Flights to New Zealand for a Working Holiday

Booking your flight to New Zealand is one of the first big decisions of your Working Holiday — and one of the easiest to get wrong. The type of ticket you choose, the airline you fly with, and how you handle arrival all have a bigger impact on your trip than most people realise.

This guide walks you through everything: where to fly into, which ticket type suits your plans, which airlines to consider, and how to arrive without the stress.

Where Does Your Flight Land? New Zealand's Main Airports

New Zealand has four airports that international travellers fly into on a Working Holiday:

  • Auckland (AKL) — The largest and most connected international hub. Most long-haul flights arrive here.
  • Christchurch (CHC) — The main gateway to the South Island.
  • Queenstown (ZQN) — Smaller but well-connected, especially useful if you're heading straight to the adventure capital.
  • Wellington (WLG) — New Zealand's capital, with regular international connections, mostly via Australia.

For most Working Holiday travellers flying from Europe, Auckland is the default arrival point. But it's worth considering where you actually want to start your trip — a connecting domestic flight might be worth it to save days of travel time later.

Choosing Your Ticket: One-Way, Return, or Flexible Return?

The right ticket type depends on one thing: how fixed your plans are. Here's an honest breakdown of all three.

One-Way Ticket

Best for: Travellers who genuinely don't know how long they'll stay — whether that's three months or two years.

A one-way ticket gives you complete flexibility. You can fly home from any airport, at any time, with any airline. That matters on a Working Holiday, where life has a habit of pulling you somewhere unexpected — a job offer in Queenstown, a festival in Wanaka, or simply not being ready to leave.

Pros

  • Fly home from whichever city you end up in
  • No fixed end date — your trip breathes around your plans, not the other way around
  • More adaptable if family events or opportunities arise at home

Cons

  • Almost always the most expensive option overall, as you're making two separate bookings
  • Booking a return flight at short notice can be costly and restrict your choices
  • Requires discipline: you need to keep enough money set aside to actually pay for that flight home. Running out of funds abroad with no booked return is a stressful situation — plan for this from the start.
  • Not suited to everyone — if you thrive on having a clear timeline, the open-endedness can feel unsettling rather than freeing

Our take: Best if you're going long-term (12+ months) or genuinely embrace uncertainty as part of the adventure.