New Zealand
Oceania · Australia and New Zealand
Recreational spearfishing is legal in New Zealand saltwater for most finfish and rock lobster while free-diving, and no licence is required to fish in the sea. It is governed primarily by the Fisheries Act 1996 and the Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013, which apply the same daily bag limits, minimum size limits and area rules to spearfishing as to other recreational methods. Key restrictions: rock lobster (crayfish) must NOT be taken by spear (reg 29); paua must NOT be taken using underwater breathing apparatus / scuba (reg 48); spearfishing is prohibited in all marine reserves (Marine Reserves Act 1971) and other no-take protected areas. Freshwater sports fish (trout, salmon, perch) cannot be speared - they may only be taken by angling under Fish & Game sports-fishing regulations made under the Conservation Act 1987. Note that recreational use of scuba/UBA to take most finfish by spear is not banned nationally, but the UBA ban does apply to paua and many regional bylaws apply.
Last updated June 15, 2026
Governing framework
- §Fisheries Act 1996
- §Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
- §Marine Reserves Act 1971
- §Conservation Act 1987 (freshwater sports fish / Fish & Game sports fishing regulations)
- License required
- Not required
- Speargun
- Allowed
- Foreigners
- Welcome
The law, verbatim
Legal texts
The exact statutory and regulatory provisions that govern spearfishing here, quoted as published, with a link to each official source.
Definition of "spear"
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
spear— (a) means any device or implement capable of puncturing the flesh or exoskeleton of a fish; but (b) does not include any gaff or similar device used solely for the landing of finfish
Definition of "underwater breathing apparatus"
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
underwater breathing apparatus— (a) means an apparatus capable of being used for providing breathable gases underwater; and (b) includes any part of the apparatus; but (c) does not include a snorkel.
Prohibition on taking rock lobsters by spear
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
(1) A person must not— (a) set or use a baited net to take rock lobsters; or (b) possess any rock lobsters taken with a baited net. (2) A person must not use a spear to take rock lobsters or possess any rock lobsters that have been speared. (3) A person who contravenes subclause (1) or (2) commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000.
Prohibition on using underwater breathing apparatus (scuba) for taking paua
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
(1) A person must not— (a) use any underwater breathing apparatus while taking paua: (b) possess any paua while in possession of any underwater breathing apparatus: (c) possess any paua in or on any conveyance in or on which there is any underwater breathing apparatus: (d) possess any paua that the person knows to have been taken when the person taking the paua was using underwater breathing apparatus. (2) A person who contravenes subclause (1) commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000.
Combined daily limit for fish in Auckland and Kermadec FMA (example area limit applying to spearfishing)
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
(1) A person must not, on any day,— (a) take more than a total quantity of 20 fish of those species specified in Schedule 6 (the combined daily limit for fish) from the Auckland and Kermadec FMA; or (b) possess more than the combined daily limit for fish in the Auckland and Kermadec FMA; or (c) possess more than the combined daily limit for fish taken from within the Auckland and Kermadec FMA.
Daily limit for rock lobsters
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
(1) A person must not, on any day, take or possess more than 6 rock lobsters (the daily limit for rock lobsters).
Restrictions on taking fish from Mimiwhangata Peninsula area (spear permitted as one allowed method)
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482)
(1) A person must not take a species of fish specified in subclause (2) from the Mimiwhangata Peninsula area unless 1 of the following fishing methods is used: (a) a line, but only if the line does not have more than 1 hook attached to it and the line is not weighted in any way: (b) trolling: (c) a spear: (d) hand-gathering: (e) potting, but only if 1 pot per person or vessel is used in the area.
When you can dive
Seasons & time restrictions
Closed, open and restricted periods across the year. Always confirm species-specific closures locally.
- ClosedScallops (where regional closed season applies)Feb 15 – Jul 14
Under reg 28 of the Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013, a closed season for scallops runs from 15 February to the close of 14 July in certain areas. Spearfishing does not typically target scallops, but season closures illustrate the regional/seasonal closure regime; many area-specific closures (e.g. recent scallop and paua closures) apply. Most finfish have no seasonal closure for recreational/spearfishing take.
Permission to fish
License
What you need to be allowed in the water, what it costs, and how to get it.
- Type
- No licence required for recreational sea fishing (including saltwater spearfishing). A Fish & Game sports-fishing licence is required for freshwater sports fish, but those fish cannot be speared.
- Cost
- Free for saltwater recreational fishing/spearfishing.
- Validity
- n/a
- How to obtain
- No application needed for saltwater spearfishing. Anglers must comply with current rules; the NZ Fishing Rules app and signage at fishing spots provide area rules.
- Authority
- Fisheries New Zealand (Ministry for Primary Industries)
Gear & technique
Equipment rules
What gear is permitted, how it may be used, and the conditions attached.
Restrictions
- A spear must not be used to take rock lobster (crayfish) - reg 29 Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013.
- Underwater breathing apparatus (scuba) must not be used to take paua, and you must not possess paua while in possession of, or in/on any conveyance carrying, UBA - reg 48.
- Freshwater sports fish (trout, salmon, perch) must not be speared; they may only be taken by permitted angling methods under Fish & Game sports-fishing regulations (Conservation Act 1987).
- Spearfishing is prohibited in all marine reserves (Marine Reserves Act 1971) and other no-take protected areas.
- "Spear" is defined broadly as any device or implement capable of puncturing the flesh or exoskeleton of a fish, excluding a gaff used solely for landing finfish.
Spearguns and hand spears are legal gear for taking most finfish while free-diving. National regulations do not impose a general ban on using scuba to spear finfish, but the UBA prohibition applies specifically to paua, and many regional bylaws and reserve rules further restrict scuba and spear use - always check local rules. Standard minimum size limits, daily bag limits and protected-species rules apply to speared catch the same as to any other method.
What you may take
Catch limits & protected species
Daily quotas, minimum sizes, and species that must never be taken.
Daily limit
Area-specific combined daily limits apply. Example: in the Auckland & Kermadec Fishery Management Area a person must not take more than a total of 20 finfish (of species listed in Schedule 6) per day (reg 55). Rock lobster: maximum 6 per person per day nationally (reg 13). Limits differ by Fisheries Management Area and species - check the rules for your area.
Minimum sizes
- Rock lobster (red, packhorse) - minimum legal size varies; measured by tail width / carapace per regulationsmin 0 cm
Protected species — do not take
- ProtectedMarine mammals (all)
- ProtectedMarine reptiles / sea turtles
- ProtectedBlack coral, red/pink coral and protected corals
- ProtectedSpotted black grouper
- ProtectedGiant grouper / Queensland groper
- ProtectedWhite pointer (great white) shark
- ProtectedBasking shark, whale shark, oceanic whitetip, deepwater nurse shark and other protected sharks
- ProtectedManta and spinetail devil rays
- ProtectedSeahorses and pipefish (some protected)
Minimum legal sizes and combined/individual daily limits are set per species and per Fisheries Management Area in the Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 schedules; exact minimum sizes were not all transcribed here. Protected species list is indicative - protected marine species are listed under the Wildlife Act 1953 and Marine Mammals Protection Act 1978 and may not be taken by any method. It is illegal to buy, sell or swap recreationally caught seafood (fines up to $250,000).
Who may fish
Visitors & residents
How the rules differ for foreign visitors and local residents.
Foreign visitors
AllowedRequirements
- No saltwater fishing licence required for visitors; same recreational rules apply to residents and non-residents.
- Comply with all bag/size limits, method restrictions and area closures.
Restrictions
- Same restrictions as residents: no spearing of rock lobster, no scuba for paua, no spearfishing in marine reserves, no taking protected species.
Tourists and foreign nationals may spearfish in the sea on the same basis as New Zealand residents without any special permit. Customary (Māori) fishing rights and area-specific customary management areas are separate and do not generally affect ordinary recreational/visitor spearfishing in open waters.
Residents
No licence for saltwater spearfishing; Fish & Game sports-fishing licence required for freshwater angling (but freshwater sports fish cannot be speared).
Requirements
- Comply with the Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 and any regional bylaws.
Benefits
- Recreational saltwater fishing and free-diving spearfishing available to the public without a permit or fee.
Recreational rules apply equally to residents and visitors. Māori customary (non-commercial) take is managed separately under customary fishing regulations.
Where on the coast
Allowed & prohibited zones
Named areas that are open to or closed for spearfishing. See the full picture on the interactive map.
Allowed areas
Free-diving spearfishing for finfish and rock lobster is generally permitted in open coastal sea waters outside marine reserves and other no-take protected areas, subject to the same daily bag limits, minimum size limits, protected-species rules and method restrictions as other recreational fishing. No saltwater fishing licence is required.
Rock lobster may not be speared (reg 29); paua may not be taken with scuba/UBA (reg 48); marine reserves and many regional closures/bylaws apply; size and bag limits apply per Fisheries Management Area.
Prohibited areas
- Cape Rodney-Okakari Point Marine Reserve (Goat Island)marine reserve
New Zealand's first marine reserve (established 1975), north of Auckland near Leigh. All fishing, including line fishing and spearfishing, and the removal or disturbing of any marine life is forbidden under the Marine Reserves Act 1971.
- Poor Knights Islands Marine Reservemarine reserve
Marine reserve off the east coast of Northland (~22 km offshore), fully no-take since 1998. No fishing of any kind from boat or shore; no taking or disturbing any marine life including shellfish and seaweeds. Spearfishing is prohibited under the Marine Reserves Act 1971.
- All New Zealand marine reserves (no-take)marine reserve
Spearfishing and all other fishing/taking of marine life is prohibited in every marine reserve managed by the Department of Conservation under the Marine Reserves Act 1971. Named reserves include (among ~30+): Akaroa, Cape Rodney-Okakari Point, the ten Fiordland reserves, Kaikoura, Kapiti, Long Bay-Okura, Mōtū Manawa-Pollen Island, Parininihi, Poor Knights, Rangitāhua/Kermadec Islands, Taputeranga, Tāwharanui, Tonga Island, Tūhua (Mayor Island), Whanganui Inlet (Westhaven) and Whangārei Harbour.
- Areas protected under the Conservation Act 1987 and other no-take / rahui / mataitai / taiapure restrictionsprotected area / customary closure
Spearfishing is prohibited or restricted in various marine protected areas, marine parks, cable-protection zones, rahui tapu (customary closures) and area-specific no-take zones declared under the Fisheries Act 1996 or other instruments. Local rules vary and must be checked before fishing.
Conditions on the water
Live conditions
Live marine and weather snapshot near a coastal reference point in New Zealand, from Open-Meteo. Conditions vary along the coast — treat as indicative.
Live marine & weather near Cape Rodney-Okakari Point Marine Reserve (Goat Island).
Who to ask
Authorities
The official bodies responsible for fisheries and licensing.
Fisheries New Zealand (Ministry for Primary Industries / Manatū Ahu Matua)
fisheries authority
mpi.govt.nz0800 008 333 (poaching/illegal fishing hotline); general MPI 0800 00 83 33Department of Conservation (Te Papa Atawhai)
environment / marine reserves authority
doc.govt.nz0800 362 468 (DOC HOTline 0800 DOC HOT for marine reserve breaches)Fish & Game New Zealand
freshwater sports fishing authority
fishandgame.org.nzRegional Fish & Game offices
Where this comes from
Sources
Every claim on this page traces back to one of these references.
- [01]
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482) - whole, New Zealand Legislation
Officiallegislation.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [02]
Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482) - PDF reproduction (FAOLEX/FAO mirror of NZ Legislation text, version as at 25 March 2022)
Officialfaolex.fao.orgAccessed Jun 15 - [03]
Reg 48 - Prohibition on using underwater breathing apparatus for taking paua, New Zealand Legislation
Officiallegislation.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [04]
Fishing rules - Ministry for Primary Industries (NZ Government)
Officialmpi.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [05]
Rules for fishing gear, methods, and measuring - MPI
Officialmpi.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [06]
Marine reserves - Department of Conservation
Officialdoc.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [07]
Poor Knights Islands Marine Reserve - Department of Conservation
Officialdoc.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [08]
Anglers Notice for Fish and Game Regions 2025 - New Zealand Gazette (freshwater sports fishing, no spearing of trout/salmon)
Officialgazette.govt.nzAccessed Jun 15 - [09]
New Zealand fishing rules 2025: Bag Limits & Licences - Action Outdoors (secondary summary)
Secondaryactionoutdoors.kiwiAccessed Jun 15
Researcher notes
Verbatim legal text in law_texts[] was extracted from the official Fisheries (Amateur Fishing) Regulations 2013 (SR 2013/482). The primary New Zealand Legislation site (legislation.govt.nz) was behind a human-verification/CAPTCHA wall during collection, so the verbatim wording was taken from the FAOLEX/FAO PDF reproduction of the official text (version as at 25 March 2022) and cross-checked against MPI guidance; source_urls point to the canonical legislation.govt.nz pages. Key practical rules for spearfishers: (1) free-dive spearfishing of most finfish is legal with no licence; (2) rock lobster CANNOT be speared; (3) paua CANNOT be taken with scuba/UBA; (4) trout/salmon/perch cannot be speared; (5) no spearfishing in marine reserves or other no-take areas; (6) standard bag/size/protected-species limits apply per Fisheries Management Area. Exact per-species minimum sizes and per-area combined limits vary and should be checked in the regulation schedules or the NZ Fishing Rules app before fishing. Coordinates for Goat Island and Poor Knights are approximate reserve centroids. data_confidence=high because core method restrictions are sourced verbatim from the official regulations; some size-limit detail and a small number of reserve coordinates are summarised rather than exhaustively transcribed.
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