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House prices forecast to rise 5.4% in 2026 as 'comatose' market awakens – economist

Author
Cameron Smith ,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 Sept 2025, 1:12pm
Westpac economists are forecasting house price growth of 5.4% next year. Photo / 123rf
Westpac economists are forecasting house price growth of 5.4% next year. Photo / 123rf

House prices forecast to rise 5.4% in 2026 as 'comatose' market awakens – economist

Author
Cameron Smith ,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 Sept 2025, 1:12pm

House prices are forecast to grow 5.4% next year as New Zealand鈥檚 housing market awakens from its slumber, according to Westpac economists.

Westpac chief economist Kelly Eckhold said the Reserve Bank鈥檚 recent 鈥渄ovish pivot鈥 was likely to support housing market sentiment through into the end of the year.

鈥淟ower interest rates should eventually support increased demand, but it will take time for momentum to shift,鈥 Eckhold said.

鈥淟ooking ahead to 2026 ... demand for both owner-occupier and investor housing should strengthen as the broadening economic recovery 鈥 and, crucially, an upturn in the labour market 鈥 encourages the formation of new households, including migrant households.

鈥淥ver time, this should eat into the current stock of unsold inventory and so reduce the current downward pressure on real house prices.鈥

Eckhold said Westpac was forecasting small, positive increases in house prices over the final three months of 2025 鈥 taking growth to around 0.6% over the year.

鈥淭his year to date we have seen no growth in house prices at the nationwide level,鈥 he said.

鈥淭he housing market remains comatose after the excesses of the Covid era.鈥

Eckhold said house prices rose at a 鈥渞apid clip鈥 through most of the period between the Global Financial Crisis and the onset of the Covid pandemic.

鈥淩eal house prices rose at an astonishing 6% annual rate that decade ... few other developed markets achieved such growth,鈥 he said.

Canada was the nearest comparator, with house price growth of under a 6% annual rate in real terms, while Australian house prices rose at a considerably slower 1.3%.

But this was further exacerbated by Covid-era support from the Reserve Bank, including a reduction of the Official Cash Rate (OCR) to 0.25% in March 2020, significant quantitative easing and the removal of restrictions on housing lending.

鈥淭hese accommodative policy settings supercharged a housing market that already had significant momentum,鈥 Eckhold said.

鈥淭he result was a severe and unsustainable spike in house prices in both real and nominal terms.

鈥淏ut the fundamentals underlying these price rises were not sustainable as ultimately inflation and interest rates rose significantly, and house prices fell.鈥

Annual house price growth in New Zealand hit 26% in 2021, significantly higher than the past 10-year average of 7%. Growth has declined since then at -13% in 2022 and -1% in both 2023 and 2024.

Eckhold said its forecast for 2026 has two-sided risks.

鈥淟ow interest rates imply attractive valuations for investors ... and that momentum could continue to build once the labour market improves. That said, the rental market also appears to be somewhat oversupplied at present, as reflected in downward pressure on rents.

鈥淥n the other hand, it鈥檚 possible that population growth could remain slow, especially if the labour market takes longer to recover. A slower rate of household formation would likely mean less upward pressure on house prices, especially if the construction of new homes remains at current or higher levels.鈥

Cameron Smith is an Auckland-based business reporter. He joined the Herald in 2015 and has covered business and sports. He reports on topics such as retail, small business, the workplace and macroeconomics.

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