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Get Started ≫The Holidays Act 2003 is the New Zealand statute setting minimum leave entitlements: four weeks of annual holidays, ten days of sick leave, bereavement leave, family violence leave and twelve public holidays. Its calculation rules are notoriously complex, and Holidays Act payroll remediation has cost major employers millions.
Holidays Act minimums
The core entitlements
Employees get four weeks of paid annual holidays after twelve months of continuous employment, ten days of paid sick leave per year after six months, bereavement leave, family violence leave, and twelve public holidays (including Matariki) when they fall on days the employee would otherwise work. Working a public holiday that is an otherwise working day earns time-and-a-half plus an alternative holiday. Genuine casual and short fixed-term employees can instead receive holiday pay of 8% added to their gross earnings, the pay-as-you-go arrangement.
Why this Act keeps breaking payrolls
The Act's calculation machinery is where the trouble lives. Annual holidays are paid at the greater of ordinary weekly pay and average weekly earnings, other leave uses different formulas again, and every variable-hours, overtime, commission or allowance pattern changes the answer. Payroll systems configured once and left alone drift into systematic underpayment, which is how some of New Zealand's largest public and private employers ended up running multi-year remediation programs. Reform is finally in motion: the Employment Leave Bill, which would replace the Holidays Act entirely, is before a select committee in 2026 with a long implementation runway after passage. Until the new regime actually commences, regular audit against actual work patterns is the only safe posture.
The trans-Tasman contrast
Australian leave minimums come from the NES with awards layered on top; New Zealand's come from this single statute with the employment agreement layered on top. New Zealand has no leave loading, but its "greater of two formulas" holiday pay plays an equivalent role for variable earners. What transfers across the Tasman unchanged is the failure mode: leave calculations set-and-forgotten inside payroll systems nobody reconciles.
Related terms
Leave loadingNational Employment Standards (NES)KiwiSaver employer contributionsAll terms ›Payroll compliance failures build silently. Size your exposure before it surfaces.
See how it worksCommon questions
Does New Zealand have leave loading?
No. The nearest equivalent is the Holidays Act rule that annual holiday pay is the greater of ordinary weekly pay and average weekly earnings, which protects variable earners the way loading protects award workers in Australia.
What is an alternative holiday?
A full day of paid leave (a "day in lieu") earned by working a public holiday that would otherwise have been a working day, on top of the time-and-a-half for the hours worked.
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