The New Zealand dollar climbed to around $0.605, moving back toward a seven-month high after a two-day decline, as markets increasingly priced in expectations that the RBNZ will start raising rates later this year. Attention has now turned to labor market data due this week, with the Q4 unemployment rate expected to hold at 5.3%, its highest level since 2016, while employment is forecast to grow by 0.3%. While the data may justify delaying policy tightening until the second half of the year, above-target inflation and firming economic growth leave little doubt that the next policy move will be a rate hike. Policymakers meet on February 18, marking the first decision under new Governor Anna Breman, who is expected to outline her policy vision. Meanwhile, gains were capped by renewed strength in the US dollar after President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Fed chair, a move markets view as hawkish and less supportive of aggressive rate cuts.

The NZD/USD exchange rate rose to 0.6039 on February 3, 2026, up 0.66% from the previous session. Over the past month, the New Zealand Dollar has strengthened 4.31%, and is up by 6.95% over the last 12 months. Historically, the New Zealand Dollar reached an all time high of 1.49 in October of 1973. New Zealand Dollar - data, forecasts, historical chart - was last updated on February 3 of 2026.

The NZD/USD exchange rate rose to 0.6039 on February 3, 2026, up 0.66% from the previous session. Over the past month, the New Zealand Dollar has strengthened 4.31%, and is up by 6.95% over the last 12 months. The New Zealand Dollar is expected to trade at 0.61 by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 0.62 in 12 months time.



Crosses Price Day Year Date
NZDUSD 0.6048 0.0049 0.81% 7.11% Feb/03
EURNZD 1.9533 -0.0118 -0.60% 6.27% Feb/03
GBPNZD 2.2656 -0.0092 -0.40% 2.47% Feb/03
AUDNZD 1.1596 0.0017 0.14% 4.72% Feb/03
NZDJPY 94.2160 0.8527 0.91% 8.12% Feb/03
NZDCNY 4.1803 0.0152 0.36% 2.26% Feb/03
NZDCHF 0.4690 0.0011 0.24% -8.26% Feb/03
NZDCAD 0.8253 0.0046 0.56% 2.05% Feb/03
NZDMXN 10.4229 -0.0151 -0.14% -8.44% Feb/03
NZDINR 54.3415 0.2660 0.49% 11.84% Feb/03
NZDBRL 3.1514 -0.0048 -0.15% -2.95% Feb/03
NZDRUB 46.4596 0.4412 0.96% -16.69% Feb/03
NZDKRW 873.4065 0.8760 0.10% 7.12% Feb/03
NZDIDR 10,108.4869 50.5635 0.50% 10.74% Feb/03
NZDARS 873.1382 2.2014 0.25% 48.25% Feb/03
NZDCZK 12.4397 0.0620 0.50% -8.75% Feb/03
NZDDKK 3.8174 0.0177 0.47% -5.33% Feb/03
NZDHUF 194.6722 0.8062 0.42% -11.86% Feb/03
NZDMYR 2.3724 0.0079 0.34% -5.64% Feb/03



Related Last Previous Unit Reference
New Zealand Inflation Rate 3.10 3.00 percent Dec 2025
United States Inflation Rate 2.70 2.70 percent Dec 2025
United States Fed Funds Interest Rate 3.75 3.75 percent Jan 2026
New Zealand Interest Rate 2.25 2.25 percent Dec 2025
United States Unemployment Rate 4.40 4.50 percent Dec 2025
New Zealand Unemployment Rate 5.30 5.20 percent Sep 2025

New Zealand Dollar
The NZDUSD spot exchange rate specifies how much one currency, the NZD, is currently worh in terms of the other, the USD. While the NZDUSD spot exchange rate is quoted and exchanged in the same day, the NZDUSD forward rate is quoted today but for delivery and payment on a specific future date.
Actual Previous Highest Lowest Dates Unit Frequency
0.60 0.60 1.49 0.39 1971 - 2026 Daily

News Stream
New Zealand Dollar Rebounds
The New Zealand dollar climbed to around $0.605, moving back toward a seven-month high after a two-day decline, as markets increasingly priced in expectations that the RBNZ will start raising rates later this year. Attention has now turned to labor market data due this week, with the Q4 unemployment rate expected to hold at 5.3%, its highest level since 2016, while employment is forecast to grow by 0.3%. While the data may justify delaying policy tightening until the second half of the year, above-target inflation and firming economic growth leave little doubt that the next policy move will be a rate hike. Policymakers meet on February 18, marking the first decision under new Governor Anna Breman, who is expected to outline her policy vision. Meanwhile, gains were capped by renewed strength in the US dollar after President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Fed chair, a move markets view as hawkish and less supportive of aggressive rate cuts.
2026-02-03
New Zealand Dollar Extends Pullback
The New Zealand dollar edged lower to around $0.602, extending its pullback from a seven-month high in the previous session, as the US dollar regained strength. The greenback rebounded after President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Fed chair, a move markets view as hawkish and less supportive of aggressive rate cuts. Meanwhile, investors continued to assess the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s policy outlook, as upbeat recent data, particularly an upside surprise in inflation, reinforced expectations that the central bank may begin tightening later this year, though July is seen as the earliest window for a move. Attention now turns to this week’s quarterly labor market data, with employment forecast to rise 0.3% q/q and the unemployment rate expected to hold at 5.3%. Policymakers meet on February 18, marking the first decision under new Governor Anna Breman, who is expected to outline her policy vision.
2026-02-02
New Zealand Dollar Set for Strong Monthly Gain
The New Zealand dollar fell to around $0.604 on Friday but remained on track for a solid monthly rise, supported by increased bets of a near-term interest rate hike. Strong economic data, particularly last week’s upside surprise in inflation, has reinforced market views that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand may begin tightening policy later this year, lifting the kiwi to a seven-month high on Thursday. Data this week also showed that consumer confidence rose in January to its highest level since August 2021, while the trade surplus widened more than forecasts. While the RBNZ is widely expected to hold rates steady at its February meeting, markets are increasingly pricing in a hike as early as July, with a high probability of a move by September. The NZD also benefited from weakness in the US dollar, as President Trump’s fresh tariff threats added to global tensions, which reduced demand for US assets. The kiwi has risen over 1% this week and is up around 5% so far this January.
2026-01-30