KA02 Report Writing for Engineering New Zealand
If your engineering qualification isn’t recognised under the Washington Accord and you’re targeting skilled migration to New Zealand or Chartered Professional Engineer status, the KA02 is the document that gets you there. Our KA02 Report Writing service covers Knowledge Profile mapping, work sample drafting, and CPD records. Every section is written by an Australian-based engineer in your discipline, based on your real project history.
What is a KA02 Report
A KA02 is a Knowledge Assessment submission to Engineering New Zealand, formerly known as IPENZ and now operating as Te Ao Rangahau. The report exists to demonstrate that your engineering education and experience meet the standard of a Washington Accord–accredited engineering degree, even though your qualification isn’t formally recognised under the Accord.
The KA02 is a technical document built around three main components. A Knowledge Profile self-assessment maps each of Engineering New Zealand’s 12 Knowledge Profile elements to specific evidence in your work history. Three to four work samples walk an Engineering NZ assessor through engineering activities you have personally performed. A chronological CPD record covers professional development since your graduation.
KA02 Report Writing supports two distinct outcomes. The first is skilled migration to New Zealand, where a positive Knowledge Assessment outcome supports your Skilled Migrant Category visa application through Immigration New Zealand. The second is Chartered Professional Engineer (CPEng NZ) registration, for engineers seeking the professional title and the right to perform restricted engineering work in New Zealand under the Chartered Professional Engineers of New Zealand Act 2002.
Our service focuses on writing the report itself. Application lodgement, representation, and migration advice are handled separately by your migration agent and Engineering New Zealand directly.
KA01 vs KA02: Which Document Applies to You
The KA01 vs KA02 question is the most confused decision in the New Zealand pathway. Many engineers don’t know which document applies until they read the criteria carefully, and several CDR-focused service providers conflate the two.
| Criterion | KA01 | KA02 |
|---|---|---|
| When you need it | Your engineering qualification is from a Washington Accord signatory country | Your qualification is not from a Washington Accord signatory, or is from a non-accredited institution within an Accord country |
| What it proves | Your existing qualification meets New Zealand’s standard | Your knowledge meets the standard of a Washington Accord–accredited degree |
| Document type | Streamlined recognition application | Full Knowledge Profile self-assessment with work samples |
| Length | Typically 10 to 20 pages | Typically 40 to 80 pages |
| Assessment process | Document verification primarily | Substantive assessment of knowledge and experience |
| Typical applicants | Engineers from USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Ireland, India (under Accord), Pakistan, Bangladesh | Engineers from China (most universities), Iran, Egypt, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, and most non-Accord countries |
| Approximate effort | 2 to 4 weeks of self-prep | 3 to 6 months of self-prep, or 5 to 21 days professionally |
If you’re not sure which applies, the consultation will identify it in 5 minutes, usually faster than the time it takes to find your university’s accreditation status yourself.
Engineering NZ’s 12 Knowledge Profile Elements
The Knowledge Profile is the framework Engineering New Zealand uses to assess KA02 submissions. Each element below is a specific area of engineering competency you must evidence with work samples and self-assessment narrative. Coverage of all 12 is mandatory, and gaps are the leading cause of KA02 rejection.
Natural science fundamentals
Mathematics, physics, chemistry, materials science relevant to your engineering discipline
Engineering science fundamentals
Numerical analysis, statistics, engineering mathematics, mechanics
Specialist engineering knowledge
Discipline-specific knowledge, such as structural analysis for civil engineers, thermodynamics for mechanical engineers, signal processing for electronics engineers
Engineering design and creativity
The application of design methodology to complex engineering problems
Engineering practice
Use of engineering tools, software, methods, and current technology
Role of engineering in society
Awareness of social, environmental, ethical, and economic context for engineering work
Professional engineering practice
Project management, engineering economics, regulatory frameworks, professional ethics
Engagement with selected disciplines
Cross-disciplinary work, for example, a structural engineer engaging with geotechnical or environmental disciplines on the same project
Investigation of complex problems
Research methods, literature review, analytical investigation
Judgement in complex situations
Decision-making under uncertainty, balancing competing constraints
Independent learning
Evidence of professional development beyond initial qualification
Communication and engagement
Technical communication, stakeholder engagement, written and verbal presentation
Every work sample in your KA02 should evidence multiple Knowledge Profile elements. The self-assessment matrix maps each element to the specific work sample paragraphs that demonstrate it, by paragraph reference rather than general claim. This cross-referencing is where most self-prepared KA02 reports fail.
What’s Inside the KA02 Report
The KA02 differs structurally from a CDR. The components, framing, and assessment process are all distinct.
Personal information and education record
Standard form covering your engineering qualifications, transcripts, professional memberships, and any prior assessments by other bodies. Document attestation requirements vary by country of origin, and we identify what you need during the consultation.
Work experience summary
A one to two page narrative covering your full engineering career. This section establishes the breadth and chronology, while the work samples establish the depth on specific projects.
Knowledge Profile self-assessment
The matrix that maps each of the 12 KP elements to your work sample paragraphs and education record. This is the assessor’s primary tool for evaluating whether your submission demonstrates Washington Accord–equivalent knowledge.
Work samples (typically 3, sometimes 4)
The heart of the KA02. Each work sample is a 1,500 to 3,000 word narrative covering one engineering project or activity you personally performed. Together, the samples must collectively evidence all 12 Knowledge Profile elements. Engineering NZ permits 4 samples when the standard 3 don’t comprehensively cover the Knowledge Profile, though most assessments use 3.
Continuing Professional Development record
A chronological table of post-graduation learning activities such as workshops, conferences, technical courses, and professional reading. Engineering NZ doesn’t mandate CPD as part of KA02 (unlike Engineers Australia for CDRs), but a thorough CPD record substantially strengthens the submission and is typically expected in practice.
Supporting documentation list
Employer reference letters, project documentation, registration certificates from other jurisdictions, and English language test results. The full list depends on your background, and we confirm what’s needed before drafting begins.
Work Sample Selection
Engineering NZ assesses your KA02 primarily on what your work samples demonstrate. Selection of the 3 or 4 projects is therefore the most consequential decision in the entire process.
The selection criteria
Each work sample must describe an engineering activity you have personally performed, rather than team-led work without specific personal contribution. The activity should reflect complex engineering work rather than routine technical tasks. Each sample must evidence multiple Knowledge Profile elements and use technical terminology appropriate to your discipline.
The diversity requirement
The three samples should not all describe the same type of engineering activity. A civil engineer submitting three structural design samples is at high risk of rejection because Engineering NZ wants to see breadth across the discipline. A better selection might include one structural design project, one construction supervision or remediation activity, and one investigation or analysis project.
The recency consideration
Engineering NZ doesn’t impose strict recency rules on KA02 work samples, unlike ACS RPL’s 3-year and 5-year windows, but assessors weight recent work more heavily. Typically at least one sample should cover a project from within the last 3 years.
The discipline match
All three samples should align with the engineering discipline you nominate in your application. A mechanical engineer submitting two mechanical samples and one purely electrical project will face questions about which discipline they’re seeking recognition under. Cross-disciplinary work fits inside an otherwise discipline-aligned sample, but the primary discipline should be consistent.
The KA02 Report Writing Process
Six stages from kickoff to delivery. Timing depends on the package selected and the scope of work sample drafting.
KA01 or KA02 path confirmation
We confirm whether KA02 is the right document for you, or whether KA01 applies based on your qualification’s accreditation status. About one in three engineers who arrive intending to commission a KA02 actually qualifies for KA01. The consultation catches this before you commit to the wrong path.
Project shortlisting
A kickoff consultation covers your full work history. We identify 5 to 7 candidate projects suitable for work samples, then narrow to three based on Knowledge Profile element coverage. You receive a written shortlist with reasoning.
Discipline-matched writer assignment
Your KA02 is assigned to an engineer in your specific discipline. The same discipline-matching principle applies as in our CDR Report Writing services. A structural KA02 is drafted by a structural engineer, a software KA02 by a software engineer.
Work sample drafting
Each work sample is drafted from your project material captured during the consultation. The drafting follows Engineering NZ’s expected structure: project context, your personal role, the technical work performed, the Knowledge Profile elements demonstrated, and the engineering outcomes achieved.
Knowledge Profile matrix construction
The self-assessment matrix that maps each KP element to specific paragraph references in your work samples is built alongside the samples. Where a particular KP element isn’t yet adequately evidenced, we expand the relevant work sample to cover it before the matrix is finalised.
Compliance pass and delivery
A senior engineer who hasn’t been involved in drafting reads the complete KA02 against Engineering NZ’s expected submission structure. The Turnitin similarity scan runs. The CPD record is finalised. You receive the complete submission package.
Combined CDR + KA02 Trans-Tasman Package
Many engineers from non-Accord countries don’t choose between Australia and New Zealand. They pursue both. If that’s your situation, a combined CDR + KA02 engagement is significantly more efficient than two separate engagements.
Why a combined package works
Both documents draw from the same underlying engineering work history. The Career Episodes that anchor your Engineers Australia CDR overlap substantially with the work samples that anchor your KA02. The same project material, restructured against two different competency frameworks, produces both submissions.
What’s different between the two
The CDR uses three Career Episodes mapped to Engineers Australia competency elements, while the KA02 uses three or four work samples mapped to Engineering NZ’s Knowledge Profile. The CDR includes a Summary Statement with paragraph cross-referencing, whereas the KA02 uses a different self-assessment matrix structure. CPD requirements differ slightly. The narrative voice is similar in both.
What stays the same
Your project material, your engineering judgement, your personal contribution evidence, and your technical depth. Reusing the underlying source material across both submissions cuts your re-discovery time significantly.
How we structure the combined engagement
One discovery consultation captures the project material for both submissions. The CDR is drafted first (since most engineers face Australian visa timelines first), with project material structured for Career Episode use. The KA02 work samples are then drafted from the same project material, restructured for Knowledge Profile evidence and Engineering NZ’s narrative format. Combined turnaround is typically 25 to 35 days versus 35 to 45 days for two sequential engagements.
The combined package pricing follows the same uniform tier structure. Essential through Supreme cover both deliverables together at a single tier price. Mention the combined trans-Tasman pathway during your consultation if Australia is also on your list.
Why Engineers Choose Us for KA02 Report Writing
What sets our KA02 service apart from generalist writing services and standalone NZ-only providers.
Australian-based engineers who understand both pathways
Our team works on Engineers Australia CDRs daily. The KA02 framework is structurally different but draws on the same underlying engineering writing competence, the ability to map technical work to a structured competency framework. Many KA02-only services lack the day-to-day exposure to assessment patterns that comes from running both pathways together.
Engineering NZ Knowledge Profile fluency
We track Engineering New Zealand’s published guidance on the Knowledge Profile and Chartered Professional Engineer assessment criteria the same way we track Engineers Australia’s MSA Booklet revisions. The 12 KP elements, the assessment criteria for each, and the typical evidence Engineering NZ expects all sit on our writing templates rather than in someone’s head.
Discipline-matched drafting at every stage
A petroleum KA02 is drafted by a petroleum engineer. A structural KA02 by a structural engineer. Discipline matching isn’t a marketing line, it’s how the technical content of work samples reads as authentic to an Engineering NZ assessor.
Human-written content, regardless of pathway
Engineering NZ hasn’t yet implemented the AI-content detection routines that Engineers Australia rolled out in 2026, but the trajectory is the same and the principle is unchanged. AI-drafted technical writing reads differently from human-drafted technical writing, and assessors notice. Every paragraph of every KA02 we deliver is written by a practising engineer.
99% positive Knowledge Assessment outcomes
Across 60+ KA02 submissions delivered since 2022. Verified outcome letters from past clients are available on request, anonymised.
Combined CDR + KA02 packages for trans-Tasman migrants
If you’re targeting both Australia and New Zealand, the combined engagement is cheaper, faster, and more coherent than separate pathways with different writers.
KA02 Report Writing Pricing
The same four-tier package applies across writing, review, plagiarism removal, KA02, and ACS RPL services. Tiers differ on turnaround speed and the level of senior-engineer review built in.
Essential
- Standard KA02 with 3 work samples
- Full Knowledge Profile self-assessment
- CPD record and document checklist
- Turnitin similarity scan
Enhanced
- Everything in Essential
- Priority response (1 business day)
- Up to 4 work samples on request
- Faster turnaround
Premium
- Everything in Enhanced
- 30-min review call with lead writer
- Priority queue placement
- WhatsApp direct line (4-hr response)
Supreme
- Everything in Premium
- Express 5-day turnaround
- Same-day writer assignment
- Senior engineer lead writer
Engineering New Zealand’s assessment fee is paid directly to Engineering NZ, separate from this service. Confirm the current fee on engineeringnz.org.nz at the time you submit. Payment terms are 50% deposit on engagement, 50% on draft delivery. We accept Visa, Mastercard, bank transfer, and PayPal.
Past KA02 Client Outcomes
“I’d been told by an Engineering NZ contact I needed KA02 because my Bangalore institution wasn’t on the Washington Accord list. The consultation here found my specific program had been accredited under the Washington Accord since 2017, so I was in the KA01 pool, not KA02. Saved me three months of unnecessary work sample drafting. I went directly to KA01 and was approved within six weeks.”
“Civil engineer applying for CPEng NZ from Iran. The 12-element Knowledge Profile was opaque to me until the writer mapped my projects against each one. Three work samples, two on bridge rehabilitation and one on a transport infrastructure design, between them covered all 12 KP elements. Approved KA02 outcome from Engineering NZ in eleven weeks.”
“Combined CDR + KA02 package. Same engineering background, two parallel submissions. The KA02 work samples reused the project material from my Career Episodes but restructured for the Knowledge Profile rather than the EA competency elements. Awarded outcomes from both Engineers Australia and Engineering NZ within four months of starting the engagement.”
Frequently Asked Questions About KA02 Report Writing
10 questions we hear most often about the KA02 service.
How does the KA02 differ from an Australian CDR?
Do I really need KA02 if my country signed the Washington Accord?
How long does KA02 Report Writing take?
What is Engineering NZ’s assessment fee?
Can I submit a KA02 in English if my degree was taught in another language?
What’s the difference between KA02 for skilled migration and KA02 for CPEng NZ?
How does Engineering NZ verify the work samples I describe?
Can I reuse my CDR Career Episodes for KA02 work samples?
What if my Knowledge Profile coverage has gaps?
Do you handle CPEng NZ assessment alongside KA02?
Start Your KA02 Report Writing
Free 15-minute consultation with a senior engineer in your discipline. We’ll confirm whether KA02 or KA01 is the right path, review your project history for work sample suitability, and quote the appropriate package. A combined CDR + KA02 trans-Tasman option is available if Australia is also on your list.
+61 414 269 514
[email protected]
Suite 105/30-34 Churchill Avenue
Strathfield NSW 2135, Australia
Mon–Sat 9am–7pm AEDT
Sun by appointment