Aotearoa New Zealand · Framework change · Updated July 2026
New Zealand's vocational qualifications are being rebuilt on skill standards, which are progressively replacing unit standards on NZQA's Directory of Assessment and Skill Standards. For providers, the change is practical and unavoidable: when a unit standard on your consent to assess is superseded, the programmes, assessment materials and moderation evidence built on it need upgrading to the new skill standard — usually within a transition window of around two years.
Skill standards are the newest of NZQA's standard types, and they're designed differently. Where unit standards are assessment-first — built around what will be assessed — skill standards centre on learning outcomes that describe the learner's progression, paired with assessment specifications that frame how those outcomes are evidenced. They're intended as the common building blocks of vocational qualifications and micro-credentials, supporting portability across providers.
The practical consequence: assessment materials written against a unit standard's outcomes don't simply carry over. The replacement skill standard has its own outcomes and assessment specifications, and your materials, mapping and moderation evidence need to line up with them.
VETos treats the transition as a managed upgrade, not a rewrite from scratch:
A qualified person still reviews and signs off everything — VETos makes the upgrade fast and evidenced; accountability for valid assessment stays with you. Book a demo with one of your own standards, or start free — pricing is per standard, in NZD.
No — skill standards replace unit standards progressively as standard-setters work through their review programmes, and it will take years across the system. The discipline that matters is per-catalogue: know which of your standards are under review, superseded, or approaching a last date of assessment.
Within its transition period, yes — existing programmes can generally run until the last date of assessment. But new programmes must be built on current standards, and waiting until the deadline compresses the rework into your busiest term.
VETos does the heavy lifting — regenerating tools and mapping against the new skill standard while carrying your contextualisation across — but a qualified assessor reviews and approves every upgraded material before use. Moderation evaluates the material and the judgements; the review step is what makes the upgrade defensible.
Bring a unit standard with a skill-standard replacement — watch the materials and mapping rebuild in a 30-minute walkthrough.
Related: VETos for New Zealand providers · NZQA moderation guide · Consent to assess · How to write assessments with AI