You are in New Zealand and the person doing this is in the United Kingdom. You report at home, and at the same time trigger action where they actually are.
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Most people here are not in an active emergency. To start an official record, use the non-emergency steps below.
Keep doing everything below in New Zealand. At the same time, the fastest leverage often sits in the United Kingdom, where the person actually is.
UK-wide: Ofcom’s Online Safety Act 2023 duties over platforms with UK users, plus the platform’s own law-enforcement channel once a UK police reference exists. Nation-level harassment/stalking protective orders are available through the relevant nation’s courts.
When the perpetrator is in the UK, a foreign victim triggers action police-to-police through the UK Interpol National Central Bureau (run via the National Crime Agency); the specific UK force that investigates depends on the nation (a Home Office force in England & Wales, Police Scotland, or the PSNI). The victim reports at home and asks their own investigating officer to pursue UK coordination.
For nation-specific offences and the exact police service, see the selected nation below.
File a non-emergency report, and do the single most important thing: get your report / reference / occurrence number. That number is the key that unlocks platforms, prosecutors, employers and protective orders.
Use the online form at 105.police.govt.nz to report any non-emergency crime or incident (harassment, threats received in writing, stalking, impersonation, etc.). It generates an official Police record. You can return to 105.police.govt.nz to update the report, add evidence (photos/documents), or get a reference. For online harassment, capture and preserve evidence (screenshots, URLs, message headers) BEFORE anything is taken down, since Police and Netsafe need the content as evidence.
Call 105, answered 24/7 by Police staff, to report a non-emergency or get advice. Produces an official record. Use when no one is injured or in danger, there is no serious risk to people or property, and the crime is not still happening. (Verbatim from police.govt.nz: 'you can call us on 105 (Ten-Five) 24/7'.)
Police victim-advice page for stalking and harassment, with reporting options and guidance.
Anonymous reporting of crime or information. Does not give you a personal occurrence reference the way a 105 report does; use 105 to start your own paper trail.
File here in addition to, not instead of, your local police report.
The statutory Approved Agency under the Harmful Digital Communications Act 2015. It is an intake and civil dispute-resolution body, not an enforcement agency: it receives, assesses and investigates complaints about online harm and tries to resolve them by advice, negotiation, mediation and persuasion. If it cannot resolve a complaint it issues a written summary you use to apply to the District Court for a takedown or cease-conduct order. Netsafe cannot lay criminal charges; serious threats and criminal matters go to Police. It is the gateway the civil HDCA court process generally requires you to go through first. The human helpline runs 9am to 6pm Mon to Fri; online reporting can be submitted any time.
National point for reporting cyber security incidents and online scams/fraud for individuals and organisations. An intake, triage, advice and referral body, not a law-enforcement investigator. It records incident details, provides advice, analyses trends, and, with your consent, refers reports to partner agencies including NZ Police, the Department of Internal Affairs, banks and telcos. 2026 change: CERT NZ has been fully merged into NCSC; the CERT NZ brand, website and old 0800 CERT NZ number are retired. For an actual criminal investigation you must also report to NZ Police (111/105). Individual reporting deep-link confirmed as ncsc.govt.nz/report/business-and-individuals/.
If Netsafe cannot resolve an online-harm complaint, the District Court can make civil orders (takedown, cease publication, correction, right of reply, identity disclosure) where there is a serious, threatened serious, or repeated breach of one or more of the Act's 10 communication principles. Intended to be speedy, efficient and relatively cheap.
This page covers the cross-border part. For the full New Zealand guide, the exact offences to name with official statute links, and the escalation ladder, see Reporting online harassment in New Zealand →