Price pressure

PHOTO: AUCKLAND & WELLINGTON STILL FURTHEST FROM THEIR PEAKS — BUT ONE IS FAR MORE “UNDERVALUED” THAN THE OTHER. FILE

New Cotality data shows that Auckland and Wellington remain the weakest housing markets in New Zealand, still sitting furthest below their 2021–2022 peaks — but property experts say one of these cities may now represent serious value.

Nationally, property values edged up 0.1% in November, pushing the NZ median to $806,551. That’s still:

  • 17.4% below the early 2022 peak

  • Only 1.1% above the June 2023 trough

But inside the numbers, the story is anything but uniform.

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📍 REGIONAL SNAPSHOT — A VERY MIXED PICTURE

Auckland

  • 22.9% below peak

  • Down 2.2% YoY

  • Down 0.2% this month

  • Eight months in a row of declines

Wellington

  • 25.1% below peak (worst in NZ)

  • Down 1.8% YoY

  • Up 0.1% this month

Christchurch

  • Only 3.8% below peak

  • Up 2.6% YoY

Other centres

  • Hamilton: down 11.4% from peak, but trending upward

  • Tauranga: down 15.2% from peak, but rising

  • Dunedin: down 10.8% from peak, now stabilising

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📊 ECONOMIST: “THIS IS AN AUCKLAND STORY — IT’S DRAGGING DOWN THE NATIONAL AVERAGE”

Cotality chief property economist Kelvin Davidson says the national flatness is almost entirely due to Auckland’s ongoing slump:

“If Auckland was removed from the national data, recent months would show increases.”

He says Auckland’s downturn is being driven by:

  • Higher-than-normal listings

  • Buyer caution

  • Slow economic confidence

  • A large pipeline of new townhouses

  • Strong supply keeping prices suppressed

Davidson describes Auckland’s mood as a “malaise”, but predicts a rebound eventually:

“It’s the biggest economy. It will come back — but supply and demand are doing their job right now.”


📈 MORTGAGE RATE FALLS POINT TO 2026 UPSIDE… BUT BUYERS STILL HOLD THE POWER

Lower mortgage rates and rising affordability indicators suggest values should firm in 2026, but Davidson warns the improvement will be gradual:

“Right now, we remain in a holding pattern.”

Across the country, more listings mean buyers continue to dominate negotiations.


💬 PROPERTY INVESTOR: “AUCKLAND IS NOW UNDERVALUED”

Property investment coach Steve Goodey says Auckland may be offering some of the best buying in years:

“A lot of Auckland property now has excellent rental yields… falling interest rates give investors more room to buy.”

He’s not calling FOMO yet — but he is seeing:

  • Good-quality stock selling fast

  • Strong upward pressure on well-presented homes

  • Investor interest growing again

Goodey believes Auckland’s slump may now represent value ahead of eventual rate cuts and economic improvement.


⚠️ WELLINGTON: “DEPRESSED, OVERSUPPLIED AND ABANDONED”

Goodey says Wellington is a very different beast:

“It’s very depressed… heaps of listings… rents have dropped significantly.”

He points to:

  • Falling rents

  • Stagnant tourism

  • Lower immigration gains

  • Fewer students

  • Long-unresolved infrastructure issues

He says many buyers from 2021 “massively overpaid” and are now stuck.

“It’s a buyer and renter’s market — but still full of opportunity for those who understand it.”

Investors are slowly returning, but caution remains high.


🏁 THE BOTTOM LINE: AUCKLAND AND WELLINGTON ARE DOWN — BUT FOR VERY DIFFERENT REASONS

Auckland = Undervalued, weighed down by supply, but poised for recovery
Wellington = Weak fundamentals, falling rents, oversupply pressures
Christchurch = Strongest major city market
Regional NZ = Quiet but positive upward growth

With mortgage rates easing and affordability slowly improving, 2026 may see the first genuine upswing — but for now, NZ’s housing market remains fragmented, fragile, and full of opportunity for strategic buyers.

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