New Zealand Is Changing — and the Food Market Is Following

Demographics & Food Market · New Zealand 2026

New Zealand Is Changing —
and the Food Market Is Following

New Zealand’s population is more ethnically diverse than at any point in its history. With the 2023 Census confirming that Asian communities now make up 17.3% of the total population, the implications for food retail, foodservice, and import demand are profound — and accelerating.

Based on Stats NZ 2023 Census  ·  OneStopAsia Editorial Team  ·  2026

4.99M
Total population
2023 census
861K
Asian-identified
residents
17.3%
Asian share
of population
+21.8%
Asian pop. growth
2018 → 2023
31.3%
Asian share
in Auckland

A Decade of Remarkable Demographic Shift

New Zealand has been transforming quietly but profoundly. The 2023 Census — the country’s 35th national count, conducted on 7 March 2023 — recorded a total usually-resident population of 4,993,923, up 6.3% since 2018. But the headline figure masks a far more significant story in how that population is composed.

In 2001, people of Asian ethnicity made up just 6.6% of New Zealand. By 2013, that share had risen to 11.8%. In 2023, it reached 17.3% — representing 861,576 people and an increase of 82.7% since 2013 alone. That is not gradual demographic drift. That is a structural transformation.

Meanwhile, the European/Pākehā majority — though still dominant at 67.8% — has been declining as a proportion of the total population for two consecutive census cycles. The Māori population (17.8%) and Pacific peoples (8.9%) have also grown, contributing to what Stats NZ describes as the most ethnically diverse population the country has ever recorded.

“One in three Aucklanders is of Asian ethnicity — a proportion that is nearly double the national average.”

Inside the Asian Population: Who Is Growing, and Where

The 17.3% figure covers an extraordinary breadth of communities. Under Statistics New Zealand’s classification, the “Asian” category spans East Asia, Southeast Asia, and South Asia — from Chinese and Korean New Zealanders to Indian, Filipino, Vietnamese, and Thai communities. Each has a distinct trajectory.

The single most dramatic story of the 2023 Census is the rise of the Indian-origin community, which overtook the Chinese-origin community as New Zealand’s largest Asian ethnic group for the first time. The Filipino community, meanwhile, posted the fastest growth rate of any major Asian group — up 49% between 2018 and 2023.

Ethnic group 2001 2006 2013 2018 2023 2018→23
Indian New #1 60,213 97,443 143,520 239,193 292,092 +22%
Chinese 100,680 139,731 163,101 247,770 279,039 +13%
Filipino Fastest ↑ 11,091 16,938 40,350 72,612 108,297 +49%
Korean 19,026 30,792 30,171 35,664 38,934 +9%
Japanese 10,026 11,910 14,118 18,141 19,488 +7%
Thai 4,554 6,057 8,052 10,251 steady
Vietnamese 3,462 4,770 6,660 10,086 steady
Cambodian 5,268 6,915 8,601 9,672 stable
Taiwanese 3,768 5,448 5,715 6,570 stable

Sources: Stats NZ Census 2001–2023. 2023 granular breakdowns for smaller groups pending full release.

Geographic concentration: Auckland dominates

The Asian population is not evenly distributed across New Zealand. The Auckland region alone is home to 60.1% of all Asian-identified residents — roughly 518,000 people — making it the primary focus for any food or retail strategy. Two local board areas — Howick and Puketāpapa — now have majority Asian populations. Hamilton City, at 22.8% Asian, has the highest concentration of any city outside Auckland.

Auckland 60.1% — 518,178 people
Canterbury 10.0% — ~86,000
Wellington 9.2% — ~79,000
Waikato 7.1% — ~61,000
Bay of Plenty 3.4% — ~29,000

How These Shifts Are Reshaping Food Demand

Population change translates directly into food purchasing patterns — both through the dietary preferences of ethnic communities seeking familiar ingredients, and through the cultural diffusion that introduces mainstream consumers to new cuisines. In New Zealand, both dynamics are now operating at scale.

Industry data confirms the direction of travel: ethnic foods — particularly Asian and Indian products — rank among the most consistently growing import categories in New Zealand’s grocery and foodservice sectors. Southeast Asian processed food exports to New Zealand have been rising year on year, and Auckland’s foodservice market increasingly reflects the tastes of its majority-Asian population in certain suburbs.

[IN]
Indian-origin community
292,092 people · largest Asian group · +22% since 2018
Whole and ground spices (turmeric, cumin, coriander, mustard seed, fenugreek)
Basmati rice, chapati flour (atta), lentils and dals
Ready-made curry pastes and masala sauces
Plant-based and vegetarian products (Hindu dietary practice)
Halal-certified meat and packaged food (Muslim segment)
Dairy: paneer, ghee, fresh yoghurt
[CN]
Chinese-origin community
279,039 people · longest-established · +13% since 2018
Soy sauce (light and dark), oyster sauce, sesame oil, black bean paste
Fresh and frozen dim sum: dumplings, har gow, siu mai
Tofu, soy milk, and fermented soy products
Fresh and dried noodles (vermicelli, egg noodle, udon)
Live and fresh seafood: whole fish, shellfish, abalone
Premium jasmine rice and specialty tea (oolong, pu-erh)
[PH]
Filipino community
108,297 people · fastest-growing · +49% since 2018
Cane vinegar and soy-vinegar adobo marinades
Calamansi juice concentrate, bagoong (fermented shrimp paste)
Ube (purple yam) — extract, powder, jam; crossing into mainstream desserts
Cassava, taro, and tropical root vegetables
Pandesal bread mix; Filipino-style instant noodles
[KR]
Korean community
38,934 people · strong cultural influence beyond its size
Gochujang, doenjang, ganjang — the essential fermented pastes and sauces
Kimchi (ready-made and DIY ingredients: napa cabbage, gochugaru)
Korean ramen and instant noodles — demand driven by K-pop cultural wave
Korean BBQ cuts: samgyeopsal (pork belly), chadolbaegi (beef brisket)
[TH][VN]
Thai & Vietnamese communities
~10,000 each · stable long-term presence
Fish sauce (nam pla / nước mắm) — increasingly found in mainstream NZ kitchens
Rice noodles (flat, round, vermicelli) for phở and pad thai
Lemongrass, galangal, kaffir lime leaves, Thai basil — fresh and frozen
Coconut milk and cream; rice paper for fresh spring rolls
[JP][TW]
Japanese & Taiwanese communities
Japan 19,488 · Taiwan ~6,570 · cultural reach far exceeds numbers
Matcha — fastest-crossing flavour into mainstream NZ cafes and bakeries
Sushi-grade rice, nori sheets, wasabi, pickled ginger
Miso, Japanese soy sauce (tamari), mirin, sake
Tapioca pearls and bubble tea bases — Taiwanese export now with multiple NZ chains

Products Poised for the Strongest Growth

While demand is growing across the board, certain product categories stand out as particularly high-opportunity over the next five years, based on the intersection of population growth rates, diaspora food behaviour, and the documented crossover of ethnic cuisines into the mainstream New Zealand market.

High-Growth Product Categories to Watch

🌶
Condiments & Sauces
Gochujang, fish sauce, tamarind paste — crossing from ethnic aisle into everyday NZ kitchens.
🌿
South Asian Staples
Whole spices, atta flour, lentils, ghee — driven by NZ’s fastest-growing large ethnic group.
Frozen & Ready Meals
Dim sum, dumplings, Filipino ready meals — frozen category outperforming fresh in grocery.
🍀
Flavour Ingredients
Matcha, ube, pandan — food-trend darlings with strong ethnic community anchors. Matcha now mainstream in NZ cafes.
Beverages
Bubble tea inputs, Asian teas, canned teas — Taiwanese bubble tea chains established in NZ; upstream tapioca & syrup supply is the opportunity.
🌿
Plant-Based & Halal
Halal-certified, vegetarian, dairy-free — structural demand from Indian Muslim and Hindu segments; underdeveloped in mainstream NZ retail.
🍳
Noodles & Rice
Jasmine, basmati, sushi-grade rice and ethnic noodles — enormous category volume given rice-centred diets of the three largest Asian communities.
🍟
Snacks & Confectionery
Korean and Japanese snacks, Filipino kakanin — social media (K-pop, food TikTok) has decoupled demand from community demographics. Opportunity extends well into general market.

Conclusion: Demographics as a Leading Indicator

New Zealand’s population trajectory makes one thing clear: the country is not simply becoming more diverse in abstract terms — it is developing large, geographically concentrated Asian communities whose food preferences are distinct, sustained, and commercially significant.

The Indian community at 292,000 people is now larger than the entire population of several New Zealand cities. The Filipino community grew by nearly 36,000 people in five years. Auckland’s Asian population is approaching one-third of the total city. These are not niche markets. They are mainstream markets in formation.

For food importers, distributors, and retailers, the strategic implication is straightforward: the product categories and cuisines that serve these communities are not just growing — they are becoming foundational to the New Zealand food economy. Businesses that build supply chain capability and retail relationships now will hold structural advantages as the demographic shift continues through the 2020s and beyond.

“The communities that shape Auckland’s food culture today will shape all of New Zealand’s food culture within a generation.”

At OneStopAsia, we track these trends because they represent the underlying logic of long-term demand in the markets we serve. The data is clear. The direction is set. The question is how quickly the market adjusts to meet it.

Editorial Note

The analysis and commentary in this article represent the views and interpretation of the OneStopAsia editorial team. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, data may be subject to revision, and some figures — particularly for smaller ethnic sub-groups — are based on the most recently available census release (2018) pending full 2023 disaggregation. Readers are encouraged to consult primary sources directly for the most current data. OneStopAsia accepts no liability for decisions made on the basis of this article.

Sources & References

Population figures use total-response ethnicity counts (individuals may be counted in more than one ethnic group). 2023 granular data for smaller sub-groups (Thai, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Taiwanese) pending full Stats NZ release; 2018 figures are used for those groups in this article.

Similar Posts