England come into the contest on the back of nine successive wins, their longest streak of success since a record-equalling 18-Test run was overseen by Eddie Jones in the wake of the 2015 World Cup.
A clutch of fringe players have emerged as Test regulars, giving coach Steve Borthwick the faith to keep more experienced options on the bench for the business end of matches.
Heyes and Baxter, with 16 caps each, start as props in a continuation of the pairing that impressed against a strong Argentine scrum in the summer, with Genge and Stuart in reserve.
Tom Curry, who has come back from a string of injuries to continue delivering big-match performances for England and Lions, is also poised among a high-quality set of replacements dubbed ‘the Pom Squad’.
Fellow finisher Henry Pollock, along with Ben Earl, will be part of a contingency plan to cover the backline if injuries bite deep.
England have managed to accelerate away from both Australia and Fiji in the final 20 minutes of matches so far this autumn, but New Zealand, after negotiating a 25-17 scare against Scotland at Murrayfield last time out, will test that tactic more thoroughly.