About

Why we built this

The May 2026 report

In May 2026, the Ministry for Regulation — led by chief executive Greer Moss — published “The State of New Zealand's Regulatory Systems” (ISBN 978-1-991372-14-7), the first comprehensive map of New Zealand's entire regulatory landscape. Using machine learning and AI to analyse legislation, annual reports, and workforce data, they identified 267 separate regulators — one for every town the size of Feilding.

This report was presented by Minister for Regulation David Seymour at a public event attended by chief executives and public service leaders. The key finding: New Zealand's regulatory environment has grown for 25 years without meaningful reform, responsibilities are fragmented across dozens of bodies, and citizens often have to navigate multiple regulators just to do simple things.

What regulation.nz does

regulation.nz is a public-interest directory built on that report. Our goal: make it easy for any New Zealander to find the right regulator, understand what triggers contact, and get the correct phone number, email address, and application portal without having to search through dozens of government websites.

Contact details were individually verified from each regulator's official govt.nz or own-domain contact page in May 2026. We note explicitly where details could not be confirmed. We commit to quarterly re-verification.

The 267 in context

95 Government departments & Crown entities

The inner ring closest to Parliament

79 Local government entities

TAs, regional councils & unitaries

57 Statutory bodies & tribunals

Professional boards, courts, panels

36 Incorporated societies & others

Industry bodies, crown companies, charities

The dog control example

The report's most memorable illustration: dog control involves 5 regulators (Internal Affairs, Primary Industries, Health, Conservation, Justice) and 11 Acts of Parliament. Day-to-day enforcement is split between central and local government and delegated to rangers, authorised officers, police, the SPCA, DOC staff, and public health — depending on location and what the dogs are doing.

As Seymour noted: “This is just dogs. We picked a relatively simple example. You replicate this across 259 regulators and a whole lot of activities including those much more complex than owning a dog and you start to see the problem.”

Data sources & accuracy

The list of 267 regulators comes from the Ministry for Regulation's official May 2026 report. Contact details were sourced from individual regulator websites and govt.nz. This site is not affiliated with the New Zealand government — it is an independent public-interest reference built to make the report's findings accessible.

If you spot an error or outdated contact detail, please get in touch.

Source material