New Zealand Fishing Rules: 2025 Bag Limits, Sizes & Licences
Planning a day on the water? For 2025 every recreational angler in New Zealand may keep up to 20 finfish in total each day, plus 50 baitfish. If you’re chasing trout, salmon or perch you’ll also need a current Fish & Game licence (Taupō uses its own permit). Local size and daily limits can be tighter, so check the area notice before you cast.
These rules aren’t red tape for the sake of it; they’re the backbone of sustainable fisheries and are set by the Ministry for Primary Industries (sea) and Fish & Game NZ or the Department of Conservation (freshwater/Taupō). This practical guide breaks the regulations down so you don’t have to scroll through PDFs on the boat. We’ll walk through national bag and size limits, regional variations, licence options, seasons and gear restrictions, enforcement penalties, and the quickest ways to double-check updates before every trip.
2025 National Bag & Size Limits at a Glance
The golden rule for salt-water anglers this year is simple: a maximum of 20 finfish of any species per person, per day, plus up to 50 baitfish (sprats, pilchards, piper, etc.). Inside that overall allowance several favourites – snapper, kingfish and blue cod in particular – carry extra size or count limits designed to let juvenile fish reach spawning age. Freshwater catches are not counted in the marine total; they follow Fish & Game or DOC rules covered later. All lengths below are measured nose to the V of the tail unless MPI specifies otherwise.
Species (selected 2025 hot targets) | Minimum Length (cm) | Daily Limit* |
---|---|---|
Snapper | 30 | 7–10 (region-specific) |
Kingfish | 75 | 3 |
Blue Cod | 30 whole / 33 filleted | 2–10 (region-specific) |
Kahawai | – | Combined 20 |
Tarakihi | 25 | Combined 20 |
Gurnard | – | Combined 20 |
Trevally | 25 | Combined 20 |
Hāpuku / Bass (combined) | – | 5 |
Rig (spotted dogfish) | – | Combined 20 |
Red Cod | – | Combined 20 |
Scallops | 100 mm shell width | 20 in shell |
Rock Lobster (spiny) | 54 mm tail width | 6 |
Pāua (black) | 125 mm shell length | 10 (max 2 yellowfoot) |
Mussels | 25 mm shell length | 50 |
*Where “Combined 20” appears the species has no individual cap; it simply forms part of the 20-fish mixed bag. Species-specific limits shown above still sit inside the 20.
Combined Finfish Limit Explained
MPI counts any bony or cartilaginous fish (snapper to sharks) as finfish. The 20-fish rule is a ceiling, not a target. For example, in the Hauraki Gulf you could legally keep 7 snapper (regional cap) + 5 kahawai + 3 gurnard + 5 tarakihi = 20 finfish total. If you landed only kahawai you could keep twenty. Undersized fish must be released immediately and do not count towards the bag because they must never go in the bin in the first place.
Shellfish & Crustacean Limits
Shellfish aren’t part of the finfish tally but each has its own strict allowance:
- Rock lobster: 6
- Scallops: 20 in shell
- Pāua: 10 (only 2 may be yellowfoot)
- Mussels: 50
- Tua/tua, cockles, pipi: 150 mixed
- Kina/sea urchin: unlimited, but gather responsibly
All shellfish must be landed in the shell so compliance officers can measure them on the spot. Removing them at sea is illegal and risks a hefty instant fine.
Popular Species Minimum Sizes
A few headline tweaks for 2025:
- Blue cod South Island – slot remains 30 cm whole / 33 cm when filleted; anything under or over must go back.
- Kingfish – still 75 cm tip-to-tail nationwide.
- Snapper – stays 30 cm in the north, 25 cm in most of the South Island.
- Pāua – unchanged at 125 mm (yellowfoot 80 mm).
Species such as kahawai, gurnard and porae have no minimum size, yet releasing small fish is good etiquette – today’s tiddler is tomorrow’s trophy.
Regional Variations You Need to Know
The 20-fish national rule is only the starting point. New Zealand is carved into ten salt-water Fisheries Management Areas (FMAs) and dozens of freshwater districts, each with tweaks that reflect local stock health, customary rāhui and bio-security risks. When the local notice is stricter, it overrides the national default. A quick check of the NZ Fishing Rules app or the interactive MPI map before you leave the ramp will stop nasty surprises at the boat ramp or the riverbank.
North Island & Kermadec Areas (Auckland/Kermadec & Central FMAs)
- Snapper – Hauraki Gulf & Bay of Plenty: 7 per person, minimum 30 cm.
- Snapper – Northland & Far North: 10 per person, 30 cm.
- Rock lobster: taking berried females is banned; any found must be returned immediately.
- Temporary closures / rāhui: Tutukaka, Whangaroa and Coromandel scallop beds remain closed for 2025—zero take.
- Set-nets: Prohibited within the Manukau and Kaipara harbour entrances to protect Māui dolphins.
West Coast South Island & Challenger Areas
- Blue cod slot size: keep only fish 33–45 cm long; anything smaller or larger goes back.
- Bag limit: 10 blue cod per person west of Cape Farewell; 6 inside Tasman Bay and Golden Bay.
- Net gear: Only one stack-net per vessel; mesh must be ≥100 mm.
- Fiordland transport rule (south of Awarua Point): blue cod may be carried in one fillet per fish, skin on, so officers can still measure them.
East Coast South Island (Canterbury/Marlborough)
- Blue cod Canterbury/Marlborough: 2 fish daily, closed season 1 Sep–30 Nov for spawning.
- Set-net bans: All tidal reaches of the Avon-Heathcote Estuary and Lyttelton Harbour are net-free to protect juvenile flounder and by-catch species.
- Shellfish: Cloudy Bay clams/tua remain open but are limited to 50 mixed per gatherer.
Fiordland Marine Area Special Rules
- A Controlled Area Permit (CAP) is required to carry filleted finfish, scuba tanks or rock lobster pots into or out of the area—apply online before launching.
- Marine reserves: No anchoring, fishing or even possessing fishing gear in Piopiotahi (Milford Sound) and eight other reserves; use marked transit lanes.
- Stowage: All blue cod must be kept in a measurable state (one fillet rule) until you are north of Awarua Point.
Taupō Trout Fishery (DOC Administered)
The Taupō District sits outside Fish & Game jurisdiction. Anyone aged 14 + fishing within the catchment—lake, rivers or streams—must hold a Taupō licence:
- Daily bag: 6 trout (any combination of rainbow or brown), no salmon present.
- Methods: fly, spin or jig only; scented soft-baits and organic berley are prohibited.
- Winter shoreline closure: 1 Jun–30 Sep, streams and specific lake zones shut to protect spawning runs.
Because DOC updates Taupō rules independently of Fish & Game, always check the latest brochure before you tie on a fly or launch a jig rig.
Freshwater Versus Saltwater Licences Explained
One quirk of New Zealand fishing rules is that the sea is free but the rivers are not. You can fish the coast or harbour without paying a cent, yet the moment you target sports fish such as trout, salmon or perch in freshwater you must carry a valid licence issued by Fish & Game NZ (or DOC if you are inside the Taupō District). The money goes straight back into hatchery releases, habitat work and ranger patrols, so most anglers see it as part of looking after the resource.
Who Must Hold a Licence
- Anyone aged 12 years and over fishing for sports fish in lakes, rivers, streams or canals.
- Non-residents (visitors) need a special licence class; the standard domestic permit is not valid.
- Children under 12 fish free, but some regions still require a free child licence for data and safety reasons.
- If you are only fishing for eels, whitebait or coarse species (rudd, tench, koi) the freshwater licence does not apply, as those fall under separate legislation.
Licence Types & 2025 Fees
Below are typical 2025 prices in NZD; they can vary a few dollars between Fish & Game regions.
Licence Type | Typical Fee (NZD) | Notes |
---|---|---|
Whole Season Adult | $137 | 1 Oct–30 Sep nationwide use |
Junior (12–17) | $29 | Same dates as adult |
Family (2 adults + kids) | $178 | One licence covers all named |
Short Break 3-Day | $55 | Consecutive days |
Short Break 9-Day | $109 | Consecutive days |
Non-Resident Whole Season | $219 | Required for visitors |
Back-Country Endorsement | Free add-on | Needed for marked rivers |
Revenue funds riverbank fencing, compliance officers and research that ultimately shapes future new zealand fishing rules.
Exemptions & Common Myths
- A salt-water charter ticket is not a freshwater licence; you still need the permit if you troll for trout on a lake.
- Fishing inside an estuary can still be legally “freshwater” if you are landward of the Inland Waters Boundary Line shown on Fish & Game maps.
- You cannot “use a mate’s licence.” Photo ID checks are common during ranger spot visits.
- Eel pots, whitebait nets and koi carp bowfishing each have their own sets of regulations and do not require a sports-fish licence, but standard size and season limits still apply.
Carry the right paperwork and the only thing you’ll be reeling in is fish, not fines.
Seasons, Methods & Gear Restrictions
Bag and size limits are only half the story—when and how you fish can be just as tightly controlled. Closed seasons protect spawning runs, while gear rules aim to cut by-catch and stop serial offenders from emptying the pantry with industrial kit. Ignore them and you face the same instant fines as an oversized snapper, so scribble the highlights below into your trip notebook.
Closed Seasons for Key Rivers & Lakes
Most South Island rivers shut over winter; parts of the central North Island do the opposite and stay open year-round. Check the brochure for every waterway, but the quick guide is:
Waterbody (selected examples) | Region | Closed Season 2025 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Mataura, Oreti main stems | Southland | 1 May – 30 Sep | Sea-run brown trout protection |
Rangitata, Rakaia salmon reach | Canterbury | 1 May – 30 Sep | Chinook spawning |
Waimakariri above SH1 | North Canterbury | 1 May – 30 Sep | Catch-and-release only after 1 Oct |
Rotorua shoreline “winter shoreline” | Bay of Plenty | 1 Jul – 30 Sep | Bank fishing closed; boat angling allowed |
Lake Ōkataina | Bay of Plenty | 1 Jul – 30 Sep | Full lake closure |
Taupō District major tributaries | DOC | 1 Jun – 30 Sep | River mouth “X-Zones” stay open |
Upper Clutha back-country reaches | Otago | 1 May – 31 Oct | Permit required 1 Nov onwards |
Remember, a “closed” river means no fishing by any method, even catch-and-release. Lakes may remain open but restrict fishing within 200 m of river mouths during those periods.
Rules for Nets, Pots, Lines & Spearfishing
- Set nets: 1 per person (max 60 m, drop ≤10 m), mesh ≥90 mm unless targeting flounder; clearly label with your name, phone and the letter “S”. Nets are banned in marine reserves and all Māui dolphin hotspots.
- Rod/hand-line limit: 3 lines per angler, each with a maximum of 25 hooks or 3 lures/flies in freshwater.
-
Rock lobster pots: 3 per person, 6 per vessel. Each must have escape gaps (
54 mm × 200 mm
) and a degradable cotton strike-wire. Berried females caught in pots must be released immediately. - Spearfishing: legal for most reef species while free-diving; using scuba to take crayfish or pāua is prohibited nationwide. Freshwater sports fish (trout, salmon, perch) are totally off-limits to spear guns.
- Electric reels and winches: permitted for kontiki/torpedo longlines only if used from the shore and attended at all times.
Breaching any of the above can incur an instant $500 fine, or a day in court if MPI believes the offence was deliberate.
Protected Species & Ethical Release
Some creatures are simply off the menu. You must not target great white sharks, Hector’s or Māui dolphins, turtles, or any marine mammal; report accidental capture to DOC (0800 DOCHOT). When releasing legal but unwanted fish:
- Keep them in the water if possible—use a rubber-mesh net.
- Wet your hands before handling; avoid squeezing the gut.
- Remove hooks with long-nose pliers or a de-hooker; cut the trace if deep-hooked.
- For deep-water snapper, vent with a descending device—MPI trials show survival jumps from 40 % to 85 %.
Follow the steps and that undersized kingie lives to fight (and spawn) another day, helping future generations enjoy the same new zealand fishing rules rather than stricter ones.
How to Check Rules Before Every Trip
Regulations change faster than the weather, and the “I didn’t know” defence never works. Make it a habit to confirm the current limits the evening before you launch and again on the day if you have cell coverage. The tools below are free, quick and work even when reception is patchy, so you’ll always be on the right side of New Zealand fishing rules.
Official MPI Digital Tools
-
NZ Fishing Rules app
- Install, allow location, and select your FMA.
- Type or photo-ID a species to see size, bag and seasonal notes.
- Tap the cloud icon to cache your region for offline use before heading offshore.
-
Text-back service (9889)
Text the species name (e.g. “snapper”) to9889
; you’ll receive a free reply with the legal length and limit in that area.
Printable PDFs & On-board Copies
MPI’s 2025 “Recreational Finfish & Shellfish Regulations” PDF is only 12 pages; download, print double-sided, laminate and stow it with your measuring board. Charter skippers must display this sheet somewhere visible—failure can cost them a $400 instant fine.
Real-Time Alerts: Rāhui & Temporary Closures
- Subscribe to MPI’s email list for emergency notices.
- Check tiaki.nz or the NZ Fishing Rules app’s “closures” layer for rāhui and bio-security bans.
- Follow local iwi Facebook pages; they often announce shellfish closures days before MPI posts the official gazette.
Spend two minutes on these checks and you’ll save yourself hundreds in fines—and a heap of embarrassment at the boat ramp.
Penalties, Enforcement & Your Responsibilities
Fishery officers aren’t just clipboard-carriers – they hold the same search, seizure and arrest powers as the Police under the Fisheries Act 1996. They can board a boat, check your chilly-bin, inspect your phone for the NZ Fishing Rules app cache and even seize your vehicle if they suspect serious offending. “Didn’t know” is not a legal excuse, so every angler has a duty to learn and follow the rules before wetting a line.
Spot Checks & Fine Schedule
Instant infringement notices are the norm; court appearances are reserved for serial or large-scale breaches.
- Undersized fish: $250 per offence
- Exceeding daily bag: $500
- Obstructing an officer or giving false details: $1,000
- Serious offending (3× daily limit, selling your catch, tampering with evidence): vessel, trailer and gear can be seized; fines up to $20,000 and/or 12 months’ imprisonment
Case in point: a 2024 Bay of Plenty skipper was fined $7,500 and lost his 6 m boat after officers found 183 snapper on board – more than triple the legal allowance for the crew of four.
Reporting Poaching & Suspected Breaches
Protecting the resource is a community job. If you witness illegal activity:
- Note the time, GPS co-ordinates or nearest landmark.
- Record vessel name, trailer plate or car registration.
- Call 0800 4 POACHER (0800 476 224) – you can remain anonymous.
Quick reports give officers a real chance of catching offenders red-handed and act as a powerful deterrent.
Keeping Accurate Catch Records
A simple logbook – date, area, species, length, number kept/released – does more than track personal bests. It:
- Proves you stayed within bag and size limits if queried later
- Helps MPI scientists model stock trends
- Highlights your own catch patterns for smarter future trips
Whether you use a waterproof notebook or a smartphone app, update it before you leave the ramp. Good records, like good knots, keep everything tight and legal.
Sustainable Fishing Tips for 2025 and Beyond
Sticking to the new zealand fishing rules is only the first step. Taking a few extra measures on the water helps keep fish stocks healthy, avoids needless by-catch and shows respect for the rohe you’re fishing in. The ideas below don’t cost much, yet they pay big dividends for the next generation of anglers.
Tackle Choices to Reduce By-catch
- Swap stainless J-hooks for non-offset circle hooks when chasing snapper or kahawai; they lip-hook fish and cut gut-hook mortality by up to 80 %.
- Use biodegradable bait bands instead of nylon cotton; if they break off they dissolve within weeks.
- Match sinker weight to current so rigs reach the strike zone quickly, minimising mid-water hits from undersized trevally and juvenile gurnard.
- On kontiki or drone longlines, clip on break-away weights every 10 hooks to keep traces low and stop seabird foul-ups.
Handling & Release for Maximum Survival
Keep fish wet and calm:
- Wet your hands and rubber-mesh net before lifting.
- Keep the fish in the water while de-hooking; if photos are a must, limit air time to under 20 seconds.
- Use a descending device for deep-caught snapper; venting reduces barotrauma but controlled descent is even better.
- Revive tired trout by pointing them into gentle current until they kick free on their own.
Join Community Science & Restoration Projects
- Log every catch (kept and released) in the FINS App; data feeds straight to MPI stock models.
- Take part in harbour clean-ups or tree-planting days run by your local fishing club—shade trees drop water temps and boost in-stream insect life.
- NIWA’s “Sediment Citizen” programme supplies free turbidity tubes; recording clarity after rain helps councils fine-tune erosion rules.
Getting involved turns a day on the water into a long-term investment in the fisheries you love.
Keep it Legal, Keep it Sustainable
Remember the essentials: stick to the 20-fish national limit, double-check regional rules before you launch, carry the right freshwater licence, and follow seasonal or gear restrictions to the letter. Measure every fish, release undersized or spawning stock gently, and use tackle that cuts by-catch. By pairing compliance with good etiquette we protect tomorrow’s snapper runs and trout hatches, so the rules stay generous rather than getting tighter.
Need a certified measuring board, circle hooks or a laminated size chart? Swing by our Auckland store or browse the full range at Action Outdoors. Gear that keeps you inside the law also helps keep New Zealand’s fisheries humming for generations.