Est.2010
Career Advice

The End of New Zealand’s Fees-Free Scheme Means Targeted Training Matters More Than Ever

New Zealand’s fees-free university scheme is being scrapped, saving the Government more than NZ$1 billion. Finance Minister Nicola Willis has confirmed 2026 will be the final year students completing eligible study can claim the subsidy, ending a policy first launched in 2018. Here’s why this change means vocational training is more valuable than ever before.

A young person studying at a desk.
A young person studying at a desk.

 The New Zealand government’s decision to scrap the one-year fees-free tertiary scheme in May’s budget is a contentious one. The policy was implemented based on the assumption that lowering the upfront cost of study would lead to more people going to university. Data analysis has, however, revealed that the scheme has had minimal impact. 

Whether or not you agree with Finance Minister Nicola Willis’s judgment, the end of the fees-free university scheme after 2026 puts even more emphasis on the value of career-focused vocational training as an alternative to university study. 

Written by

Adam is a Senior Career Consultant at Learning People, specialising in helping people move into IT, Project Management, Cyber Security, Software Development, and Cloud Computing roles through personalised 1:1 consultation. He understands well which skills and certifications employers value most in today’s fast-evolving tech landscape.

Adam AshwellSenior Career Consultant
Adam Ashwell

“Fees-Free” is Ending After A Costly Eight-Year Run

First introduced by the Labour government in 2018, the scheme initially covered students’ first year of study. Last year, in 2025, the current government switched the scheme to instead cover students’ final year of study. 

Despite good intentions, after almost eight years and nearly NZ$2 billion spent, research by Auckland University of Technology has found  “no clear evidence” that it encouraged students to enrol in bachelor’s degrees, or that it improved retention or completion. 

This tells us that education being accessible is so much more than a simple university tuition fee reduction.

Funding Is Moving Towards Vocational Routes

Alongside the news of the fees-free initiative ending, the New Zealand Government announced it is redirecting budget into more vocational and trade-related career pathways, including a plan to double Trades Academy places to 20,000 for Year 11–13 students by 2030. They also aim to create 1,000 extra Youth Guarantee places for school leavers aged 16 to 24 with little or no qualifications. 

That shift signals a bigger policy preference: shorter, practical, employment-linked routes over broad subsidies for traditional higher education. Universities and other education providers will also be allowed to raise tuition fees by up to 6% in 2027, putting even more pressure on study choices. 

For School Leavers, The Question of University Is Now More Poignant Than Ever

If you are a New Zealand resident weighing up launching a career in tech or project management, do not let the end of fees-free deter you. A multi-year university path can still make sense, but it is no longer the automatic “safer” option - in fact, 64% of HR professionals say a degree alone doesn’t guarantee the digital or AI capability modern roles require.

This is where vocational, career-focused training earns attention. IT, cybersecurity, project management, data analytics, and coding can offer clearer links between study, certification, practical skills, and job search support. When choosing a route built around the job you want, the time you have, and the income you need to protect, part-time online training is the obvious winner. 

Plan Your First Step With A Career-Ready Route

Our career-focused courses in IT, cybersecurity, project management, data analytics, and coding include valuable AI training and expert guidance to help you land a role in your chosen sector. If university no longer fits the bill, a vocational route could give your next move more power and more focus. Speak to a Career Consultant to get started. 

Latest Guides and Insights

View All News
View All News

Share this article

Don't just take our word for it...

Hear what our students have to say