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New Zealand to Introduce ₹2,040 Tourist Entry Fee for Natural Sites by 2027

New Zealand to Introduce ₹2,040 Tourist Entry Fee for Natural Sites by 2027

New Zealand to Introduce ₹2,040 Tourist Entry Fee for Natural Sites by 2027

New Zealand plans to introduce in 2027 a visitor fee for international tourists ranging between ₹1,020 to ₹2,040 to visit several iconic natural sites. This development ties in to a major update to conservation legislation, and also opens more protected land to businesses.

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What’s Happening?

The plan is expected to raise NZ$62 million (₹3,160 crore) annually.

These fees will apply to major sites like:

  1. Cathedral Cove / Te Whanganui-a-Hei
  2. Tongariro Crossing
  3. Milford Track
  4. Aoraki Mount Cook

Why?

According to Conservation Minister Tama Potaka, the intention is to reinvest fees collected from visitors back into the same natural areas that are critical to New Zealand’s tourism economy.

What Else is Changing?

Alongside the new tourist fee, the government plans to:

  1. Ease restrictions on businesses operating on conservation land
  2. Simplify permits for activities on protected land
  3. Allow sale or exchange of conservation land in certain cases

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said this reform will help drive growth across tourism, agriculture, and infrastructure. He emphasized the goal of creating “more jobs, more growth and higher wages.”

Who Can Visit — and Who Pays?

The proposed fee will apply to foreign tourists visiting key conservation areas.

  1. Local residents and domestic visitors are not expected to pay
  2. Tourists from abroad will be charged per person at each designated site

Why It’s Raising Alarms

Environmental groups and opposition leaders warn that the changes risk harming fragile ecosystems:

  1. Conservation land covers one-third of New Zealand
  2. It protects areas of ecological, cultural, and historic value
  3. Critics say the reforms shift focus from protection to profit

Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick accused the government of putting business before biodiversity.

Forest & Bird CEO Nicola Toki called it the “most significant weakening of conservation law in a generation.”

What Are Other Countries Doing?

New Zealand’s model mirrors global practices:

  1. Bhutan: ₹8,350/night “Sustainable Development Fee”
  2. Bali, Indonesia: ₹800 tourist levy + ₹20,000/year Komodo Island fee
  3. Thailand: ₹450–₹1,150 national park fee for foreigners
  4. Kenya & Tanzania: ₹4,100–₹6,600/day safari park entry
  5. USA: ₹1,700–₹3,000 per national park visit (or ₹6,600/year pass)
  6. Venice, Italy: ₹450 day-trip tourist entry fee

Final Word

New Zealand’s proposed move will only be the latest in a growing international trend of charging fees for entry to preserve nature. While the fees could support conservation, many fear loosening land protections could have long-term environmental costs.

The final law is still under review, but from 2027, visiting New Zealand’s natural wonders may come with a price — and a debate.