"Portable Radio" Means Three Different Things in NZ
Before any spec sheet matters, you need to know which legal category your radio falls into. New Zealand has three, and they're not interchangeable.
| Category | Licence | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| UHF CB (477MHz) | None — covered by a General User Radio Licence | Farms, 4WD touring, tramping, light work, family use |
| Marine VHF | VHF Radio Operator Certificate to transmit | Boating, fishing, anything legally on the water |
| Commercial / DMR | Individual RSM frequency licence, annual fee | Construction, security, forestry, transport, fixed work sites |
Get the category wrong and you end up in one of two bad spots: using an overseas radio that isn't type-approved for NZ frequencies and risking real fines, or paying for a licensed commercial system when a free UHF CB handheld would have done the job. Work out which bucket you're in first, then read the section below that matches.
Licence-Free UHF CB: Right for Most Recreational Use
UHF CB, also called the Personal Radio Service, operates on the 477MHz band and is genuinely free to use. It falls under the General User Radio Licence (GURL), which means there's no application, no fee, and no paperwork, as long as your radio is type-approved for New Zealand and carries the RCM compliance mark. Power output is capped at 5 watts, and you've got 80 channels to work with.
This covers most of what people mean when they ask for "a portable radio": staying in touch on a farm, running a convoy on a 4WD trip, coordinating a hunting or tramping group, or keeping a small work crew connected. Channel 11 is the standard calling channel, and channels 5 and 35 are reserved for emergencies only, never use them for a casual chat.
If you want the full technical detail on UHF CB, channel plans and antenna selection, we've covered that ground in depth in our UHF CB radio guide. The short version here: for casual and light commercial use, this is almost always your starting point, and it costs nothing to use once you've bought the hardware.
When You Need a Licensed Commercial Radio Instead
UHF CB is a shared, public channel. That's fine for a casual chat, but it's a real problem the moment your business depends on getting a message through cleanly every time. On a busy construction site or in a crowded industrial area, public channels get congested, and there's nothing stopping someone else from talking over your safety-critical instruction.
This is where a licensed commercial radio earns its keep. You apply through Radio Spectrum Management (RSM) for a private frequency, which gives your team a dedicated channel free from outside chatter. Most commercial radios sold for this purpose use DMR (Digital Mobile Radio), which delivers clearer audio and longer battery life than analogue gear of the same wattage.
Current RSM Licensing Fees
As of 1 July 2026, the published RSM fee schedule sits at: a standard individual licence at $190, a land mobile licence covering up to five repeater locations at $800, an unlimited-locations land mobile licence at $1,800, and an amateur licence at $66. These are annual fees on top of the hardware cost, which is the trade-off for a guaranteed, private channel.
A good supplier handles the licence application as part of the sale, so you're not navigating RSM paperwork solo. If your team needs guaranteed clarity over a fixed work area, security operation, or large transport fleet, this is the category to budget for, not UHF CB.
Marine VHF: A Category of Its Own
If you're getting on the water, UHF CB isn't the right tool. Marine VHF operates on its own internationally designated maritime frequencies and is the legal standard for on-water communication in New Zealand. Channel 16 is monitored for distress calls, and a trained operator can begin coordinating a rescue within a minute of you keying up.
Operating a marine VHF radio legally requires a VHF Radio Operator Certificate, with one exception: you can transmit without one in a genuine emergency or distress situation. A portable handheld VHF gives a useful 50 kilometres of coverage in most conditions and is the right backup to keep clipped to a lifejacket if you go overboard.
This is genuinely its own world, with its own licensing, its own etiquette, and its own hardware. If you're kitting out a boat, it's worth treating as a separate purchase entirely from a land-based UHF CB or commercial radio.
The Specs That Actually Matter Once You've Picked a Category
Once you know which category fits, the spec sheet stops being overwhelming. A handful of things actually change how the radio performs in the field.
- IP rating: IP67 is the realistic baseline for outdoor, farm or marine use, dust-tight and able to survive brief submersion. Anything lower won't hold up to a wet ute tray or a dusty yard.
- Wattage: For UHF CB, 5 watts is the legal maximum and worth paying for over a 1-watt unit if range matters. Terrain, not just wattage, decides how far your signal actually travels.
- Battery runtime: Look at hours of standby plus realistic talk time, not just a marketing number. A 12-hour shift needs a battery rated well beyond that on paper.
- Antenna: A taller, higher-gain antenna almost always beats a stubby one for range, at the cost of being slightly less convenient to carry.
- Channel features: CTCSS or DCS tone coding filters out other users on a shared UHF CB channel, giving you a clearer, more private-feeling line without needing a paid licence.
Battery-powered extras like Bluetooth or GPS tracking are genuinely useful for some users, particularly 4WD touring groups who want location sharing between vehicles, but they're not what determines whether the radio does its core job. Get the rating, wattage and battery right first.
If you've never compared a basic unit against a feature-rich one side by side, this walkthrough on choosing a first UHF CB radio covers the practical differences well, and the UHF CB band is identical between New Zealand and Australia, so the advice carries straight across.
Matching Radios to Real NZ Use Cases
Here's how that decision plays out with real, current stock from our range.
Family, farm and recreational use
Commercial and work crews
On the water
If your work site needs a private, licensed frequency rather than a single radio, that's a coverage planning conversation rather than a product choice, and we've written a separate guide on radio repeaters and coverage planning if that's the situation you're in.