A smartphone displaying a sports betting app lies on a casino table surrounded by poker chips and playing cards. The left side features a blue banner with the text “THE BULLETIN.”.
With more betting companies heading for NZ next year, the tension between gambling profits and harm minimisation is only set to grow. (Photo: Getty Images)

The BulletinJuly 2, 2025

Will NZ’s big bet on online gambling pay off?

A smartphone displaying a sports betting app lies on a casino table surrounded by poker chips and playing cards. The left side features a blue banner with the text “THE BULLETIN.”.
With more betting companies heading for NZ next year, the tension between gambling profits and harm minimisation is only set to grow. (Photo: Getty Images)

Major law changes are set to reshape how New Zealanders gamble – and bring in tens of millions in new taxes, writes Catherine McGregor in today’s extract from The Bulletin.

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Sports betting monopoly tightened

This week marked a significant shake-up for the online betting landscape, with new rules cementing the TAB’s monopoly over sports betting in Aotearoa. Backed by all parties and driven by racing minister Winston Peters, the law updates the Racing Act to ban overseas operators from taking bets from New Zealanders – an attempt, The Spinoff’s Shanti Mathias explains, to protect the $19 billion racing industry and the 13,500 jobs it supports. While some punters fear that a monopoly will mean worse odds, Entain, the UK giant that partners with the TAB in NZ, says its odds will match those of Ladbrokes in the competitive Australian market. The new rules arrive alongside the launch of the Problem Gambling Foundation’s Are You Being Played? campaign, aimed at raising awareness of how betting companies hook young men on sports betting.​

Online casinos next in line

The government’s next frontier is online casino gambling. On Monday, internal affairs minister Brooke van Velden introduced the Online Casino Gambling Bill, which will regulate an area that has long operated in a legal grey zone. Under the legislation, the government will auction up to 15 licences, all requiring operators to supply provide detailed business plans, including for harm minimisation, explains Davina Zimmer for The Detail. Companies like SkyCity and Christchurch Casino, which currently run their online operations out of Malta, are expected to shift their businesses back onshore when the new regime kicks in from February 2026.

The changes are designed to claw back tax revenue and bring gambling into a regulated harm-reduction framework – but they’re also expected to unleash a wave of advertising for online casinos, something that has been illegal under current law.

Influencers in the spotlight

For now, it remains illegal to advertise offshore betting sites here, but that hasn’t deterred many influencers from taking quick cash to spruik them. Millie Elder-Holmes was fined $5,000 for repeat promotions, nine more influencers have received cease and desist notices, and 27 are on a watch-list, reports Joseph Los’e in the Herald.

Some of the worst offenders appear to be student social media accounts. Sam Smith-Soppet of Critic, the Otago student magazine, recently reported on student influencers pushing Rainbet, an offshore crypto casino, despite clear legal prohibitions. Another audience being heavily targeted by influencer marketing is Māori, who make up 17% of the population but 30% of problem gamblers, Los’e reports. Māori Health Organisation Hāpai Te Hauora’s Jason Alexander wants the gambling companies involved to be banned from this country. “These gambling companies are knowingly using Māori influencers to reach Māori audiences. It’s not just harmful – it’s calculated, it’s manipulative, and it shows they have no regard for the wellbeing of our whānau.”

Legal promotions still pose risks

Not all online gambling promotions are rogue. Under New Zealand law, influencers can legally promote the TAB and its youth-focused subsidiary, Betcha. As Shanti Mathias reported in December, plenty of local influencers are leaning in. “This is a universe of paid partnerships, sponsored podcasts, exclusive invites for influencers and underneath it all, gambling, all carefully choreographed and reduced to catchy Instagram Reels,” she writes.

While posts usually carry the familiar (and legally required) “R18, Gamble Responsibly” tagline, the experts Shanti speaks to warn that’s far from enough, and say young people, especially young men, are constantly seeing betting normalised on their feeds. With many more local licences on the way, the tension between gambling profits and harm minimisation is only set to grow.

Keep going!
A hand places a New Zealand 20 dollar banknote into the front pocket of blue jeans. A vertical blue banner on the right side reads "The Bulletin.
This week brings some unwelcome changes for household budgets, as many GPs’ fees rise and Kiwisaver contributions are cut. (Photo: Getty Images)

The BulletinJuly 1, 2025

The July 1 changes and what they mean for you

A hand places a New Zealand 20 dollar banknote into the front pocket of blue jeans. A vertical blue banner on the right side reads "The Bulletin.
This week brings some unwelcome changes for household budgets, as many GPs’ fees rise and Kiwisaver contributions are cut. (Photo: Getty Images)

The annual July 1 reset kicks in today, with the launch of a new 24/7 online health service and changes to rental standards, transport fares and more, writes Catherine McGregor in today’s extract from The Bulletin.

To receive The Bulletin in full each weekday, sign up here.

Round-the-clock GP care goes nationwide

Following a pilot programme last month, people anywhere in the country can now see a New Zealand-registered doctor or nurse practitioner online. The new 24/7 digital health service, named Online GP Care and launching nationwide today, allows people to book secure video consultations for non-urgent health concerns through one of eight approved providers. Health minister Simeon Brown says the service is designed to give patients 24-hour access to healthcare, while easing pressure on busy GP clinics and emergency departments. Patients can get prescriptions, referrals or lab tests, and clinical notes are sent to their regular GP to ensure continuity of care. Some groups, including children under 14 and Community Services Card holders, will have part or all of the cost covered. Costs for adults without a card range from $69 to $99.

A new era for rental properties

Since it’s July 1, there’s a raft of other changes starting today, including the healthy homes standards, which are now fully in force for all residential rental properties – six years after they passed into law. As of today, every rental home must meet minimum requirements for heating, insulation, ventilation, moisture drainage and draught stopping. Gabi Lardies has all the details of the new rules – and any loopholes – on The Spinoff here.

For tenants, this should mean a warmer, drier, healthier place to live. However, tenancy advisor Sarina Gibbon tells the Herald’s Anne Gibson (paywalled) the maximum fine of $7,200 per breach is too low to act as a serious deterrent for non-compliant landlords. The government says that while $7,200 is the maximum penalty, the Tenancy Tribunal can also award compensation and order the landlord to carry out work up to a value of $100,000.

Wegovy arrives on pharmacy shelves

Also from today, New Zealanders will be able to get a prescription for Wegovy, the weight-loss version of the diabetes drug Ozempic. Both drugs contain semaglutide, a substance that mimics a natural appetite hormone to help people eat less. Unlike Ozempic, which is approved here for diabetes (but widely used off-label in the US), Wegovy is specifically approved for treating obesity. It’s not cheap: patients can expect to pay between $450 and $600 a month, as Pharmac has yet to fund the drug – though talks about possible funding are ongoing, according to manufacturer Novo Nordisk, Stuff’s Michael Daly reports.

Wegovy prescriptions will be limited to people with a BMI over 30, or between 27 and 30 if they have related health issues. Patients must see a doctor for baseline tests and will need regular monitoring while using the self-administered weekly injection.

Higher costs for getting around and staying well

This week also brings some unwelcome changes for household budgets. As Stuff’s Bridie Witton explains, GP visits will get a little pricier for many patients as part of the government’s recently announced funding boost for primary care. Clinics that accept the full 9.13% funding increase have agreed to keep patient fee rises to no more than 3% – but some may opt for a smaller 6.43% funding boost, giving them more freedom to set fees higher.

Meanwhile, catching the bus or train in some parts of the country is also more expensive, as regional councils respond to new government directives to shift more of the cost burden to passengers. In Wellington, Metlink’s Snapper card fares go up 2.2% today and the popular off-peak discount drops from 50% to 30%. Christchurch commuters will see the Metrocard adult fare jump a massive 50%, from $2 to $3, starting July 7.

Changes to benefits and contributions

Several changes to government benefits also kick in today, RNZ reports. Parents taking time off work to care for new babies will see their maximum weekly parental leave payment rise from $754.87 to $788.66 before tax, with a small boost too for the minimum payment to self-employed parents. For people receiving Jobseeker Support, the rules tighten: the period before needing to reapply shortens from a year to six months, part of wider efforts to encourage more people back into work sooner. And finally, it’s a new year in the world of KiwiSaver, meaning the lower government contribution starts today – down from 50 to 25 cents for every dollar saved, up to a maximum of $260.72 a year.