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The number of new homes being built in Auckland is at its highest level since records began in 2013

Property
The number of new homes being built in Auckland is at its highest level since records began in 2013

The number of new homes being completed in the Auckland region continues to set new records.

According to the Auckland Council, it issued 1412 Code Compliance Certificates (CCCs) for new residential dwellings in March, up 24% compared to March last year and up a whopping 108% compared to March 2019.

Code Compliance Certificates are issued when a building is completed and ready for occupation, so are a better indication of new housing supply than building consents, which are usually issued before construction starts.

Auckland Council has compiled its CCC figures since January 2013. The figures for March were the highest they have ever been for any month of the year apart from November last year when they hit 1581.

The figures show that the Council has been issuing CCCs for new housing at an average rate of more than 1000 a month since November last year, which suggests new housing supply in Auckland has doubled over the last five years and is continuing to increase.

In the 12 months to March this year 12,768 consents were issued for new dwellings, up from 11,318 in the year to March 2020 and 9429 in the year to March 2019.

The figures show that both the number of homes being completed in Auckland in any 12 month period and the rolling monthly average, are both running at their highest levels since the end of 2013 when data started to be collated.

That increase in supply combined with the hiatus in immigration due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, should have helped to ease housing shortages in Auckland over the last 12 months.

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49 Comments

Its better but still a far cry from the estimated 200k homes needed nationally.

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Why being so negative? This building rate is off the charts and refers to Auckland alone! Likely we are close to 2K country wide so we are rapidly eroding the so called shortage. The number you are referring to, where’s that coming from anyway? Take into account in Auckland alone there are about 50K empty homes which some might go into the market if investments don’t make sense anymore after the recent changes.

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Well don't stand there moaning, get your magic wand waving, you'll have it sorted in a jiffy

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There are not 200k households living in tents

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This is not enough to fulfil increasing demand (waiting list for emergency housing is all time high), prices for small dwelling is also skyrocketing and there is no action by RBNZ.

Now time is passed, the crime is already committed (removing LVR, IO loan, slashing interest rates) it's irreversible.

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The problem is we are not building what people need but what builders believe can get them the highest profits. We have an oversupply of larger expensive homes, for which demand is not as high, guess what happens then.

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Isn't that an accurate reflection of New Zealands wealth distribution? A small number of people have a great deal of wealth while most have very little. I'd be more surprised to see houses being built for a market that doesn't exist.

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I'm trying to buy an "expensive home" in the greater Ponsonby area, I have been looking seriously for 6 months and I can say with certainty that there is no oversupply of expensive houses in that area, quite the opposite!

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I guess you are looking for a very specific thing then. Maybe broaden your search?

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TradeMe search for a house $3 - 3.5 Mill in all the following suburbs; Ponsonby, Freeman's Bay, St Mary's Bay, Herne Bay, Westmere & Grey Lynn show 8 (eight) houses for sale in total !

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Drop the bottom figure in your search and you will get nore hits. I think you will find that agents will say 2.5 when actually the vendor is looking for 3m. Then probably meet in the middle.

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Exactly, cherry picking is always been a an ally of bad statistics.

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no one uses trademe for listing property in that range. You should know that.

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No worries. Inflation will either slow down the production output or raise the cost of production. Either way, it's a good outcome for inclining price traction.

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Quite a selfish take on the housing crisis.

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Quite? Its pathological.

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Yeah supply is increasing but earlier 3 bedroom/ 4 bedroom house on 600sqmt plus section was available for $900000 and now tiny houses on 160sqmt are available for a million - now is on three level than on four level ( if not already).

This is Jacinda Arden and Mr Orr's defination of affordability and all going ga ga over it.

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Good news is that everybody else believes the same thing, which is the condition for a bubble to pop (except for the landlords club of course, they will tell you anything to keep their dream going on).

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Reserve and Commercial Banks are happy to extend large mortgages currently, even to investors. If they believed house prices would fall they'd be forcing customers to build equity.

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Not even close to as happily as they were a few months ago especially without a significant deposit or equity.

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Greg, have you switched contexts part way through the article? Start giving annual stats for last 3 years for consents rather than CCCs? I'm confused whether this is a context switch or a typo?

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In a way I'm surprised because they cost of building materials has jumped so rapidly but then the lead time on having a house delivered could be up to a year.

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Pretty sure that there would have been a huge rush over the summer to get everything possible on the market NOW during the current gold rush. People bang on here about supply but they are simply not going to build houses to have them simply sit about. Supply and price are linked and there will never be a flood of new housing just to help those that think that this will drop the prices, it makes no sense to release any more houses than those that will be sold in a reasonable timeframe. Building cost are still rising so house prices will keep rising. It will take an Epic crash in the whole NZ economy to change anything and at that point you will probably find your suddenly unemployed and cannot even afford the rent let alone a house.

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Carlos - supply often overshoots demand. Investors cant always time the market, and commit to developing the property while times are good.

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Well said Carlos

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Housing will bring the rest of the economy down, not the other way round. Considering our economy is housing...

Developers make mistakes, Ive seen plenty go to the wall (20 plus years working for building supply merchants), your comment re not building to sit around, I get that but it doesnt take much to be caught, sentiment can turn on a dime, although I tend to agree we have generational - you never lose on a house - mentality, that will artificially prop the market up.

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I'm more concerned about the quality of the build, not the speed. From what I see, everyone is rushing to build houses - but no one talks about the quality and workmanship.

Whatever it takes to solve the supply shortage right?

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Right!

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I talk about the quality. Developers are maximising intensity, paying too much for 'easy to develop' land, and cutting the cost of the build...using cheap roofing, quick labour, and base materials....best to spend a bit more and get a build that will last for generations. Possible to keep the costs down too by watching where the costs lie!

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Good stuff.

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meanwhile, back on the farm
NZ vaccinations running at 390,000
just ahead of Mozambique at 360,000
Rwanda at 350,000
Malawi at 330,000

But way behind Uganda at 420,000 and half the vaccinations done in Zimbabwe at 730,000

Well done team.....

https://gisanddata.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/bda7594740fd40299423…

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Mozambique population 30 million.
Rwanda 12.6 million.
Malawi 18.6 million.
Uganda 44 million.
Zimbabwe 14.6 million.

You might like to also list the number of Covid cases those countries have. All of which will be significantly underreporting the actual numbers, yet will still be massively higher than New Zealand both in total and per capita.

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What relevance does that have to the point?

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Scale.

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RCE.. what does your comment have to do with house stats in Auckland?. Too many covid free nubskulls on this site.

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Only assured business is real estate in NZ..new goldmine :

https://www.oneroof.co.nz/news/39433

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Yes it's crazy.

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You can have a CCC but does that means the house has been sold by the builder or developer? If more than say 90% have been sold then it indicates there is still plenty of money floating around, not necessarily at a reasonable price whatever that is, $750k? What size does that buy you? bedrooms? probably 2 and less than 80m2. Don't classify that as affordable.
Did an investigation about 3 weeks ago into a KiwiBuild in Akl Northern area, 2 bed with a parking space but turned out to be a dummy ad as none available but had an open market offer on a 1+study apartment at $640k including a car park.

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$900k per day been spent on motels and 22,000+ people homeless living in motels.

How does any of this make sense? When do these things converge?

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A NZ property expert said on the radio last weekend that he didn't think there was a shortage of property in NZ, because we have been building record number so f new homes, and the borders have been shut for over a year. The problem is all the empty or airBNBs. When there is a 1/3 less houses on the market than normal, then something is wrong.

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A NZ property expert said on the radio last weekend that he didn't think there was a shortage of property in NZ, because we have been building record number so f new homes, and the borders have been shut for over a year. The problem is all the empty or airBNBs. When there is a 1/3 less houses on the market than normal, then something is wrong.

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So what is it exactly that is wrong ? My take on it is that the recent huge price gains has effectively taken another whole generation of Kiwis out of the housing market. So who is buying all the houses ? Either there are just less listings because people are hoodling houses or else anything listed is snapped up. The ultra low interest rates have distorted the housing market something terrible and the powers that be are refusing to acknowledge it. How many more months of this before its sorted ? If we hit summer with these low rates and the boarder begins to open we all know what the result will be.

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Interesting article on Stuff this morning re: a potential brain drain to Aus, especially in areas such as nursing, care and teaching. Aus govt is pumping money and tax breaks into those areas.

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Yep and the NZ government is freezing the nurses and teachers wages thus encouraging them to leave for OZ... It's just plain stupid

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It’s going to be a torrent I reckon. More because of housing than the pay freeze. A lot of young NZers have correctly reached the conclusion that their country does not give a damn

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Not the country..rather the Boomers

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Exactly! I'm spreading the word where I can. There is a solution to the NZ housing crisis for individuals - move to Australia!

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Great news!!

It means that unit you purchased for 900k will drop to 650k because of supply. Your house which doubled in value in which you used equity to buy a place in te aroha will half.. Because of supply. Because if you bring more apples into the market then apples will drop because of supply.

Yay for economics 101 because that applies to housing yay. Hang in there first home buyers because prices will half... Because of supply... Yay... Tui...

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Well unfortunately that is not what will happen. It would if we built 200 k houses in a closed system. But the system isn't closed. The government has their hand firmly clasped on the immigration tap, and as soon as there is any sign of the property market falling they will open the tap. It's the demand side that drives prices up not supply binging it down. We have just seen it with Covid. Last year when it looked like falling,, the government raided the savings of many and drew down on the future tax take of the young,to print 64 billion, handing out to all sorts of people that didn't require it. They had to do this to bring down interest rates which is the only other demand side lever they could use while the immigration plumbing was stuck. The only thing that can bring it down other than targeted legislation is inflation and corresponding interest rates. But as the whole world has been fudging inflation figures since the GFC, I won't hold my breath.

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