A practical win for rural communities is on the way as the Government fast‑tracks KiwiSaver changes designed to help farmers, farm workers and defence personnel finally get a foothold on the property ladder.
The reforms, driven by a Member’s Bill from Rangitīkei MP Suze Redmayne and now taken up by the Government, aim to remove technical barriers that have long disadvantaged people who live in employer‑provided housing or buy farms through commercial entities.
Redmayne says the change answers a clear injustice. She recalls Tirrell, a stock manager at Tunnel Hill, who had saved a substantial deposit in KiwiSaver but was blocked from using it because his job required him to live in employer‑provided accommodation. “If you work hard and save hard, you should be able to get ahead — no matter who you are, where you live, or what you do for a job,” she said, welcoming the Government’s decision to convert her Member’s Bill into a Government Bill.
The reforms make two targeted adjustments. First, workers in service tenancies — including farm workers, rural teachers, police, clergy and defence personnel — will be exempted from the six‑month live‑in requirement when using KiwiSaver to buy their first home. Second, aspiring farmers will be able to use KiwiSaver funds to buy a farm through an entity they majority‑own, reflecting the commercial reality that farms are often held in companies or trusts.
Finance Minister Nicola Willis framed the changes as a fairness fix. She said the technical amendments will ensure rural workers are not denied the opportunity to put a foot on the property ladder simply because their work requires employer housing. Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson emphasised the reforms’ practical impact for young farmers, noting that allowing KiwiSaver to be used for farm purchases through majority‑owned entities will help them invest in their futures and put down roots.
The Government plans to introduce legislation mid‑year, signalling a swift path from proposal to law. Supporters say the changes preserve KiwiSaver’s core purpose while adapting it to modern rural life, balancing prudent policy with real‑world needs.
For many in the regions, the reforms are more than technical tweaks — they are a recognition that rural New Zealand deserves policies that reflect how people live and work. By removing unnecessary barriers, the Government aims to back the primary sector, strengthen rural communities and give hardworking New Zealanders a fairer chance to own a home or farm.


