New Zealand’s external position improved markedly at the start of 2026, with the current account deficit shrinking to NZD -1.01 billion in the first quarter, from NZD -5.98 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025. The latest figures, updated on 16 June 2026, highlight a significant quarter-over-quarter adjustment in the country’s balance with the rest of the world.
On a quarter-over-quarter basis, the data show that the current quarter’s performance represents a substantial improvement relative to the previous quarter, when the deficit had widened to nearly NZD -6 billion. The new reading suggests an easing of external pressures and points to a more favourable balance of trade and income flows than in late 2025, although the account remains in deficit overall.
Investors and policymakers will be closely watching whether this narrowing can be sustained in subsequent quarters, especially given that the comparison framework explicitly measures how the current quarter’s shift stacks up against the movement seen in the previous period. For now, the first quarter of 2026 marks a notable step toward stabilizing New Zealand’s external accounts on a quarter-over-quarter basis.