KiwiSaver Government Contribution 2025-26: $260.72 Max After Budget 2025 Halved the Match
The KiwiSaver government contribution halved on 1 July 2025. Match is now 25c per $1 up to $260.72 per year. Members earning over $180,000 are no longer eligible. Complete guide to the new rules.
Published 22 March 2026 · Updated 21 April 2026 · Reviewed by NZ Tax Tools Editorial Desk
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Contributions, employer match, MTC, and withdrawal scenarios
Budget 2025 halved the KiwiSaver government contribution on 1 July 2025. The maximum dropped from $521.43 to $260.72 per year, the match rate fell from 50 cents to 25 cents per dollar, and a new $180,000 income eligibility cap was introduced. This article explains the rules that actually apply for the 2025-26 MTC year (1 July 2025 – 30 June 2026) — many online guides still quote the old figures, so check the numbers carefully before relying on them.
What changed on 1 July 2025
| Rule | Before 1 Jul 2025 | From 1 Jul 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum government contribution | $521.43 | $260.72 |
| Match rate | 50 cents per $1 | 25 cents per $1 |
| Personal contribution to unlock max | $1,042.86 | $1,042.86 (unchanged) |
| Income eligibility cap | None | $180,000 prior-year income |
| Minimum age | 18 | 18 (unchanged) |
| 16- and 17-year-old employer contributions | Not required | Required from 1 Jul 2025 |
The personal-contribution trigger ($1,042.86) stayed the same, but because the match rate halved, the dollar return for maxing out dropped by exactly half. If you were budgeting on getting $521.43, you’re now getting $260.72 for the same personal outlay.
Who is eligible for 2025-26
To receive any government contribution for the 2025-26 MTC year, all of the following must be true:
- KiwiSaver member — enrolled through an IRD-approved provider
- Aged 18 or over at 30 June 2026
- Prior-year taxable income not over $180,000 — this is income for the tax year ending 31 March 2025 (the year before the MTC year)
- Mainly live in New Zealand — narrow exceptions for government workers posted overseas
- Contribute at least $1 of your own money — even a small personal contribution triggers a proportional match
What counts as “your own” contributions
Only money that came out of your own pocket counts toward the $1,042.86 trigger. That means:
- ✅ Employee PAYE deductions (3%, 4%, 6%, 8%, 10%)
- ✅ Voluntary lump-sum contributions to your provider
- ❌ Employer contributions (these are a separate obligation)
- ❌ Past government contributions rolled forward
Key numbers for 2025-26
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Maximum government contribution | $260.72 |
| Personal contribution for full amount | $1,042.86 |
| Match rate | 25 cents per $1 |
| Income cap (prior tax year) | $180,000 |
| Contribution year | 1 July 2025 – 30 June 2026 |
| Payment timing | By 15 August 2026 |
How to get the full $260.72
Option 1: Voluntary top-up before 30 June
If your PAYE deductions will fall short of $1,042.86 for the year, make a lump-sum contribution directly to your KiwiSaver provider before 30 June 2026. Most providers accept bank transfers at any time.
Example: By late May you have contributed $700 through PAYE. To unlock the full $260.72 match, transfer a $342.86 top-up before 30 June.
Option 2: Increase your contribution rate
Moving from 3% to 4% (now the default from 1 April 2026) pushes most salaried workers over the $1,042.86 trigger without a separate top-up. At 4%, you clear $1,042.86 at any salary over $26,072.
Option 3: Spread voluntary contributions across the year
Set up a recurring direct debit (e.g., $20 per week = $1,040 for the year). This keeps the contribution painless and removes the risk of forgetting to top up before the June deadline.
Worked examples under the new rules
$40,000 salary, 3% rate, eligible
- Annual employee contribution: $40,000 × 3% = $1,200
- Over the $1,042.86 trigger → full match
- Government contribution: $260.72
$30,000 salary, 3% rate, eligible
- Annual employee contribution: $30,000 × 3% = $900
- Below the trigger — match is pro-rated
- Government contribution: $900 × 25% = $225
- Top up $142.86 before 30 June to unlock the remaining $35.72
$200,000 salary, any rate
- Prior-year income above the $180,000 cap → not eligible
- Government contribution: $0 regardless of personal contributions
Why did the government halve the match?
Budget 2025 documented the change as a “rebalancing of incentives” — the halved match combined with higher default employee (3%→4%) and employer (3%→3.5%) contributions from 1 April 2026. Treasury modelling found that the combination still lifts long-term retirement balances on average, with the employer increase doing most of the heavy lifting at lower incomes and the halved match falling hardest on voluntary top-ups by higher earners.
In practice, high earners lost the most (they typically maxed out the top-up) and the $180,000 cap makes the loss complete for them. Middle-income earners whose PAYE deductions already cleared $1,042.86 lose a flat $260.71 per year — real, but not catastrophic — and recover some through the higher employer contribution.
Related rules you should know
- Under 18s: still not eligible for the government contribution, though employer contributions are now required for 16- and 17-year-olds from 1 July 2025.
- Over 65s: eligibility continues until you’re eligible to withdraw (age 65 plus 5 years of membership). Once withdrawable, most providers stop matching — check with yours.
- Savings suspensions: no personal contributions are deducted during a suspension, so you accumulate no trigger amount. Voluntary top-ups during a suspension still qualify.
- Self-employed / not working: you can still unlock the full match — just make direct contributions to your provider totalling $1,042.86 during 1 July – 30 June.
- Tax on the match: the government contribution itself is tax-free when paid in. Investment returns inside your KiwiSaver fund are still taxed at your PIR.
Checklist before 30 June 2026
- Log into your KiwiSaver provider and check year-to-date personal contributions
- Check your prior-year (1 April 2024 – 31 March 2025) taxable income is at or below $180,000
- If there is a shortfall toward $1,042.86, transfer a top-up to your provider before 30 June
- Confirm your IRD number is on file with your provider
- Update your myIR address if you’ve moved (used to verify NZ residence)
Use the tools
- KiwiSaver Government Contribution Calculator — see exactly how much you’re entitled to and what to top up
- KiwiSaver 3% vs 4% Calculator — decide whether to stay at 3% or move to the new 4% default
- KiwiSaver Calculator — model your annual contributions across rates
Summary
The KiwiSaver government contribution for 2025-26 is capped at $260.72 — half the pre-Budget-2025 amount. To get the full match you still need to contribute $1,042.86 of your own money between 1 July 2025 and 30 June 2026, but only if your prior-year income was $180,000 or less. If you’re used to the old $521.43 figure, update your retirement projections — the Treasury view is that the higher employer contribution (3.5% from 1 April 2026) compensates, but on a year-by-year cash basis you’re $260.71 behind where you would have been.
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