Does Air New Zealand check proof of onward travel?
Known for strict checks
✈ Air New Zealand (NZ) · New Zealand, Pacific. New Zealand requires evidence of onward travel from visitors and it is systematically verified before boarding — Air NZ check-in will ask on one-way fares.
Why the airline checks at all
Carriers are fined when they deliver a passenger who's refused entry, so the airline desk is where onward-ticket rules actually bite — usually before you're given a boarding pass. Budget carriers enforce hardest, and full-service carriers apply the same rules wherever the destination demands them. Any airline can ask on any route; below is where Air New Zealand travellers report it most.
Routes where it comes up most
Destinations Air New Zealand serves where onward proof is a documented entry condition:
Travelling one-way? Three legitimate fixes, safest first
- A refundable real ticket — book a fully refundable fare out and cancel it once you're through. Bulletproof; the only cost is having the fare tied up for a few days.
- A cheap genuine exit flight — a budget one-way to a nearby country is often US$20–50 and is real proof by definition (you can even use it).
- A rented onward reservation — a real, short-lived airline booking with a checkable PNR. Usually fine at airline check-in; riskier with strict immigration officers on arrival, and never appropriate for a visa application.
Whatever you show, it must be a real booking with a reference the agent can verify — an edited PDF or an invented code is document fraud. Full guide →
Before you travel
Flying Air New Zealand one-way? Sort your exit before the desk:
Check your destination too
Enforcement is destination-driven — see whether your country asks, who checks, and what counts.
Open the instant checker → Open the trip planner