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Home / Northland Age

On The Up: NZ Post backtracks on Ōpua General Store postal cuts after review

Sarah Curtis
Sarah Curtis
Multimedia Journalist·Northern Advocate·
17 Apr, 2026 04:59 AM3 mins to read
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The Ōpua General Store is one of only 10 partner stores to keep postal services. Photo / NZ Post

The Ōpua General Store is one of only 10 partner stores to keep postal services. Photo / NZ Post

Postal services at Ōpua have been saved after a community campaign prompted NZ Post to rethink that part of its nationwide network overhaul.

The local store has offered postal services since 1900.

It was one of only 10 to successfully challenge NZ Post’s January 27 decision to withdraw services from 140 partner stores as it reshaped its network in response to declining letter volumes and growing parcel demand.

Northland MP Grant McCallum said the outcome showed what could be achieved when communities worked together to present a strong, evidence-based case.

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“If you make a good case and the community gets in behind something, then you’ve got a much stronger chance to get a good outcome,” McCallum said.

McCallum, Ōpua General Store owner Harprett Singh and local community members made formal submissions against the NZ Post proposal to include Ōpua in its withdrawal from 140 partner stores, which initially included five Northland stores.

Northland MP Grant McCallum (left) and Ōpua General Store owner Harprett Singh.
Northland MP Grant McCallum (left) and Ōpua General Store owner Harprett Singh.

The challenge focused on Ōpua’s role as one of New Zealand’s busiest ports of entry for small international vessels and its importance to surrounding rural communities.

McCallum said the lobbying also highlighted practical realities not initially factored into the wider network changes.

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“When boats come in from overseas, they’ll often get mail sent to Ōpua and pick it up when they come into the marina,” he said.

Singh was “happy and thankful” with the decision after weeks of uncertainty about the shop’s postal services, saying he was grateful for McCallum and the community’s support.

He said the store supported many live-aboard boaties who relied on it as a fixed mailing address while travelling. Inland residents used it as their most accessible postal outlet.

Singh said the challenge had benefited NZ Post, which now had a clearer understanding of how important the Ōpua outlet was to boaties, rural customers and local businesses.

NZ Post has agreed to retain nearly all Ōpua’s core mail services, including domestic letters, parcels and its 150 private boxes. However, international services will be limited to receiving incoming mail and parcels only.

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Singh said outbound overseas mail would need to be sent from Paihia, 6.3km by road from Ōpua, which had the technology required to process it correctly.

NZ Post said while there would be fewer stores, customers would have a better experience, with 90% of Kiwis in urban areas still within 4km of a store.

Affected communities were invited to seek reviews of individual decisions, and after requests from 26 locations, the company announced on March 27 that new information had changed its decision in 10 cases.

In Northland, services will still be withdrawn in 2026 from Te Mai West in Woodhill, Whangārei (June 2); the Tikipunga Foodmarket (June 3); the Blue Lagoon Four Square in Moerewa (June 4); and the Mangawhai Service Station, where services are scheduled to end later in the year on a date yet to be confirmed.

About 30 post shops across the region will continue offering postal services.

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Sarah Curtis is a news reporter for the Northern Advocate, focusing on a wide range of issues. She has nearly 20 years’ experience in journalism, most of which she spent court reporting in Gisborne and on the East Coast.

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