TheNew Zealand men's national football team (Māori:Tīma hoka a-motu o Aotearoa) representsNew Zealand in men's internationalfootball competitions. The team is governed by the governing body for football in New Zealand,New Zealand Football (NZF), which is currently a member ofFIFA and theOceania Football Confederation (OFC). The team's official nickname is theAll Whites (Māori:Ōmā[ɔːmaː]).[4]
New Zealand's first international football match was played inDunedin at the oldCaledonian Ground on 23 July 1904 against a team representing New South Wales. New Zealand lost by the game's only goal, but drew with the same team 3–3 in a game atAthletic Park, Wellington seven days later.[5] The following year the team played a Wellington representative side on 10 June before embarking on a tour of Australia, during which they played eleven representative sides, including three "test matches" against New South Wales. Of these three matches they won one, lost one, and drew one.
A New Zealand national team did not play again until 1922, when New Zealand played three official full internationals againstAustralia, played atCarisbrook in Dunedin,Athletic Park in Wellington, andAuckland Domain. The results were two 3–1 wins to New Zealand and a 1–1 draw in Wellington.[6][7] In 1927,Canada became the second team to play in New Zealand as they played in four official matches with a win and a draw.[8]
At the beginning of the 1980s the All Whites were on a run of consecutive victories until the1980 Oceania Cup in New Caledonia. New Zealand ended up having a disastrous campaign, losing 1–3 and 0–4 to Tahiti and Fiji respectively. In the last round without a possible qualification for the final they beat the Solomon Islands 6–1.
The All Whites later improved when the team advanced to the final phase of thequalifiers for the 1982 World Cup. With zero losses, the team's strength was highlighted by a 3–3 draw and a 1–0 victory against Australia, and a 13–0 victory against Fiji. For the final phase the All Whites, competed againstChina PR,Saudi Arabia andKuwait. After a 5–0 victory against the Saudis, they competed in a play-off match against China, winning 2–1, eventually qualifying for theWorld Cup in Spain.
Up until the 1980s, the All Whites received criticism for having a high number of British players.Of the 22-man squad in their 1982 World Cup campaign, 11 members were born in the United Kingdom. This included the captainSteve Sumner and strikerSteve Wooddin, who had both played club football in England before immigrating. They lost all three games conceding 12 goals and scoring just 2. Over the following decades the composition of the national squad changed and "the face of football became increasingly Kiwi".[10]
Since the 1990s, United Statescollege soccer has played a significant role in the development of New Zealand players. This influence began when formerScotland internationalBobby Clark returned to the US after his 1994–96 stint as New Zealand head coach to take the head coaching job atStanford University. Clark began recruiting in New Zealand, and former New Zealand national playersRyan Nelsen andSimon Elliott played for him at Stanford. The trend that Clark started has continued to the present; more than two dozen New Zealanders are now playing forNCAA Division I men's programmes in the US.[11] A common next step in these players' career paths is a stint inMajor League Soccer;ESPN soccernet journalist Brent Latham speculated in a March 2010 story that New Zealand's2010 World Cup squad could have more MLS players than theUS squad.[11][12]
However, Latham's speculation did not prove true, as only one MLS player made the New Zealand squad for the World Cup. New Zealand formerly competed againstAustralia for top honours in theOFC. However, after Australia left to join theAFC in 2006, New Zealand were left as the only seeded team in the OFC. New Zealand qualified for the 2010 World Cup, though exited the competition after the first round despite being the only team not to lose a game during the tournament. They drew 1–1 versus defending championsItaly, along withSlovakia and a scoreless match againstParaguay while eventual championsSpain lost toSwitzerland. New Zealand finished above Italy in their group as the Italians lost to Slovakia in their final group match and finished with two points compared to New Zealand's three.[13]
After a very positive cycle for the All Whites, the team competed for the2012 OFC Nations Cup as favourites to win the title winning the first two games by a small margin of victory (1–0 and 2–1), and a 1–1 draw against theSalomonense. In the next round, they faced New Caledonia in the semi-final, where they suffered 2–0 loss, with goals fromBertrand Kaï in the 60th minute, andGeorges Gope-Fenepej in the second minute of second-half stoppage time to seal the defeat known as theHorror in Honiara.Ricki Herbert stepped down, but New Zealand would also be eliminated in theintercontinental play-off for the 2014 World Cup byMexico 9–3 on aggregate.
In August 2014,Anthony Hudson was appointed manager of the All Whites. Hudson's first game in charge of the national team was a 3–1 defeat away toUzbekistan in September. As a result of the All Whites playing "just three matches" in the previous year, which was "the least of any country in world football",[14] and having "seven months without a match" the All Whites dropped to 161st in theFIFA World Rankings.[15][16] The All Whites went on to win the2016 OFC Nations Cup, winning four matches with the final being won via a penalty shootout after a 0–0 draw against Papua New Guinea, conceding only one goal, from a penalty, in the process. New Zealand's victory saw them crowned Oceania champions making New Zealand the most successful national team in the competition's history, having won the tournament five times, and also saw them qualify for the2017 FIFA Confederations Cup in Russia. The All Whites moved up to 88th in the FIFA World Rankings, the highest ranking in three years, on the back of the OFC Nations Cup victory that qualified them for the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup.[17][18]
After a disappointing tournament at the2017 FIFA Confederations Cup where they finished bottom of their group which featured Russia, Mexico and Portugal, the national team fell 27 places to 122nd.[19] In September 2017, New Zealand won theOFC Final against the Solomon Islands with an aggregate score of 8–3 to qualify for the inter-continental play-off qualifier against Peru, the fifth-ranked nation from South America's qualifiers.[20][21] After holding Peru off in the first leg, they would go to lose 2–0 in the second leg to be eliminated from competition as Peru became the last team to qualify for the2018 FIFA World Cup.[22][23]
After the All Whites' stoppage for almost two years, they returned to play friendlies (in 2021), obtaining positive results in their three (four counting againstAlgeria A') games played in that year. With the complications caused by theCOVID-19 pandemic, the2022 World Cup qualifiers were held in the host country itself, Qatar, where the Kiwis managed to win all the games, as well as breaking artillery records, when forwardChris Wood became the All Whites' top scorer, after scoring twice againstFiji.
New Zealand playingAustralia at home atEden Park in a match commemorating the rivalry.
With the continental victory, they qualified for theinter-confederation play-offs, where they disputed the vacancy againstCosta Rica. They started by conceding a goal in the 3rd minute of the game toJoel Campbell, but New Zealand began to pressure the game, and in the 39th minute, Chris Wood scored after a poor kick byYeltsin Tejeda. However, his goal was disallowed when thevideo assistant referee (VAR) showed thatMatthew Garbett had fouledÓscar Duarte before the goal.[24] As the final whistle blew, the New Zealanders failed to qualify for the Cup, which was their third consecutive elimination in the inter-confederation play-offs.[25]
After the qualifiers, the All Whites played a home and away series against theSocceroos to mark the 100th anniversary of the first meeting between the two nations, which was first played in Dunedin in 1922.[26]
In June 2023, withDarren Bazeley already having his position as coach for the 2026 cycle, in a friendly against Qatar where the All Whites were winning during the first half, New Zealand defenderMichael Boxall claimed to have suffered a racist attack from the Qatari playerYusuf Abdurisag, and in protest by the New Zealand team players against the referee for not acting in this situation, they abandoned the match, not playing the second remaining time.[27][28]
Shortly afterwards, there was the return of the Soccer Ashes dispute against the Australians after the original urn was found again after almost 70 years of its disappearance.[29][30] The decisive title match was played in October in England, in which Australia consolidated its superiority after a solid 2–0 victory.[31][32][33]
New Zealand's traditional home colours are white with a black trim, while its away kits are usually reversed, featuring black with a white trim. This reversal of the colour scheme by New Zealand's football team is due to the fact that black (the nation's traditional color in rugby) was traditionally reserved for referees byFIFA.
Since late 2022, with the change of the institutional logo of New Zealand Football, there has been a greater preference for using only a fern leaf, without the name of the institution, which, regardless of the uniform (white or black), presents the leaf in a white color outlined in black.
During thequalification for the 1982 FIFA World Cup, the team appeared for the first time in an all white uniform against Taiwan in 1981. This led a commentator to dub them the "All Whites", a play on the traditional name "All Blacks" used for the national rugby team.[35] The name stuck, and was popularised in the song "Marching off to Spain" with its chant refrain "Kiwis! All Whites!". .[35][36]
New Zealand's long time rivals areTrans-Tasman neighboursAustralia.[37] The two teams' history dates back to 1922, where they first met in both their international debuts. The rivalry between theSocceroos (Australia) and theAll Whites (New Zealand) is part of awider friendly rivalry between the geographical neighbours Australia and New Zealand, which applies not only to sport but to the culture of the two countries. The rivalry was intensified when Australia and New Zealand were both members of theOFC, regularly competing inOFC Nations Cup finals and inFIFA World Cup qualification, where only one team from the OFC progressed to theWorld Cup.
Since Australia left the OFC to join theAFC in 2006, competition between the two teams has been less frequent. However, the rivalry between the two teams is still strong, with the occasional match receiving much media and public attention.[38] The rivalry extends to club football, with New Zealand's only fully professional teams, theWellington Phoenix andAuckland FC, playing in the AustralianA-League.
The mainsupporter group of the New Zealand national team are known as theWhite Noise.[39][40][41][42] White Noise was formed in November 2007[43] with the supporters group of theWellington Phoenix,'Yellow Fever', rebranding themselves when the national sides play.[44] Additionally,The Flying Kiwis FC founded by Matt Fejos, have been New Zealand's main supporter group for away fixtures. The Flying Kiwis have been synonymous with organizing fan friendly matches with supporters of opposing teams, most notably during the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup where they organized a friendly match between supporters of the Russian national team.[45][46]
New Zealand does not have a dedicatednational stadium. Instead, the team plays at different venues throughout the country for exhibition or tournament purposes. In recent years, major international matches have usually been rotated around various large grounds, includingSky Stadium in Wellington andNorth Harbour Stadium in Auckland. International matches have also been played at theMount Smart Stadium andEden Park in Auckland.
The following players were called up for the matches againstColombia andEcuador on 15 and 18 November 2025[51] Caps and goals updated as of 19 November 2025 after the match againstEcuador.
INJ Withdrew due to injury PRE Preliminary squad / standby RET Retired from the national team SUS Serving suspension WD Player withdrew from the squad due to non-injury issue.
^The 100th goal can still be considered unknown, as the order of who scored the goals is still unknown, but the possible authors of the 100th goal are,Bill Hume (where he scored three goals),George Cuthill andCharlie Steele Jr..
^Hilton, Tony; Smith, Barry (1991).An Association with Soccer: The NZFA Celebrates Its First 100 Years.New Zealand Football. pp. 143–144.ISBN978-0473012915.
^Latham's piece directly states; "From his post across the Pacific Ocean, Ricki Herbert may have a more profound interest in labor peace in America [referring to a possible MLS player strike that was averted days after the piece] than anyone in the history of New Zealand, because when his team kicks off the World Cup againstSlovakia on 15 June, the All-Whites' lineup could feature even more MLS players than [U.S. national coach Bob] Bradley's."
^Curulli, Chris (13 July 2023)."What is the Soccer Ashes Trophy? Find out more about the prize for October's match v New Zealand".socceroos.com.au.Football Australia (FA).While the Soccer Ashes trophy was not masterminded and built until 1923, it was actually played for a year earlier. Australia and New Zealand took to the pitch for their first 'A' Internationals in June 1922 in Dunedin, Wellington and Auckland, before a return tour in Australia in 1923. With a well-organised set-up, boosted by the heroics of their captain George Campbell, New Zealand had the edge throughout these fixtures, winning two and drawing one of the first series.
1 Associate member of OFC - Not a member of FIFA 2 Not a member of OFC and consequently not a member of FIFA 3 Northern Mariana Islands was only an associate member of OFC between 1998 and 2009 - Not a member of FIFA 4 Although not geographically in Oceania, Chinese Taipei was a member of the OFC between 1976–1978 and 1982–1989 Although not geographically in OceaniaIsrael entered OFC World Cup qualification in1986 and1990 due to political reasons, though it never became a formal OFC member.