This improved financial performance meant substantial levy reductions were "appropriate and sustainable".
Finance Minister Bill English said that Government had waited until ACC's financial stability had been "locked in" before committing to reductions.
"We don't want volatility in the levies where you're putting them up and then down all the time. We believe now that the performance is sufficiently embedded that we can look at a track over the next four or five years of steadily reducing ACC.
"That should deliver some quite significant bonuses back to households and businesses and wage-earners."
Collins said ACC had focused on regaining the trust and confidence of New Zealanders and on improving its service to claimants.
"I am very pleased to see ACC continuing to work on these priority areas and investing in better quality outcomes, improving privacy, culture change, customer service, and importantly, injury prevention," she said.
English said Government was still committed to making ACC self-funding, and believed it would meet this goal before the deadline of 2019.
But he did not plan to open it up to competition because he felt that insurance companies were still tied up with the Christchurch rebuild.
The ACC levies would be decided later this year after public consultation.
READ MORE -
John Armstrong: Steady-as-she-goes budget
Student loan defaulters could be stopped at border.
Government allocates $188.6m for welfare reforms.