About the maternity web tool

The Report on Maternity web tool enables you to explore trends over time using interactive graphs and tables. Filtered results, data dictionaries and the full data sets can be downloaded from within the web tool.

The web tool presents:

  • the demographic profile of people giving birth (eg, age, ethnicity, deprivation) and selected antenatal factors (eg, plurality, parity)
  • events relating to labour and birth (eg, type of birth, interventions, place of birth)
  • the demographic profile of live-born babies, their birthweight and gestation and care provided after birth.

Key findings about births in 2024

Number of births

Number of births
  • 58,090 people gave birth and 58,158 babies were live-born in 2024, an increase from 2023.

  • The birth rate in 2024 was 54.3 births per 1,000 females of reproductive age, an increase from 2023 (54.2 per 1000 females of reproductive age).

Types of care provided

Types of care provided
  • Most people giving birth (93%) received some care (at any point in their pregnancy) from a community-based Lead Maternity Carer in 2024.

  • More than two-thirds of people giving birth in 2024 (68%) registered with a Lead Maternity Carer in their first trimester of pregnancy; up from half (50%) in 2010.

  • Most people gave birth at a tertiary facility (48%) or at a secondary facility (41%). 7% of people gave birth at a primary facility or birthing unit, and 4% of people gave birth at home in 2024. These rates have been quite stable over time.

Birthing interventions

Birthing interventions
  • Induction of labour, epidural analgesia, and episiotomy rates have generally continued an upward trend over the last 17 years. Rates of augmentation of established labour has continued a downward trend over this same period.

  • Caesarean section rates have increased over the last 17 years to 34% of all births in 2024 the first highest ever recorded. Emergency caesarean section rates have generally increased over the same period, whereas elective caesarean rates have remained roughly the same. There has been a corresponding decrease in spontaneous vaginal birth (53% in 2024) and no significant change to rates of instrumental vaginal birth (10% in 2024).

Birthweights and gestational age

Birthweights and gestational age
  • The percentage of exclusively breastfed babies has decreased in recent years, while the percentage of partially breastfed babies has increased.
  • There have been no changes to trends in birthweight distribution or distribution of gestational age at birth over the last 17 years. In 2024, 7.8% of babies were born preterm (before 37 weeks gestation).

  • Similar to previous years, babies of low birthweight (less than 2500g) were more common among parents under 20 years or over 40 years, babies of Indian ethnicity, and those residing in areas of high neighbourhood deprivation in 2024.

  • Preterm births (before 37 weeks gestation) were more common among parents aged over 40 years or under 20 years, babies of Pacific, Indian, or Māori ethnicity, and those residing in areas of high neighbourhood deprivation in 2024.

About the data

Data for this web tool was extracted from maternity events recorded in Health New Zealand | Te Whatu Ora's National Maternity Collection. The National Maternity Collection collates data from different sources to provide statistical, demographic and clinical information about people giving birth and live-born babies in New Zealand.

Maternity data clinical coding changes

Maternity data clinical coding changes

From 1 July 2019, diagnoses codes are assigned using the 11th Edition of ICD-10-AM (International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision, Australian Modification) and procedure codes are assigned using the 11th Edition of ACHI (Australian Classification of Health Interventions) (Source: The Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority).

Some maternity events (people giving birth in hospital and live babies born in hospital) are impacted by changes in the 11th Edition clinical coding standards, particularly place of birth and type of birth data.

Therefore, this data may show variation due to the change in coding standards rather than a true increase.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

In this web tool, maternity data was extracted and recalculated to reflect ongoing updates to data in the National Maternity Collection and the revision of population estimates and projections following each census. For this reason, please use this latest version of the web tool as numbers and rates in previous maternity publications and tables may not be comparable.

We have quality checked the collection, extraction, and reporting of the data presented here. However, errors can occur. Contact us through the Data Services team at Health NZ if you have any concerns regarding any of the data or analyses presented here, at data-enquiries@tewhatuora.govt.nz

Publishing information

Publishing information

Date of publication:

18 December 2025

Ordering information:

Only soft copy available to download

Copyright status:

Owned by Te Whatu Ora and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.

 

Further information

Further information about the data can be found in the web tool and in this document.

Report on Maternity: further information [PDF, 421 KB]

Report on Maternity: further information [DOCX, 143 KB]