KPMG has increased the capacity of its Australia-focused delivery centre, Fiji Dynamix (FDX), at its Garden City office in Raiwai to 104 seats — a sign of accelerating demand for outsourced professional services and the firm's deepening commitment to building capacity in Fiji. The firm said 65 of those seats are already filled, including 33 graduates from its January 2026 intake.
The expanded Garden City facility forms part of a rapid rollout of new office space that began when KPMG opened its Star One office in Nadi in August 2023. The Garden City site was established in Suva in 2024 to complement the firm’s existing Suva Central presence and now houses the FDX team. Naomi Mitchell, KPMG’s national managing partner for Mid-Market and Private, described the move as a direct response to growing client demand for services delivered through an outsourcing model.
“The Garden City office now houses the KPMG FDX team and significantly expands our local KPMG office network,” Mitchell said at a launch event. The firm has also substantially increased its local workforce: KPMG Fiji has grown from about 160 people to more than 440 staff across its Fijian operations, a scale-up driven largely by stronger demand for outsourced and integrated service delivery to Australian clients.
KPMG Fiji managing partner Sharvek Naidu said the firm would continue to invest in capacity between its Nadi and Suva offices. “Since 2023, KPMG has invested heavily in new office spaces between Star One in Nadi and Garden City in Suva — which has helped our own people and clients, the Fiji economy and job creation,” Naidu said. He framed the expansion as part of a broader strategy to support client needs while nurturing local talent and economic growth.
The launch was officiated by Australian High Commissioner to Fiji Peter Roberts, who praised the expansion as a marker of Fiji’s emergence as a regional hub for digital innovation and high-skill professional services. Roberts pointed to the close commercial links between the two countries, noting more than 85 percent of clients for Fijian outsourcing firms are Australian-based. “Through Fiji Dynamix, you have shown that highly skilled Fijian professionals can work fully integrated with Australian teams,” he said.
KPMG’s disclosure that 33 of the newly filled FDX positions are graduates from the January 2026 intake highlights the firm’s pipeline for early-career recruitment and on-the-job training. With 65 filled seats out of 104, the centre still has capacity to absorb additional recruits as client demand continues to grow, signalling further hiring opportunities in the near term.
The expansion reflects a wider trend of international service providers deepening operations in Fiji to tap competitive labour costs and a skilled, English-speaking workforce. For KPMG, which provides audit, tax and advisory services alongside outsourced delivery through FDX, the move strengthens its offshore service model and underlines Fiji’s growing role as an outsourcing destination for Australian businesses.

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