New Zealand’s businesses are experiencing notable productivity increases in 2025 due to the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Across diverse industries – from manufacturing floors to rural farms – AI technologies are streamlining operations, cutting costs, and augmenting the workforce. This report examines key sectors, backed by detailed statistics and trends, and compares New Zealand’s progress with global peers. It also discusses challenges, government initiatives, and future outlook, providing a comprehensive picture of AI’s impact on productivity in NZ.
AI Adoption (2025)
82%
of New Zealand organizations report using AI in their operations
Efficiency Boost
93%
of businesses say AI made workers more efficient
Cost Savings
71%
of firms achieved operational cost savings through AI adoption
Job Replacement
7%
of companies report AI directly replacing any workers
Overview: AI Adoption and Productivity Trends in 2025
AI is widely adopted by New Zealand businesses, driving significant productivity gains.
Surveys in early 2025 show that 82% of NZ organizations now use AI in some capacity, a sharp rise (15% increase) from late 2024. The payoff has been substantial – 93% of businesses report that AI has made their workers more efficient.
Automation of repetitive tasks and smarter data insights allow employees to focus on higher-value work, boosting output per person. In fact, 70% of New Zealand CEOs say AI has made their workforce more efficient, far higher than the 42% of CEOs saying the same in neighbouring Australia.
Companies are also seeing financial benefits from AI-powered productivity. Over 56% of firms report a positive financial impact from AI (up from 50% previously), with 71% citing savings in operational costs due to AI efficiencies. These savings come from reduced waste, optimized resource use, and lower labor costs for routine tasks. Notably, most businesses have achieved these gains without mass layoffs – only 7% of organizations report AI replacing workers. Instead, many firms note they simply need fewer new hires because existing teams, augmented by AI, can accomplish more. This trend has helped firms maintain productivity even amid a tight labour market.
Figure: Rising AI Adoption and Impact (2023–2025) – The timeline below highlights the rapid growth of AI use among NZ businesses and its impact on productivity over the past few years:
2023 – Initial Uptake
%
About 48% of NZ businesses were using AI tools, as companies began exploring automation and analytics.
2024 – Acceleration
%
AI adoption surged to 66% of businesses by late 2024, with 80% of users reporting positive impacts on productivity.
2025 – Mainstream
%
Over 82% of organizations use AI in 2025, and 93% report improved efficiency. AI and automation are top investment priorities for NZ firms.
Sector-by-Sector Impact of AI on Productivity
Manufacturing
AI-powered automation, quality control, and predictive maintenance are boosting factory efficiency and output.
Agriculture
Precision farming with AI (smart sensors, drones, analytics) is improving crop yields, resource use, and sustainability.
Healthcare
Healthcare is adopting AI for administrative tasks and data analysis, easing staff workload while cautiously moving into clinical AI.
Financial Services
Banks and financial firms use AI for customer service chatbots, fraud detection, and algorithmic analysis, speeding up services.
Manufacturing Sector
Manufacturing in NZ has embraced AI to enhance efficiency and quality. In factories and production facilities, AI-driven automation is streamlining operations. Robots and intelligent machines handle repetitive assembly tasks, working alongside human operators. This reduces errors and frees workers for higher-skilled jobs like oversight and optimization. AI systems analyze vast amounts of sensor data in real time to identify inefficiencies that human operators might miss. For example, AI can automatically adjust production line speeds or materials supply to eliminate bottlenecks, resulting in smoother workflows and higher output.
Quality control has improved thanks to AI-powered vision and detection. Machine learning algorithms inspect products for defects far more reliably and faster than manual checks, catching issues early. This has cut down waste and costly rework – ensuring that only quality goods leave the line. Predictive maintenance is another game-changer: manufacturers deploy AI sensors on equipment to monitor performance and predict when maintenance is needed. By fixing machines proactively before breakdowns occur, companies minimise unplanned downtime, extend equipment lifespan, and avoid productivity losses due to equipment failure.
A strong example comes from an NZ heavy machinery company, McLeod Cranes. By using an AI system to interface with its field crews, McLeod significantly reduced the time spent searching for critical information and enhanced its safety response. In the event of a crane fault or incident, “AI can talk to field workers within seconds of an event and provide robust actions immediately,” improving on-site productivity and safety. This illustrates how AI not only speeds up internal processes but also aids in quick decision-making during operations.
Despite these advances, the manufacturing sector’s success with AI also hinges on workforce transformation. As routine tasks are automated, manufacturers are upskilling workers to operate and manage the new intelligent systems. Rather than cutting jobs, many factories are creating new roles for AI specialists, data analysts, and maintenance techs, while retraining technicians in digital skills. This approach ensures that the introduction of AI “redefines roles rather than replaces them,” as one industry expert noted. In summary, manufacturing in NZ is seeing higher productivity through fewer stoppages, better quality, and optimised processes – all enabled by AI – while concurrently evolving its workforce to collaborate with these technologies.
Agriculture Sector
Healthcare Sector
(This report was prepared by the Copilot Researcher agent)