For 30 years, buying a house in New Zealand was a one-way bet that pushed prices higher and crowded first-time buyers out. That run is now over.
Home values have fallen roughly 20% from their 2021 peak, growth has stalled, and the country's biggest bank just cut its forecast for the year ahead. The "must buy now" panic that fueled the market for three decades has gone quiet.
Investors Are Heading For The Exits
The clearest sign of the shift shows up in the landlord data, where a recent survey of 200 small "mum and dad" landlords by economist Tony Alexander found 38% now plan to sell - the highest share on record. Only 12% are looking to buy more property.
That matters because mom-and-pop investors have driven New Zealand's housing market for years, and when the math stops working, they leave. Right now the math is brutal: without capital gains, rental yields - the rent a property brings in versus what it costs - aren't covering mortgage payments for a lot of these owners.
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Why This Matters Outside New Zealand
New Zealand is a small market, but a useful preview. The country saw the same pandemic price surge that hit the U.S., Canada, Australia, and the U.K. - and it's further along in the comedown.
Affordability is the brake. In Auckland, the median home costs roughly 10 to 11 times the median household income, which international housing economists call "severely unaffordable."
The same dynamic powered the boom on the way up. Years of low interest rates, strong immigration, and tax rules that favored landlords pushed prices to levels that locked out first-time buyers - and now that those drivers have reversed, the demand they created has reversed too.
Wellington is showing what the back half of a long boom looks like, with prices down nearly 27% from their October 2021 peak. ANZ now expects national prices to drop another 2% in 2026, a sharp reversal from its earlier call for 5% growth this year.
Worth Noting
For U.S. investors, the takeaway isn't that American home prices are about to fall 27% - it's that long boom markets can quietly flip when investor psychology cracks, and they can stay flipped for years. New Zealand's last big housing slump took most of a decade to work through.
The "buy now or be priced out forever" feeling is hard to put back together once it's gone.
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