What Wellington actually looks, feels, and costs like for someone considering moving. Neighbourhoods, climate, transport, healthcare, safety, and the practical scaffolding — every figure sourced.
Country
New Zealand
Oceania
Population
440,900
metro · 2024
Area
444 km²
Elevation
31 m
city centre
Time zone
Pacific/Auckland
Currency
NZD
Airport
WLG · Wellington International Airport
Metro
no metro
Walkability
●●●●●
editorial score · 1–5
Bike friendliness
●●●○○
editorial score · 1–5
Primary language
English primary; compact, highly walkable capital. Te Reo Māori co-official.
Wellington is a city of 440,900 people in New Zealand (Oceania). It is the capital. The main international airport is WLG (Wellington International Airport). There is no metro — intra-city transport is bus-based.
A one-bedroom city-centre apartment runs approximately NZ$1,950 (approximately €1,073) per month. Monthly groceries for one person run approximately NZ$465. A monthly public-transport pass costs NZ$180. Across the 100 cities Meridian tracks, Wellington ranks 47th overall on combined monthly essentials — in the middle of the range.
Wellington's climate is temperate oceanic — January is typically the warmest month with average highs around 20°C, while July is the coldest with average lows near 6°C. Annual rainfall totals approximately 1207mm, wettest in July.
Cost of living
Cost of living
Total monthly essentials: approximately €1,554/month EUR-equivalent for a single person in a 1-bedroom flat (rent + utilities + groceries + transit). District and lifestyle swing this 30–50% either way.
Visa policy, taxation, healthcare, and broadband infrastructure are national rather than city-level — the numbers below are New Zealand-wide context for someone weighing Wellington specifically. Each links through to the full country brief.
INZ raised the AEWV median-wage threshold from NZD 29.66/hour to NZD 31.61/hour (approximately NZD 65,750/year full-time) from 27 February 2025. The median-wage basis is updated periodically as Statistics NZ wage data is refreshed. Materially changes the minimum salary required for most AEWV roles.
Who it affects: All new AEWV applications and renewals from 27 February 2025.
INZ's Green List of shortage occupations was reviewed and updated in late 2024 — several tech and engineering occupations added to Tier 1 (Straight to Residence); some healthcare roles reclassified between tiers. The Green List is the direct-to-residence fast-track mechanism; periodic rotation reflects evolving labour-market shortages.
Who it affects: Applicants in newly-added or newly-removed Green List occupations.
Operational confirmation that the Work to Residence — Straight to Residence pathway for Tier 1 Green List occupations continues unchanged through 2025–2026. Tier 1 applicants can apply for Permanent Residence directly from overseas with a qualifying NZ job offer. Tier 2 applicants retain the 2-year Work to Residence transitional pathway.
Who it affects: Prospective applicants on the Tier 1 Green List.
A one-bedroom apartment in central Wellington rents for around NZ$1,950 (approximately €1,073) per month. Combined monthly essentials (rent + utilities + groceries + transit) total approximately €1,554 EUR-equivalent. Individual spend varies 30–50% by district and lifestyle.
Is Wellington expensive compared to other global cities?
Wellington ranks 47th out of 100 cities Meridian tracks for combined monthly living costs — in the affordable half, and 3rd of 5 within New Zealand. Rankings use EUR-normalised rent + utilities + groceries + transit.
What's the weather like in Wellington?
Wellington sees average summer highs of 20°C in January and winter lows of 6°C in July. Annual rainfall totals about 1207mm. Full monthly breakdown in the Climate section above.
What visa do I need to move to Wellington?
Wellington's visa regime is set at the national level — New Zealand tracks 4 residence-permit routes including Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV), Skilled Migrant Category Resident Visa, Green List — Straight to Residence, among others. See the New Zealand country brief for full eligibility, salary thresholds, and processing times.
How do you get around in Wellington?
Wellington has no metro — buses and taxis/ride-hailing cover intra-city transport; the city centre is highly walkable (Meridian editorial score 5/5). Monthly transit pass cost is in the breakdown above.
What language is spoken in Wellington?
English primary; compact, highly walkable capital. Te Reo Māori co-official.
What is the main airport for Wellington?
Wellington's primary international airport is WLG (Wellington International Airport).