This guide explains how to prepare a proforma invoice for New Zealand buyers and authorities, including local tax context (GST) and currency (NZD or USD).

Overview

A proforma invoice in New Zealand is used for quotations, advance payment, and import/export planning. It is not usually a substitute for a final tax invoice unless local rules say otherwise.

Required fields in New Zealand

  • Seller and buyer legal names and addresses
  • Proforma number, date, and validity
  • Line items with description, quantity, unit price, and total
  • Currency stated clearly (NZD or USD)
  • Tax identifiers where applicable: GST
  • Payment terms and bank details for advances

Tax and compliance notes

Consult a local accountant for VAT/GST registration thresholds and when a tax invoice must be issued after supply. Show estimated tax on the proforma only if helpful for buyer approval.

Local trade practice

New Zealand Customs often references the proforma invoice value when calculating duty ahead of the formal entry.

Language options

English is widely accepted for cross-border trade. For domestic New Zealand buyers, consider bilingual documents if it speeds internal approval.

Free template

Download the country-ready template below and edit in Word, Excel, or PDF.

Free template download

Open HTML or Word in any editor. For PDF, use Print → Save as PDF in your browser. Import CSV into Excel or Google Sheets.

Create your proforma invoice in minutes

Use our free templates or follow our step-by-step guide — no account required to get started.

Frequently asked questions

Include parties, proforma number, dates, line items, currency, payment terms, and a clear title stating Proforma Invoice.

It shows intent and agreed terms but is typically not a final tax invoice. Binding obligations depend on your contract and local law.

Yes — use the download buttons on this page for HTML, Word, Excel, or PDF export.

New Zealand Customs often references the proforma invoice value when calculating duty ahead of the formal entry.