEC funding hikes.

What Comes Next? Funding Pathways Forward
Without Fees Free, core options persist:
- Student Loans: Interest-free living/study loans, income-based repayment.
- Allowances: $131-$302/week for independents/parents.
- Scholarships: University-specific (e.g., NZ uni jobs), equity funds for Māori/Pacific.
- Targeted Aid: First-in-family, apprenticeships via Targeted Training Fund.
Experts advocate income-contingent grants or vocational boosts, as per TEC reviews. Budget may redirect savings to high-demand fields like nursing, engineering.
Student Strategies: Navigating Fees in 2027 and Beyond
Prospective students should:
- Plan budgets early—use scholarship databases.
- Opt for part-time work (20 hours/week visa-free).
- Explore polytechnics/zero-fee providers like SIT.
- Leverage employer sponsorships post-grad.
Current students: Maximize 2026 eligibility if qualifying. Universities offer hardship funds; check NZ higher ed careers for funded paths.
Broader Outlook for Tertiary Education in Aotearoa
This signals a targeted era: funding for completers, skills-aligned programmes. With 62% bachelor completion (lower for Māori/Pacific), emphasis shifts to retention via mentoring, flexible delivery. Global trends—AI upskilling, micro-credentials—may reshape offerings at institutions like Massey and Lincoln.
Positive note: Stable rankings (UoA top NZ), strong research output. Policymakers eye apprenticeships, echoing Peters' trades pivot. For New Zealand's universities, adaptability remains key amid fiscal realism.
