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Cold, expensive, crap: What Brits really think of life in NZ

Author
Chris Marriner,
Publish Date
Fri, 27 Dec 2024, 1:12pm

Cold, expensive, crap: What Brits really think of life in NZ

Author
Chris Marriner,
Publish Date
Fri, 27 Dec 2024, 1:12pm

This article was one of Herald Travel鈥檚 top stories of 2024.

A asking if she should move to New Zealand has been met with a flood of responses, many from expats who found life in Aotearoa was not all they had hoped for.

The mother-of-one took her question to the popular online British parenting forum Mumsnet, saying that her husband was concerned about the threat of war in the UK.

She explained they had one son who was due to start school and that her husband had been offered a very well-paying job in New Zealand but she was concerned as she had never visited and did not know anyone living here.

She said her husband鈥檚 fear of war was driven by concerns that might soon be at war with NATO but she didn鈥檛 think 鈥渁 knee-jerk life-changing decision is the way forward here.

鈥淎m I being unreasonable to want to dig my feet in about this and say no?鈥

If the original poster was not being unreasonable, some of the respondents arguably were.

Soon the post was filled with quick takes on the horrors (and delights) that might await a new migrant to New Zealand.

One Brit living in Auckland wrote: 鈥淲ages are s**t. Food is expensive. Houses are cold. Transport is crap.鈥

But surely it鈥檚 not all bad? The criticism fell into some broad categories:

Everything is expensive

鈥淚 hope it鈥檚 a great offer as it鈥檚 very expensive there. I鈥檓 from NZ and can鈥檛 afford to move back,鈥 wrote one Kiwi expat. The cost-of-living commentary was widely echoed in the responses.

. Clothes are expensive,鈥 wrote one Brit whose family had shifted here. 鈥淢ost things are imported which means they are expensive and not readily available.鈥

鈥淪alaries are lower and you won鈥檛 have much spare,鈥 another wrote.

鈥淥ur pay in NZ doesn鈥檛 go as far,鈥 said one British transplant. 鈥淔ood is really, really expensive, particularly fruit and veg. I am in the UK at the moment and food is still cheap here, in comparison.鈥

That'll be $300, thanks. Photo / 九一星空无限

That'll be $300, thanks. Photo / 九一星空无限

Others claimed that the cost of dental care is prohibitive compared to the UK public system, with one claiming: 鈥淎ny Kiwi you meet with decent teeth is very well-to-do.鈥

In response, some claimed that fears of prohibitive food prices were not borne out by their experience here.

鈥淔ood is no more expensive than the U.K. now plus if you鈥檙e up north you can grow your own produce. The climate in the upper half of the north island is a lot milder, where I live it is t-shirt weather 9 months of the year. There is about double the sunshine hours too so no horrendous grey sky,鈥 wrote the woman who seems unlikely to live in Auckland.

鈥淚 earn more in NZ so does DH (darling husband) so research your area, don鈥檛 listen to someone else,鈥 she concluded.

鈥淭he food tastes about 70 billion times better than anything grown here in the UK,鈥 wrote a Brit with a sophisticated palate.

It鈥檚 too far away (and it鈥檚 boring)

These were common gripes. Many complained that our remote spot in the depths of the South Pacific meant that not only were they were they too far from family, they were also without easy, affordable access to international travel.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fecking long way from anything,鈥 one person opined. 鈥淲hich is great in some respects and terrible in others.鈥

鈥淚t is sooooooo far to get anywhere different. . I had an amazing network of friends etc but it was quite suburban even in the city,鈥 wrote one former NZ resident.

鈥淚鈥檝e been and it鈥檚 like stepping back to the 80s,鈥 one time-traveller said. 鈥淏eautiful but a bit weird.鈥 They did not make clear when they visited.

A beach scene in NZ, apparently recently. Picture / Moontide CollectionA beach scene in NZ, apparently recently. Picture / Moontide Collection

鈥淚t is a different lifestyle so if you don鈥檛 like doing lots of sport and outdoor things then it isn鈥檛 a country for you. While they speak mainly English and aren鈥檛 as rude/blunt as Australians the culture is still different,鈥 one insightful commentator offered.

鈥淭heir capital city was like a town here. I felt like unless you were doing extreme sports I鈥檇 be bored,鈥 another wrote, bluntly. 鈥淎nd yes, it鈥檚 expensive,鈥 they added, twisting the knife.

鈥淢y son lives in Auckland. We went for an extended visit/holiday, & we were bored - and that鈥檚 the city!鈥 one grumbler wrote.

鈥淗e likes it there, but he was a boring old fart when he was a teenager,鈥 the loving parent added.

NZ has earthquakes

鈥淣ew Zealand has ,鈥 wrote one person in a brief response. Others made the same point. To be fair, it鈥檚 a good one.

The weather

Brits, like Kiwis, love to talk about the weather. To the obvious delight of Britons on Mumsnet, a discussion of weather in New Zealand meant having the ability to discuss the climate outside and inside the home.

Our homes were described as 鈥渇reezing鈥 and 鈥渄amp鈥 and many complained of feeling cold inside their homes here.

Kiwis will feel this one, deep in their bones.

Even those of us fortunate enough to now live in a well-insulated home will remember time spent in freezing flat where . But some of the criticism was a little silly.

Children and the elderly often pay the worst health costs associated with cold, damp, mouldy homes. Photo / FileChildren and the elderly often pay the worst health costs associated with cold, damp, mouldy homes. Photo / File

鈥淚f you get invited to someones house in winter, you have to take an extra jumper and socks as you will likely be chilly. Most houses have heat pumps, but they aren鈥檛 that great tbh,鈥 one rugged-up respondent wrote.

鈥淭he houses don鈥檛 have heating,鈥 one misinformed Brit wrote, likely because NZ overwhelmingly does not have central heating (unlike the UK),

They were kind enough to add: 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 get as cold in the winter鈥.

Bringing a plate?

There was a genuine moment of cross-cultural confusion when one Briton took aim at the proud Kiwi tradition of 鈥榖ringing a plate鈥.

We might think it reduces pressure on the host, adds a communal air to events and offers the opportunity to feel superior about one鈥檚 own scones. One Brit disagreed.

鈥淭ypically, when most people invite you over to their house you have to 鈥榖ring a plate鈥 as the host can鈥檛 afford to cater for all those that they have invited,鈥 they wrote, the point flying over their head at speed.

They were swiftly put in place but multiple Kiwis and British expats, with one writing: 鈥淗onestly, what a load of friggen nonsense.

鈥淥ut of all the drivel and misconceptions spouted on this thread about NZ, this one is particularly annoying. Kiwis will be bring a plate for numerous reasons - respect for host, the sharing of kai, sharing the workload to name a few reasons. Your ascertain that the 鈥榖ring a plate鈥 tradition is because a host can鈥檛 afford to cater is quite frankly rude and insulting.鈥

But other Brits also felt that New Zealand wasn鈥檛 particularly welcoming to their kind, despite our shared language, head of state, system of laws, popular sports, love of aforementioned scones etc.

Even Kiwi politicians bring a plate. Photo / Mark Mitchell Even Kiwi politicians bring a plate. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Some wrote that there was an 鈥渁nti-English鈥 sentiment in New Zealand that had seen them struggle to find employment.

Others disputed this, gently pointing out to those complaining that they should not expect a 鈥榣ittle England鈥 when they arrive.

鈥淐ulturally it is very different to the UK, and its history is increasingly viewed from a less Anglocentric perspective, which some migrants from the UK find quite challenging,鈥 one wrote, with shade.

鈥淭he culture is different, it鈥檚 not 1950s Britain or England with beaches,鈥 a British expat mum wrote.

鈥淭here is a strong M膩ori and Pasifika influence and kids are learning to speak te reo M膩ori and do kapa haka etc (I think this is amazing).鈥

鈥楢 crackpot reason鈥

Many took issue with the initial reason for the question, asking why she was even entertaining her husband wishes to move because of the threat of war.

鈥淵our DH (darling husband) should not confuse desperate Tory Party electioneering and Daily Mail scaremongering as a 鈥榯hreat of war鈥 which necessitates emigrating,鈥 one wrote.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a crackpot reason to move to the other side of the world with zero connections to a place you鈥檝e never been. I wouldn鈥檛 be entertaining the idea and I鈥檇 be getting him therapy for his distorted fears,鈥 another put more directly.

鈥淪ounds like he should address his fears with calm and logic, rather than drag his family to the Southern Hemisphere in a panic,鈥 another said.

Sensibly, one person wrote that Mumsnet might not be the best place to seek advice.

鈥淕o and see the country for yourself as it is now instead of reading opinions about NZ that were formed twenty years ago,鈥 they wrote.

鈥淥r join a forum for people who live there or are planning to move there and read up-to-date information from people who are there now.鈥

Another offered a cautionary tale.

鈥淭here was a British family in the 70s who became freaked out about the possibility of war, especially nuclear. And decided to move somewhere remote, to keep their children safe.

鈥淭hey moved to....

鈥淭he Falklands.鈥

Chris Marriner is an Auckland-based journalist covering trending news and social media. He joined the Herald in 2003 and previously worked in the Herald鈥檚 visual team. He is an Englishman by birth, a New Zealander by descent and lives in a very warm house, thank you very much.

This story was originally published on the Herald on June 13, 2024.

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