Property Management

Auckland rents up 7.6% in last year

Auckland rents continue their steady rise, but it’s a different story around the rest of the country.

Thursday, July 23rd 2015

Median weekly rent for Auckland properties went up by 7.6% over the last year, according to the latest Trade Me Property Rental Price Index.

This means they were up $35 per week year-on-year.

In June alone, they rose by $5 a week to hit $495 per week.

Head of Trade Me Property Nigel Jeffries said Auckland rents showed a significantly higher increase over the first half of 2015 when compared to the latter half of 2014.

“In 2014, rents were rising at an annual rate of around 2% a year, but the first six months of 2015 have upped the ante with rents rising at an average of 6%, and they’re now heading toward 8% in the year to June.”

“The median weekly rent for an Auckland tenant is now over $25,740 compared to just under $24,000 per annum in June 2014.”

Jeffries said that, over the past five years, the median Auckland weekly rent had gone from $400 to $495, which was an increase of 23.8%.

“A $95 jump in weekly rental costs isn’t trivial, but it pales into insignificance when compared to the 62% rise in expected selling price for Auckland properties over the same period.”

Meanwhile, Auckland’s rising rents sit in striking contrast to the rest of the country where median rents remain more subdued.

The median weekly rent nationwide did not change between May and June, stagnating at $360 per week. 

This was an increase of just 2.2%, or $10 per week, from this time a year ago.

Jeffries said that, outside of Auckland, the last couple of months saw a hefty slowdown in the pace of median rent increases, particularly compared to the second half of 2014 where they rose by 7%.

Overall, eight of the 14 regions reported growth in median weekly rents, while four regions saw falls, and two remained unchanged.

Taranaki and Gisborne both did well with increases of 12.5% and 11.1% respectively.

However, Canterbury, Otago and Waikato reported declines in the median weekly rent.

Jeffries said the Christchurch rental market had peaked in March with median rent of $495 per week, before easing back to $440 per week in June.

Comments

No comments yet

Most Read

Unity First Home Buyer special 4.29
SBS FirstHome Combo 4.29
ICBC 4.85
Kiwibank Special 4.89
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special 4.89
SBS Bank Special 4.95
ANZ Special 4.95
ASB Bank 4.95
Westpac Special 4.95
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.95
BNZ - Std 4.95
Nelson Building Society 4.93
Westpac Special 4.95
ICBC 4.95
Wairarapa Building Society 4.95
Kiwibank Special 4.95
ANZ Special 4.95
BNZ - Std 4.95
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.95
ASB Bank 4.95
SBS Bank Special 4.95
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 4.99
SBS Bank Special 5.39
ICBC 5.39
Westpac Special 5.39
BNZ - Classic 5.59
BNZ - Std 5.59
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.69
ASB Bank 5.69
AIA - Go Home Loans 5.69
Kiwibank Special 5.79
Kainga Ora 5.79
ANZ 5.79
SBS Construction lending for FHB 3.94
AIA - Back My Build 4.44
CFML 321 Loans 4.99
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.95
Co-operative Bank - Standard 5.95
Heartland Bank - Online 5.99
Kiwibank 6.35
Kiwibank - Offset 6.35
TSB Special 6.39
BNZ - Std 6.44
China Construction Bank Special 6.44

More Stories

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

Friday, March 21st 2025

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

New Zealander’s reliance on property capital gains in the mid-single digits is at an end.

[TMM Podcast] Yelsa serves up “marine reserve” of property buyers

Friday, January 31st 2025

[TMM Podcast] Yelsa serves up “marine reserve” of property buyers

It’s been years in the making and former real estate agent Mike Harvey is now coming to market with his platform matching buyers and sellers, an offering he says will be a gamechanger for the industry.

Leaving last year's stumbling housing market behind

Friday, January 17th 2025

Leaving last year's stumbling housing market behind

As interest rates ease and job losses climb, New Zealand’s housing market faces a mixed year of modest growth, with conflicting forces shaping the outlook for homebuyers and investors.

Don’t bet on house prices rising faster than incomes

Wednesday, January 15th 2025

Don’t bet on house prices rising faster than incomes

Former Reserve Bank Governor and National Party leader Don Brash says there are grounds for believing that house prices may finally have ended the three-decade period when they rose significantly faster than incomes.