Compliance17 June 2026·9 min read

Sustainable Winegrowing New Zealand (SWNZ) Certification: Your Essential Compliance Guide

SWNZ is the industry-wide sustainability certification programme that certifies 98% of New Zealand's vineyard area. If you export or want market credibility, SWNZ membership and annual certification is essential.

Cepaos Team · Wine compliance
In short
  • All SWNZ members must submit annual questionnaires covering six sustainability focus areas (Soil, Water, Plant Protection, Waste, People, Climate Change) by 30 June each year
  • Your vineyard must maintain a detailed spray diary documenting every agrichemical application; all products used must be on the approved SWNZ list
  • You will undergo a third-party audit by an independent verifier during your initial certification (within 3-6 months) and then every three years thereafter
  • You must achieve compliance with all major requirements and at least 80% of minor requirements to be certified; annual membership fees apply

1Understanding the Six Focus Areas

The SWNZ programme is structured around six key sustainability areas, each with its own set of assessment criteria. Your annual submission will require you to provide data and supporting documentation across all six areas.

Climate Change focuses on energy efficiency, fuel consumption, and greenhouse gas emissions reporting. From the 2020-21 growing season onwards, all members must submit Scope 1 and 2 emissions data; SWNZ provides each certified vineyard with personalised benchmarking reports to help you understand your carbon footprint relative to peers in your region.

Water evaluates your water sourcing, usage efficiency, and management practices. If you draw water from bores, rainwater systems, or other self-supplied sources used in production, you must conduct testing to ensure safety and quality.

Soil assesses soil management practices, including soil testing, organic matter management, and erosion control. This area encourages continuous improvement in your vineyard's long-term soil health.

Plant Protection requires documentation of all agrichemical applications via your spray diary, with verification that all products used are on the SWNZ approved products list. Incorrect or unapproved products represent a compliance breach.

Waste covers waste minimisation, recycling, and responsible disposal across vineyard and winery operations. You must demonstrate how you manage glass, cardboard, organic matter, and other production waste.

People focuses on worker health, safety, and fair employment practices. This includes workplace safety protocols and demonstrable commitment to your team's wellbeing.

2The Annual Assessment Cycle

Your SWNZ compliance year runs from 1 July to 30 June. In June, you will receive your online questionnaire via the NZW Member Portal. This questionnaire is divided into three tiers:

Major questions are mandatory. Non-compliance with any major question results in a corrective action notice. You must address these before certification is granted for the next year.

Minor questions represent best-practice guidance. You must achieve compliance with at least 80% of all minor questions across your submission to maintain certification.

Best practices are voluntary and represent the next step in continuous improvement.

Mind the late feeYour submission deadline is 30 June. If you submit late, the grace period extends to 1 September, but from 2025 onwards, any member with outstanding submissions after 1 September incurs a late fee of NZD 200 plus GST per property.

Alongside your questionnaire submission, if you operate a vineyard, you must provide a complete spray diary covering the entire growing season. All agrichemical applications must be recorded with product name, date applied, area treated, and reason for application. Every product must match the SWNZ approved products list. If you have used an unapproved product, you must declare it and explain the circumstances; if the product is not permissible, this becomes a corrective action.

3Independent Audits and Verification

For initial certification, expect the full audit process to take three to six months from the day you register. An independent, third-party auditor appointed by SWNZ will visit your property to verify the information you have submitted. They will inspect your spray diary records, interview key staff, review your water testing documentation, and assess your compliance across all six focus areas.

Once you are certified, you undergo a full on-site audit every three years. In the intervening years, your annual questionnaire submission and supporting data are reviewed, but a physical inspection is not required unless a corrective action from the previous year must be verified or a new breach is suspected.

If your audit reveals a non-compliance, you will receive a corrective action notice specifying the issue, the evidence required to demonstrate correction, and the timeframe in which you must remedy it. SWNZ certification for the next year is not granted until this corrective action is verified as complete and the requirement is met.

Independent verifiersAll verifiers are independent contractors trained and accredited by SWNZ, ensuring consistent and impartial assessment across the industry.

4Costs and Member Obligations

SWNZ membership and certification incur annual fees, which vary by vineyard size and wine production volume. Fees cover the cost of programme administration, member support, third-party audits, and SWNZ's marketing of certified producers internationally.

Beyond fees, your main operational obligation is accurate data collection and timely submission. Maintaining a precise spray diary throughout the growing season is non-negotiable; reconstructing this record after harvest is difficult and invites audit findings. Many SWNZ members use spray diary software or manual ledgers to record applications the same day they are made.

Remedy corrective actions promptlyYour second key obligation is remedying corrective actions promptly. Delays in responding to corrective actions may result in your certification being suspended or revoked, and the ability to market your wine as "SWNZ certified" will be withdrawn.

5Market Credibility and Export Advantage

SWNZ certification is recognised internationally and increasingly required by major retailers and importers. Over 90% of New Zealand wine produced annually comes from SWNZ-certified facilities, making certified status an expectation rather than a competitive advantage in most export markets. For wineries selling into UK supermarkets and other strict ESG-focused retailers, SWNZ certification is often a mandatory condition of supply.

The programme's 30-year track record (launched in 1995) and transparent third-party auditing model mean that SWNZ certification carries genuine weight with buyers, sommeliers, and sustainability-focused consumers globally.

Legal NoticeCepaos is not a system homologated or endorsed by Sustainable Winegrowing New Zealand or the New Zealand Ministry for Primary Industries. The information provided is based on publicly available SWNZ and MPI documentation. Your winery is solely responsible for verifying current compliance requirements, interpreting the SWNZ Terms and Conditions, and ensuring all submissions and supporting documentation are accurate and submitted to the official SWNZ system by the stated deadlines. The binding source of truth for SWNZ requirements is the official SWNZ Terms and Conditions document published on the New Zealand Wine website and the NZW Member Portal. Cepaos makes no warranty that this guide is complete, error-free, or reflects the most current version of SWNZ rules. For official guidance, contact SWNZ membership support at membership@swnz.org.nz.

Your SWNZ submission, ready before 30 June

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