With housing costs in New Zealand rising rapidly (), the New Zealand Government has introduced reforms intended to reduce incentives for housing investors while increasing the supply of new housing.
What exactly are the reforms being introduced in New Zealand and are there any lessons for Australia as house prices here continue to soar, even after the worst of the coronavirus pandemic?
What are the NZ reforms?
The changes are:
- Residential property acquired on or after 27 March 2021 has to be held for 10 years (rather than 5 years previously) if profits on the sale price (when the property is sold) are to be excluded from being taxed (i.e. there is no capital gains tax for investment properties held for over 10 years). Property that was the seller’s main home, was inherited or was from a deceased estate property is exempt from being taxed. [This is known as the bright-line property rule and does not apply to properties acquired before 1 October 2015.] People and businesses that trade in property—that is, buying and selling frequently for a profit—will continue to have resale profits taxed as part of their income.
- Investors can no longer claim interest deductions for buying an existing residential investment property acquired on or after 27 March 2021. For investors who bought before that date, interest deductions will .
- New builds will be exempt from the bright-line property 10 year period, and will only have to be held for 5 years for capital gains on resale to not be considered as taxable income for investors. The NZ Government is still to decide whether interest deductions for investors will be available for new builds.
- From May 1 the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is only allowing most . Lenders will be able provide a maximum of 5 per cent of new mortgage lending to investors who have a deposit of less than a 40 per cent.
The New Zealand Government is encouraging first home purchasers . The First Home Grant is available to eligible KiwiSaver members buying a first home. The grant is between $3,000 and $5,000 for existing properties, or $6,000, $8,000 or $10,000 for new properties. People buying together can also combine their First Home Grants to put towards the purchase of the same property. The Government is also lifting the house price caps for both new properties and existing properties and raising the income caps for single people to $95,000 and for two or more people to $150,000. The increases in house price caps are location dependent, :
New builds | Existing property | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Region | Current Cap | New Cap | Current Cap | New Cap |
Auckland | $650,000 | $700,000 | $600,000 | $625,000 |
Wellington City | $550,000 | $650,000 | $500,000 | $550,000 |
Nelson City | $550,000 | $600,000 | $500,000 | $525,000 |
Dunedin City | $500,000 | $550,000 | $400,000 | $425,000 |