Language selection Te kōwhiringa reo

Find a range of different ways of approaching language selection, including translating into languages based on regional population data, English proficiency and identified language gaps, and translation data from the Department of Internal Affairs Translation Service.

While organisations may want to invest in widely spoken language to ensure the highest reach possible, there may be situations when translating information for ethnic groups with a smaller population may have small reach but high impact, whereas translating for a bigger audience may have the potential for greater reach but may not have as much impact as similar information may already be available in that language.

There is no one size fits all approach, and important factors such as budget, purpose, and intended audience will impact your decisions.

 

Languages by region

If you are trying to get messages into specific regions, you may want to adapt the languages you are translating to reflect the diversity or ethnic community population of that region.

Below is a summary of languages spoken in some of Aotearoa New Zealand’s major centres. StatsNZ | Tatauranga Aotearoa provide breakdowns of the most common languages spoken in each region of the country on their website.

 

Auckland | Tāmaki Makaurau

Bay of Plenty | Te Moana-a-Toitehuatahi

Waikato

Samoan

Māori

Māori

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

Punjabi

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

Hindi

French

Hindi

Māori

German

Afrikaans

Yue (Cantonese)

Hindi

French

Sinitic (other Chinese dialect)

Afrikaans

Tagalog

Tongan

Spanish

German

Tagalog

Tagalog

Punjabi

Punjabi

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

Samoan

French

New Zealand Sign Language

Sinitic (other Chinese dialect)

 

Wellington | Te Whanganui-a-tara

Canterbury | Waitaha

Otago | Ōtākou

Māori

Māori

Māori

Samoan

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

French

French

Tagalog

German

German

French

Spanish

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

Samoan

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

Hindi

German

Tagalog

Spanish

Sinitic (other Chinese dialect)

Hindi

Yue (Cantonese)

Spanish

New Zealand Sign Language

Tagalog

Hindi

Samoan

Afrikaans

Afrikaans

Sinitic (other Chinese dialect)

 

 

Languages by ethnicity

The ten most spoken languages by ethnic communities in Aotearoa New Zealand are listed below. These have been broken down by ethnicity (Asian, Middle Eastern, Latin American, African and Continental European). This information can be helpful if you are wanting to translate information to reach specific ethnic communities.

This is data where individuals have self-identified as belonging to an ethnic group and does not necessarily mean there is a language barrier.

Asian

Continental European

Middle Eastern

Latin American

African

English

English

English

English

English

Northern Chinese (Mandarin)

German

Arabic

Spanish

Afrikaans

Hindi

Dutch

Farsi/Persian

Portuguese

Bantu

Yue (Cantonese)

French

Assyrian

French

Somali

Sinitic (other Chinese dialect)

Russian

Turkish

Italian

French

Tagalog

Spanish

Kurdish

German

Amharic

Punjabi

Italian

Hebrew

Māori

Arabic

Korean

Māori

French

Japanese

German

Fijian Hindi

Serbo-Croatian

Spanish

New Zealand Sign Language

Zulu

Gujarati

Swedish

Semitic

Arabic

Swahili

 

English language proficiency

StatsNZ data

Based on Census data, we can infer that at least 3% of people in Aotearoa New Zealand (or approximately 115,000 people) may need language assistance to access government services. The highest population requiring language assistance are Asian communities, where an estimated 11% (or 80,000 people) may require extra support.

This data is based on the number of people who did not tick ‘English’ as a language they spoke in the Census question “In which languages can you talk about a lot of everyday things.” We can only estimate the extent of the language gap, since this specific question may have been overlooked by those with written language difficulties, language barriers, or by those who skipped the question inadvertently. There may also people who can speak English conversationally, but in some circumstances may need an interpreter or translation to aid their communication or understanding.

English Proficiency Index data

It may also be helpful to check the English Proficiency Index to get a sense of which populations are likely to have better levels of English, this may help you to determine the priority languages of people that will need information delivered in their languages. For example, while Afrikaans is a language spoken widely by ethnic communities in Aotearoa New Zealand, the English proficiency rate of South Africa is high, whereas a language like Gujarati (where there are comparatively fewer speakers), may be higher on the priority list of languages due to the lower English proficiency ranking of people from India.

 

Highest English language proficiency rates

1. Netherlands

11. Croatia

2. Singapore

12. South Africa

3. Austria

13. Poland

4. Norway

14. Greece

5. Denmark

15. Slovakia

6. Belgium

16. Luxembourg

7. Sweden

17. Romania

8. Finland

18. Hungary

9. Portugal

19. Lithuania

10. Germany

20. Kenya

 

Lowest English language proficiency rates

1. Laos

11. Oman

2. Congo

12. Somalia

3. Yemen

13. Kazakhstan

4. Libya

14. Haiti

5. Rwanda

15. Thailand

6. Tajikistan

16. Cameroon

7. Angola

17. Sudan

8. Cote d’Ivoire

18. Cambodia

9. Iraq

19. Myanmar

10. Saudi Arabia

20. Azerbaijan

 

Combined ethnic community population and English proficiency data

The Ministry for Ethnic Communities has combined the ethnicity data from the 2018 Census with the English Proficiency Index data set to provide a list of priority ethnicities who are likely to benefit from translations.

Each country was given a value as a percentage based on their English proficiency ranking. The initial rankings from the English Proficiency Index data were from 1-110 (where 1 has the highest proficiency). The total number of people within that ethnic population (drawn from the MEC data dashboard) was weighted by the proficiency ranking to arrive at the list below.

1. Chinese (not further defined)

11. African (not further defined)

2. Indian (not further defined)

12. Southeast Asian (not further defined)

3. Filipino

13. Vietnamese

4. Japanese

14. Indonesian

5. Korean

15. Afghan

6. Asian (not further defined)

16. South African European

7. Thai

17. Pakistani

8. Latin American (not further defined)

18. Brazilian

9. Cambodian

19. Russian

10. Middle Eastern (not further defined)

20. Iranian

 

Most translated languages by the DIA Translation Service

Below is a list of the most frequently translated languages carried out by DIA Translation Service over 2020-2022. This covers translation projects from English for both public sector agencies and private sector clients.

1. Māori

26. Gujarati

2. Samoan

27. Tamil

3. Tongan

28. German

4. Chinese (Simplified)

29. Russian

5. Hindi

30. Burmese

6. Cook Islands Māori

31. Bislama

7. Korean

32. Dari

8. Fijian

33. Spanish (South American)

9. Niuean

34. Italian

10. Arabic

35. Khmer

11. Tokelauan

36. Indonesian

12. Tuvaluan

37. Pashto

13. Chinese (Traditional)

38. Malay

14. Tagalog

39. Bengali

15. Punjabi

40. Pijin

16. Japanese

41. Portuguese

17. Spanish

42. Nepali

18. Farsi/Persian

43. Portuguese (Brazilian)

19. Rotuman

44. Swahili

20. Kiribati

45. Malayalam

21. Urdu

46. Turkish

22. Vietnamese

47. Tigrinya

23. Somali

48. Amharic

24. French

49. Karen

25. Thai

50. Dutch

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