Rachel Hunter and Martin Henderson led an army of Kiwi expats arriving at Auckland Airport.
On Friday, former supermodel Hunter stepped off a flight from Los Angeles to support the All Blacks.
"She looked stunning. She swanned in and everyone's jaws dropped," said an onlooker.
Actor Henderson, 37, who stars in Hollywood drama Off the Map, was greeted by his sister and nephews yesterday.
America's Cup skipper Sir Russell Coutts, now CEO of Oracle Racing, said he would not miss the action.
Even overseas celebrities chimed in. Kiwi-born Russell Crowe tweeted: "I hope that Australia get everything they want out of the match, everything except victory."
Hobbit actor James Nesbitt was eating lunch at Auckland restaurant Euro yesterday afternoon with fellow Hobbit actor Stephen Hunter and former England rugby player Will Greenwood.
The Irish actor, who plays Bofur in The Hobbit, said he had been enjoying the rugby and would take another break from filming to attend the final next week.
"I think it's been a great success: exciting, passionate, raucous," Nesbitt said.
Brewing billionairess Charlene de Carvalho-Heineken, who is worth $8.7bn, also arrived yesterday.
A Heineken spokeswoman said de Carvalho-Heineken was attending hospitality events for the 1000 guests of the brewing company, who are mostly from the key rugby markets of Australia, Ireland, United Kingdom, France and South Africa.
Nine members of the 1987 French squad, including former captain Serge Blanco, reunited for the trip to New Zealand in the hope their team would make the final.
His Serene Highness Prince Albert II is one of several International Olympic Committee members here to attend a NZ Olympic Committee centenary dinner on Thursday. The Prince is understood to be here as a guest of the IRB.
British Prime Minister David Cameron is rumoured to be coming next week.