Research by Consumer NZ from July 2024 has found 60 per cent of non-property owners feel buying a house is not within their reach.
This comes as a report published by Deloitte this month found home ownership in New Zealand has dropped below 60 per cent, the lowest since 1945.
Consumer NZ, head of research and advocacy, Gemma Rasmussen, says there are concerning consumer impacts to dwindling home ownership in Aotearoa.
“Our nationally representative research found that 41 per cent of non-homeowners says they are completely locked out, while 19 per cent says they were saving for a deposit, but couldn’t keep pace with the market.
We estimate that 1 million New Zealanders feel that renting is their only option,” Gemma says.
“Those living in Nelson and the Bay of Plenty feel most locked out of the property market, while those aged 40-49 are most likely to have lost hope about ever purchasing a property.”
“There are a range of factors that have contributed to dwindling home ownership prospects. A housing price boom post-Covid saw many snap up housing due to low interest rates and a great return on investment.
“Couple that with a low housing stock, followed by inflation and climbing mortgage interest rates, and we’re looking at the largest deterioration of housing affordability in Aotearoa in decades,” Gemma says.
“Unfortunately, we may not be feeling much respite with rising insurance costs due to weather volatility, rising energy costs and increasing council property rates bumping up house values.
“This leaves us with property landing in the hands of fewer people across the country, diminishing the age-old concept of homeownership as a rite of passage.”
When renting is your only option
Gemma says renters are facing a lot of instability. Out of the renters surveyed, 65 per cent says they’ve been living in their rental for 4 years or less.
“The transient nature of renting isn’t great for families who might be enrolling their kids in a local school, or for older New Zealanders who have limited incomes.
“Each move can contribute to feelings of instability and vulnerability,” Gemma says.
Rental standards are also cause for concern with approximately one-third of renters experiencing a problem with dampness and mould, while 21 per cent says they cannot afford to adequately heat their home.
“With a large and potentially growing number of renters it's important that our tenancy laws provide proper protection for tenants. All New Zealanders deserve to live in a healthy and safe home and have some certainty over their future.”
1 comment
The Master
Posted on 30-07-2024 14:26 | By Ian Stevenson
It seems the intention is to create as higher cost as possible for homeowners...this comes from many directions: -
1 The main-players in the market(Construction) have a stranglehold on product supply, certification, pricing. No competition.
2 Shortage of "real" trades people, partly because apprenticeship schemes being academic, not real stuff, so skill/knowledge is not being passed on.
3 The RMA would be the single biggest mess that exists, the RC and BC requirements are failing in many ways, are very costly. Councils are using the Act to bolster their own ranks at the cost of homeowners
4 Councils want to max out what they get in any way possible by delaying subdivisions, crazy requirements, fees and costs for Africa and more
5 Tribe related costs are just getting started.
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