Published on : 31 Dec 2025
Picture yourself standing at Milford Sound as waterfalls cascade down sheer cliff faces, or hiking across the otherworldly volcanic landscapes of Tongariro. Perhaps you’re watching dolphins play in the turquoise waters of the Bay of Islands, or savoring world-class wine in Marlborough’s vineyards. For travelers from the US, UK, Canada, and Australia, New Zealand offers landscapes so diverse and stunning they seem pulled from different planets—but at what cost?
Let’s address the elephant in the room: Yes, New Zealand is expensive. It consistently ranks among the world’s priciest travel destinations, and if you’re not careful, your budget can disappear faster than a Kiwi bird at dusk. But here’s what guidebooks don’t always tell you: with strategic planning, New Zealand is far more accessible than its reputation suggests.
How much will a trip to New Zealand cost in 2026? The honest answer is: it depends entirely on your choices. A budget backpacker camping and self-catering can explore for $100-150/day. A mid-range traveler seeking comfort can have an incredible experience for $250-400/day. And luxury seekers willing to splurge on boutique lodges and helicopter tours will find plenty of ways to spend $600-1,200+/day.
This comprehensive 2026 guide breaks down the real New Zealand trip cost across every category: international flights from major cities, the critical campervan vs. hotel decision, food prices that won’t shock you, activity costs (including which adventure sports are actually worth it), and insider money-saving strategies from travelers who’ve mastered budget travel in Aotearoa (New Zealand’s Māori name).
We’ll also cover 2026-specific changes you need to know: the tripled International Visitor Levy (now $100 NZD vs. $35), seasonal pricing variations, North Island vs. South Island cost differences, and whether buying a used campervan beats renting.
Whether you’re planning a 2-week South Island road trip, a 3-week grand tour of both islands, or a quick 10-day highlights tour, you’ll find exact costs, comparison tables, and strategic advice to maximize your New Zealand adventure while minimizing unnecessary expenses.
Quick Answer: A 2-week New Zealand trip in 2026 will cost approximately:
These estimates include flights from North America, transportation (car/campervan), accommodation, food, gas, and activities.
Before diving into costs, you need to know about significant 2026 changes affecting your New Zealand trip cost:
Biggest change: The mandatory IVL fee increased from NZ$35 to NZ$100 (nearly 3x)!
What it is:
Who pays:
Who’s exempt:
How to minimize cost:
Application timing: Apply at least 72 hours before travel (processes within minutes but be safe)
New Zealand’s GST (Goods and Services Tax): 15% on most goods and services
2026 impact:
Already included in advertised prices, but know this adds 15% to base costs
Current 2026 estimates:
Impact on road trips:
| Category | Budget | Mid-Range | Luxury |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily total (per person) | $200-300 | $400-600 | $800-1,400+ |
| Accommodation | $30-70/night | $120-200/night | $300-700+/night |
| Food | $30-50/day | $60-100/day | $150-300+/day |
| Transportation | $60-100/day | $100-180/day | $250-500+/day |
| Activities | $10-40/day | $60-120/day | $200-500+/day |
| 2-week trip total | $2,800-4,200 | $5,600-8,400 | $11,200-19,600+ |
Note: Prices are per person based on 2 people traveling together and sharing costs. Solo travelers budget 40-60% more.
International flights typically represent 30-45% of your total New Zealand trip cost. Prices vary dramatically by departure city, season, and airline.
West Coast (Los Angeles, San Francisco, Vancouver):
| Season | Economy | Premium Economy | Business |
|---|---|---|---|
| Winter (Jun-Aug) | $900-1,400 | $1,800-2,600 | $3,500-5,500 |
| Spring (Sept-Nov) | $1,100-1,700 | $2,200-3,200 | $4,200-6,500 |
| Summer (Dec-Feb) | $1,500-2,400 | $3,000-4,500 | $5,500-8,500 |
| Fall (Mar-May) | $1,000-1,600 | $2,000-3,000 | $3,800-6,000 |
East Coast (New York, Boston, Washington DC):
| Season | Economy | Premium Economy | Business |
|---|---|---|---|
| Winter | $1,200-1,800 | $2,400-3,600 | $4,500-7,000 |
| Spring | $1,400-2,100 | $2,800-4,000 | $5,200-8,000 |
| Summer | $1,800-2,800 | $3,600-5,400 | $6,800-10,500 |
| Fall | $1,300-2,000 | $2,600-3,800 | $5,000-7,500 |
Flight duration:
UK (London):
| Season | Economy | Premium Economy | Business |
|---|---|---|---|
| Off-season | £900-1,400 ($1,170-1,820) | £1,800-2,800 ($2,340-3,640) | £3,500-5,500 ($4,550-7,150) |
| Peak season | £1,400-2,200 ($1,820-2,860) | £2,800-4,200 ($3,640-5,460) | £5,200-8,000 ($6,760-10,400) |
Flight duration: 24-28 hours (1-2 stops)
Sydney/Melbourne:
| Season | Economy | Premium Economy | Business |
|---|---|---|---|
| Off-season | AU$300-600 | AU$600-1,000 | AU$1,500-2,500 |
| Peak season | AU$600-1,000 | AU$1,000-1,600 | AU$2,200-3,500 |
Flight duration: 3-4 hours direct
Full-Service:
Budget (Australia-NZ only):
Best booking windows:
Money-saving tips:
This is the most critical budget decision for your New Zealand trip. Let’s break down both options completely.
Daily campervan costs (2-person):
| Vehicle Type | Budget Season | Peak Season |
|---|---|---|
| Basic campervan (2-berth, older) | NZ$80-120/day | NZ$140-200/day |
| Mid-range campervan (2-berth, newer) | NZ$150-220/day | NZ$250-350/day |
| Luxury motorhome (4-berth+) | NZ$250-400/day | NZ$400-600+/day |
Additional campervan costs:
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Campground fees (powered site) | NZ$30-50/night per site |
| Free/DOC campsites | NZ$0-15/night |
| Fuel (2-week South Island) | NZ$350-500 |
| Propane refills | NZ$30-50 per refill |
| Dump station fees | Usually free |
| Insurance | NZ$25-50/day (reduce excess) |
2-week campervan trip total:
Pros: ✅ Accommodation + transport combined ✅ Freedom to camp in stunning locations ✅ Built-in kitchen (huge food savings) ✅ Flexibility to change plans ✅ Access to remote areas ✅ Can save $100-200/night vs hotels
Cons: ❌ High upfront daily cost ❌ Fuel consumption (10-15 mpg typical) ❌ Parking challenges in cities ❌ Must use designated campsites (freedom camping restricted) ❌ Can be cramped/uncomfortable ❌ Winter not ideal (cold nights)
Accommodation costs:
| Type | Budget | Mid-Range | Luxury |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hostel (dorm) | NZ$35-70/night per person | – | – |
| Hostel (private room) | NZ$100-160/night | – | – |
| Budget hotel/motel | NZ$120-180/night | – | – |
| Mid-range hotel | – | NZ$180-320/night | – |
| Boutique hotel | – | – | NZ$350-600/night |
| Luxury lodge | – | – | NZ$600-1,500+/night |
Car rental costs (per day):
| Vehicle Type | Budget Season | Peak Season |
|---|---|---|
| Economy car (Toyota Corolla) | NZ$40-70 | NZ$80-130 |
| SUV/4WD | NZ$80-120 | NZ$140-220 |
| Luxury vehicle | NZ$150-250+ | NZ$250-400+ |
Fuel costs:
2-week hotels + car trip total:
Pros: ✅ More comfortable sleeping ✅ Better city access/parking ✅ Lower daily fuel costs (cars more efficient) ✅ Can stay in one place multiple nights ✅ Access to hotel amenities (breakfast, WiFi, etc.)
Cons: ❌ Accommodation + transport separate costs ❌ Less flexibility (pre-booked hotels) ❌ Can’t camp in scenic locations ❌ Need to eat out more (no kitchen) ❌ Higher total cost usually
2-week South Island trip (2 people):
| Category | Campervan | Hotels + Car |
|---|---|---|
| Transport | NZ$2,800 (included in campervan) | NZ$1,400 (car rental + fuel) |
| Accommodation | NZ$420-700 (campsites) | NZ$3,360-5,600 (hotels) |
| Food | NZ$840 (self-catered) | NZ$1,680 (mix of restaurants/groceries) |
| Total for 2 people | NZ$4,060-4,340 | NZ$6,440-8,680 |
| Per person | ~$1,220-1,305 USD | ~$1,935-2,610 USD |
Verdict: Campervan saves NZ$2,380-4,340 (~$1,430-2,605 USD) for 2 people over 2 weeks!
If staying 4+ weeks, buying can be cheaper:
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Used campervan (decent condition) | NZ$8,000-15,000 |
| Registration + insurance | NZ$500-800 |
| Warrant of Fitness (inspection) | NZ$60-80 |
| Resale value (if sold at end) | NZ$6,500-13,000 |
| Net cost (buy → sell) | NZ$1,500-3,500 |
For 4+ weeks: Buying beats renting ($1,500-3,500 vs $4,500-12,000+ rental)
Where to buy:
Dorm beds:
Private rooms in hostels:
Best hostel chains:
Budget motels:
Mid-range hotels:
Luxury/boutique:
Entire apartment:
Private room:
Most expensive:
More affordable:
New Zealand’s food costs are high, but strategic eating keeps budgets manageable.
Countdown, Pak’nSave, New World (major chains):
| Item | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Bread (loaf) | NZ$2-4 (~$1.20-2.40 USD) |
| Milk (2L) | NZ$4-5 (~$2.40-3 USD) |
| Eggs (12) | NZ$7-10 (~$4.20-6 USD) |
| Chicken breast (1kg) | NZ$14-18 (~$8.40-10.80 USD) |
| Ground beef (1kg) | NZ$14-20 (~$8.40-12 USD) |
| Rice (1kg) | NZ$3-5 (~$1.80-3 USD) |
| Pasta (500g) | NZ$2-4 (~$1.20-2.40 USD) |
| Tomatoes (1kg) | NZ$6-10 (~$3.60-6 USD) |
| Apples (1kg) | NZ$4-6 (~$2.40-3.60 USD) |
| Cheese (500g block) | NZ$10-15 (~$6-9 USD) |
| Wine (bottle) | NZ$12-25 (~$7.20-15 USD) |
| Beer (6-pack) | NZ$15-25 (~$9-15 USD) |
Budget tip: Shop at Pak’nSave (cheapest) → Countdown → New World (most expensive)
Budget meals:
| Option | Cost |
|---|---|
| Fish & chips (takeaway) | NZ$12-18 (~$7-11 USD) |
| Meat pie (bakery) | NZ$5-8 (~$3-5 USD) |
| McDonald’s Big Mac meal | NZ$14-16 (~$8-10 USD) |
| Subway footlong | NZ$12-15 (~$7-9 USD) |
| Asian takeout | NZ$12-18 (~$7-11 USD) |
Mid-range restaurants:
| Meal Type | Cost |
|---|---|
| Café breakfast | NZ$18-28 (~$11-17 USD) |
| Casual lunch | NZ$18-30 (~$11-18 USD) |
| Dinner entrée | NZ$25-40 (~$15-24 USD) |
| Pizza (large) | NZ$20-35 (~$12-21 USD) |
| Thai/Indian curry | NZ$20-30 (~$12-18 USD) |
Drinks:
| Beverage | Cost |
|---|---|
| Flat white/coffee | NZ$5-7 (~$3-4 USD) |
| Beer (bar) | NZ$10-15 (~$6-9 USD) |
| Wine (glass) | NZ$12-18 (~$7-11 USD) |
| Cocktail | NZ$16-24 (~$10-14 USD) |
Ultra Budget ($20-35/day):
Budget ($35-60/day):
Mid-Range ($60-100/day):
Comfortable ($100-180/day):
New Zealand is the “Adventure Capital of the World”—but those adventures add up fast!
✅ Hiking/tramping – Thousands of DOC (Department of Conservation) tracks ✅ Beaches – Stunning coastlines everywhere ✅ Waterfalls – Countless spectacular falls ✅ Viewpoints – Pull-offs along scenic routes ✅ National parks – Free entry (some parking fees) ✅ City walks – Wellington waterfront, Auckland Domain ✅ Wildlife viewing – Seals, dolphins, penguins (from shore) ✅ Glow worm caves (some free caves exist)
Estimate: You could spend 2 weeks seeing incredible sights for NZ$0 in entry fees!
| Activity | Cost |
|---|---|
| Great Walks hut passes | NZ$15-65/night |
| Tamaki Maori Village (Rotorua) | NZ$139 (~$83 USD) |
| Waitomo Glowworm Caves | NZ$56 (~$34 USD) |
| Mount Cook scenic flights | NZ$395-795 (~$237-477 USD) |
| Kaikoura whale watching | NZ$165 (~$99 USD) |
| Dolphin swimming | NZ$195 (~$117 USD) |
| Hot pools (Tekapo, Hanmer) | NZ$30-50 (~$18-30 USD) |
| Activity | Cost |
|---|---|
| Skydiving | NZ$299-499 (~$179-299 USD) |
| Bungee jumping | NZ$195-275 (~$117-165 USD) |
| Milford Sound cruise | NZ$95-200 (~$57-120 USD) |
| Jet boating | NZ$149-195 (~$89-117 USD) |
| White water rafting | NZ$145-199 (~$87-119 USD) |
| Heli-hiking (Franz Josef) | NZ$449-649 (~$269-389 USD) |
| Lord of the Rings tours | NZ$169-299 (~$101-179 USD) |
| Activity | Cost |
|---|---|
| Helicopter tours | NZ$450-1,200+ (~$270-720+ USD) |
| Multi-day guided hikes | NZ$1,800-4,000+ (~$1,080-2,400+ USD) |
| Scenic flights (extended) | NZ$500-1,500+ (~$300-900+ USD) |
| Diving (Poor Knights Islands) | NZ$300-600 (~$180-360 USD) |
Ultra Budget (NZ$0-150):
Budget (NZ$200-600):
Mid-Range (NZ$800-1,600):
Splurge (NZ$2,000-5,000+):
Overall verdict: Costs are similar, but each island has different expense patterns.
| Factor | North Island | South Island |
|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | Slightly more expensive (Auckland, Rotorua) | Slightly cheaper (except Queenstown) |
| Activities | More cultural (Māori experiences), geothermal | More adventure sports, stunning landscapes |
| Food | Similar prices | Similar prices |
| Fuel | Slightly cheaper | Slightly more expensive (longer distances) |
| Overall | 5-10% more expensive | 5-10% cheaper |
Must-see attractions:
Typical 10-day North Island costs:
Must-see attractions:
Typical 10-day South Island costs:
| Category | Total (2 people) | Per Person |
|---|---|---|
| Flights (West Coast US) | NZ$2,400 | NZ$1,200 |
| Campervan rental (basic, shoulder season) | NZ$1,960 (14 days x NZ$140) | NZ$980 |
| Campervan insurance | NZ$420 (NZ$30/day) | NZ$210 |
| Campsite fees (mix powered/DOC) | NZ$560 (avg NZ$40/night) | NZ$280 |
| Fuel (South Island loop) | NZ$400 | NZ$200 |
| Food (self-catered, some budget meals) | NZ$840 (NZ$60/day) | NZ$420 |
| Activities (Milford + caves + 1 adventure) | NZ$600 | NZ$300 |
| NZeTA/IVL levy | NZ$234 | NZ$117 |
| Miscellaneous | NZ$200 | NZ$100 |
| TOTAL PER PERSON | NZ$4,587 (~$2,752 USD) | |
| Daily average | NZ$328/day (~$197 USD/day) |
| Category | Total (2 people) | Per Person |
|---|---|---|
| Flights (East Coast US, peak) | NZ$4,200 | NZ$2,100 |
| Domestic flight (Auckland-Queenstown) | NZ$400 | NZ$200 |
| Car rental (SUV, 14 days) | NZ$2,240 | NZ$1,120 |
| Fuel (both islands ~2,500km) | NZ$560 | NZ$280 |
| Accommodation (mix motels/hotels) | NZ$3,920 (avg NZ$280/night) | NZ$1,960 |
| Food (mix restaurants/groceries) | NZ$1,960 (NZ$140/day) | NZ$980 |
| Activities (5-6 experiences) | NZ$1,800 | NZ$900 |
| NZeTA/IVL levy | NZ$234 | NZ$117 |
| Miscellaneous | NZ$400 | NZ$200 |
| TOTAL PER PERSON | NZ$7,857 (~$4,714 USD) | |
| Daily average | NZ$561/day (~$337 USD/day) |
| Category | Total (2 people) | Per Person |
|---|---|---|
| Flights (Business class or premium) | NZ$10,000 | NZ$5,000 |
| Domestic flights (3 flights) | NZ$1,200 | NZ$600 |
| Luxury car rental or private driver | NZ$4,900 | NZ$2,450 |
| Fuel | NZ$400 | NZ$200 |
| Accommodation (luxury lodges/5-star) | NZ$9,800 (avg NZ$700/night) | NZ$4,900 |
| Food (fine dining) | NZ$3,920 (NZ$280/day) | NZ$1,960 |
| Activities (helicopter tours, premium adventures) | NZ$5,600 | NZ$2,800 |
| NZeTA/IVL levy | NZ$234 | NZ$117 |
| Miscellaneous | NZ$1,000 | NZ$500 |
| TOTAL PER PERSON | NZ$18,527 (~$11,116 USD) | |
| Daily average | NZ$1,323/day (~$794 USD/day) |
New Zealand’s costs and weather vary dramatically by season. Here’s when to visit for best value:
Best for: Best weather, all activities open, Christmas/New Year
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| ✅ Warmest weather (60-75°F/15-24°C) | ❌ Most expensive season (+40-60%) |
| ✅ Longest days (15+ hours daylight) | ❌ Very crowded tourist sites |
| ✅ All hiking tracks open | ❌ Accommodation books out months ahead |
| ✅ Beach weather | ❌ Flight prices peak |
| ✅ All tours operating | ❌ Christmas/New Year = extreme prices |
Average daily cost: NZ$450-700 (~$270-420 USD)
Best strategy: Book 6+ months ahead or avoid Dec 20-Jan 10 entirely
Best for: Shoulder season value, autumn colors, wine harvest
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| ✅ Good weather still (55-70°F/13-21°C) | ❌ Days shortening (down to 11hrs by May) |
| ✅ Moderate prices (-20-30% vs summer) | ❌ Some activities closing (glaciers) |
| ✅ Beautiful autumn foliage | ❌ Cooler, need layers |
| ✅ Fewer crowds | ❌ More rain |
| ✅ Wine harvest season | ❌ Some mountain passes closing |
Average daily cost: NZ$300-500 (~$180-300 USD)
Best months: March-April (warmest, beautiful colors)
Best for: Snow sports, cheapest prices, North Island stays nice
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| ✅ Cheapest season (-40-50% vs summer) | ❌ Cold (40-55°F/4-13°C) |
| ✅ Skiing/snowboarding (Queenstown, Wanaka) | ❌ Short days (9-10 hours) |
| ✅ Fewer tourists (except ski areas) | ❌ Many hiking tracks closed |
| ✅ Good for North Island (geothermal stays warm) | ❌ Milford Road often closed |
| ✅ Clear skies (less rain than autumn) | ❌ Mountain passes need chains |
Average daily cost: NZ$200-350 (~$120-210 USD)
Best for: Ski enthusiasts, extreme budget travelers, North Island focus
Best for: Shoulder value, wildflowers, lambing season
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| ✅ Good prices (-25-35% vs summer) | ❌ Unpredictable weather |
| ✅ Days lengthening (13+ hours by Nov) | ❌ Still cool (50-65°F/10-18°C) |
| ✅ Wildflowers blooming | ❌ Some tracks still closed (Sept) |
| ✅ Lambing season (cute!) | ❌ Can be windy |
| ✅ Fewer crowds | ❌ Occasional snow at altitude |
Average daily cost: NZ$280-450 (~$168-270 USD)
Best months: October-November (warming up, good value)
| Season | Flights | Accommodation | Activities | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Summer | 💰💰💰💰 | 💰💰💰💰 | 💰💰💰💰 | NZ$450-700/day |
| Autumn | 💰💰💰 | 💰💰💰 | 💰💰💰 | NZ$300-500/day |
| Winter | 💰 | 💰 | 💰💰 | NZ$200-350/day |
| Spring | 💰💰 | 💰💰 | 💰💰💰 | NZ$280-450/day |
Our recommendation: Visit October-November or March-April for best value-to-experience ratio
Total cost: NZ$117-123 (~$70-74 USD)
When: Apply 72+ hours before travel (usually instant, but be safe)
Campervan rental companies charge if not cleaned:
How to avoid: Spend 30-60 mins cleaning before return
Standard excess (what you pay if damaged):
Common damages:
How to minimize:
City parking:
Some attractions charge parking:
Only one toll road in NZ:
Credit card fees: 3% on all purchases (if card has foreign fees)
Solution: Use cards with NO foreign transaction fees:
Savings: NZ$150-300 on NZ$5,000-10,000 trip
Average costs (per person, including flights from US):
This includes flights, accommodation, transportation, food, gas, and activities.
Yes, New Zealand is expensive compared to most destinations. It’s comparable to:
However: Strategic planning (campervanning, self-catering, shoulder season) makes it surprisingly affordable.
June-August for absolute lowest prices (winter = 40-50% cheaper than summer).
Best value months: March-April and October-November (good weather + moderate prices)
Campervan wins for budget travelers:
Hotels better for:
Daily food budgets:
Restaurant meal: NZ$25-40 (~$15-24 USD) Groceries 20-30% more expensive than US/UK
Summer (Oct-April): NO – Regular car fine for 95% of roads Winter (May-Sept): YES – Recommended for safety (snow/ice) F-roads (highland roads): YES – Required, but most tourists don’t go there
Savings: 2WD costs 40-50% less than 4WD
2026 estimates:
2-week South Island loop: NZ$280-420 (~$168-252 USD) in fuel
Absolutely! Budget strategies:
Realistic budget: NZ$200-300/day (~$120-180 USD) per person
Very similar overall, but:
Choose based on interests, not cost!
IVL (International Visitor Conservation and Tourism Levy): NZ$100 (~$60 USD)
Must pay if you’re:
How to pay: Part of NZeTA application (total: NZ$117 via app)
Highly recommended. New Zealand’s medical care is excellent but expensive:
Good travel insurance: $60-150 for 2-week trip
No! New Zealand doesn’t have a tipping culture.
Savings: No need to budget for tips!
Yes! New Zealand has excellent tap water everywhere.
Bring reusable water bottle, save NZ$3-5/day
Popular activities:
Budget NZ$800-1,600 for 4-6 activities over 2 weeks
Buy if staying 4+ weeks:
Rent if staying less than 4 weeks – Buying/selling hassle not worth it
Top 5 money-savers:
Minimum: 7-10 days (one island, highlights) Recommended: 14-21 days (both islands comfortably) Ideal: 3-4 weeks (explore in depth, relax)
More time = less driving per day = better experience
No. New Zealand’s currency is New Zealand Dollar (NZD/NZ$).
Exchange rate (approximate): NZ$1 = $0.60 USD
No need to exchange money – Use credit/debit cards everywhere (even small amounts)
Yes! DOC (Department of Conservation) campsites:
Freedom camping (sleeping in vehicle outside campsites):
Usually NOT included:
Always included:
After breaking down every expense, here’s the truth: Yes, New Zealand is expensive. But it’s absolutely, unquestionably worth every dollar.
New Zealand offers something increasingly rare—a destination that actually exceeds your wildest expectations. The photos don’t capture the scale of Milford Sound’s cliffs. The videos don’t convey the otherworldliness of geothermal areas. The reviews don’t prepare you for how genuinely friendly Kiwis are.
How much will a trip to New Zealand cost? For most travelers, budget $200-600/day per person depending on your comfort level. But remember: the memories you’ll create are priceless.
Our final recommendations:
To minimize New Zealand trip cost:
To maximize value:
Don’t skimp on:
Bottom line: Budget $4,000-8,000 per person for an incredible 2-week trip. With smart planning, New Zealand is achievable—and worth every penny.
Your Middle Earth adventure awaits. Start planning—those fjords aren’t going to explore themselves!
Bookmark this page for your New Zealand trip planning! Share with travel partners.
Have questions about New Zealand trip cost or need specific budget advice? Drop a comment and we’ll help!
Ready to book? Start with flights 3-6 months out, then lock in campervan/accommodation. Aotearoa is calling! 🇳🇿✨
Posted By : Vinay
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