An Auckland apartment that changed hands in October for $50,000 was the cheapest sale of the year, CoreLogic says.
It has released a report reviewing property sales in 2024.
The priciest sales were a Paritai Drive house for $21.84 million in Orakei and a property on Victoria Avenue in Remuera once owned by Grant Dalton that sold for $20 million, both sold in March/
The cheapest was a freehold Morning Star Place property in Auckland’s Mt Albert.
The third-most expensive sale was the former Key residence on St Stephens Ave, Parnell which sold for $16.3 million. Fourth was an Orakei Road house in Remuera sold for $12.8m.
Wellington’s most expensive sale was a property on Ludlam St, Wellington, which sold for $4.55m. In Christchurch, the most expensive sale was on Whitewash Head Rd, for $8.1m.
The most expensive suburb in the year was Herne Bay in Auckland, with a median value of $3.36m.
Auckland suburbs were nine of the top 10 – St Mary’s Bay was next with an $2.76m average value and Remuera third with $2.45m. Arrowtown was the only non-Auckland suburb in the top 10.
Herne Bay’s median value lifted 4.3% over the year.
At the other end of the scale was Murupara in Whakatāne, with a median value of $191,600. Murupara’s median value was up just over 81% in five years.
“If you look at the markets that are fastest-moving, in terms of days on the market or time to sell, they tend to be a bit cheaper, with affordability a bit in favour of buyers,” CoreLogic chief economist Kelvin Davidson said.
“They tend to be the areas where values have risen the most in the last year or five years. Parts of Southland the West Coast, suburbs in Greymouth ... they’ve tended to see some pretty substantial growth over the past year or five years.
“There are exceptions to the rule but affordability is playing a key role here.”
Wallacetown, Southland had the fastest-moving market, with properties selling in seven days. Davidson said that probably reflected strong demand and limited supply.
Waimate, in contrast, recorded a median 83 days on the market.
“There are factors pushing in both directions,” Davidson said.
“Markets where values have gone up a bit more perhaps haven’t had as many listings. That’s been a big theme of Auckland and Wellington, listings have turned around a bit and switched in favour of buyers.”
The labour market was still weak but interest rates might fall further. Debt-to-income ratios could be more of a factor next year, although Davidson said they were not likely to limit a large number of borrowers.
Blaketown in the Grey district had the most value growth over the year at 16.7%, while nearby Cobden had the strongest five-year gain up 108.8%.
Auckland Central had the sharpest five-year drop in median values, down 9.1%. Mataura Gore had the biggest drop over a year at 10%.
Nukuhau, Taupō had the fastest-rising rents, up 27.7% over the year while Kawerau’s fell by 9.1%.
“For investors, cash flow might look a bit different but there might be more difficulty getting the loan in the first place,” Davidson said.
Rental yields might look better in cheaper areas but there could be higher vacancy rates.
Davidson said what was seen as “bad” for some people – such as sellers who wanted to shift quickly – could be great for others, such as first-home buyers.