Pāpāmoa resident living in fear after fatal slip on Welcome Bay Road

Source: Radio New Zealand

Welcome Bay Rd weather damage on Thursday RNZ / Jamie Troughton

A rural Pāpāmoa resident says his family is worried about living in fear of another slip after his neighbour’s property was flattened by a landslide early yesterday morning.

Two bodies have since been recovered from a house on Welcome Bay Road.

Lindsay Putt, who lives on Welcome Bay Road, evacuated with his wife Zoe Beck, who is 34 weeks pregnant and their three-year-old daughter Willow at about 5am on Thursday after the landslide damaged neighbouring properties.

“We heard what we thought was thunder coming from above the hill behind our house. But you could hear it moving towards the driveway, and we put it together that it was rocks and debris, and it was a landslide. It was pretty close to home.”

Welcome Bay slip road closure. RNZ/Jimmy Ellingham

He estimated the falling debris missed them by about forty metres.

He said they did not know when they would be able to return to their home, and in the meantime, would be staying with family in Tauranga.

“We went back to the house and spoke to the cops who had cordoned off the road about what was happening and when we’ll be able to come back. They have our contact details and will let us know when it’s ok.

“This morning we could see a lot more damage because when it [the landslide] hit, it was dark, we couldn’t see anything.

“Just seeing the amount of slip behind our house is a bit daunting. If we move back in are we always going to be not sleeping properly or on edge because we don’t know if a little bit of rain overnight is going to get it moving again?”

He said he felt devastated for their neighbours, and the ordeal had left them quite shaken.

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The Arctic for Donald Trump now, Antarctica tomorrow?

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s Scott Base in Antarctica. Antactica NZ/ Anthony Powell

US threats to annex Greenland may also have ramifications for Antarctica, including New Zealand’s interests there, polar region experts say.

Veteran New Zealand researcher Alan Hemmings says the idea the United States might eye up the southern continent for its natural resources or a strategic advantage would have been “fanciful” even five years ago.

However, that had become a plausible scenario, as President Donald Trump’s administration placed national interests above longstanding multilateral agreements.

Another polar law expert said a US withdrawal from Antarctica could be just as concerning, because New Zealand’s own programme there leans on American support.

Since 1958, New Zealand has allowed the US to operate out of the Christchurch Antarctic ‘gateway’, under an agreement where US military personnel are largely subject to their own rules.

The US McMurdo Station neighbours New Zealand’s Scott Base on Ross Island, and the two countries collaborate on science and logistics.

Both countries are original signatories to the 1959 Antarctic Treaty, which froze territorial claims – including New Zealand’s – and instead dedicated the continent to international scientific cooperation.

The treaty also prohibits mining and extraction of resources, except for scientific purposes.

However, countries have expressed interest in the resources locked up in Antarctica, including hydrocarbons and rare earth minerals.

McMurdo Station, the main US Antarctic base, neighbours New Zealand’s own Scott Base. 123RF

University of Canterbury adjunct professor Alan Hemmings said questioning future US plans for Antarctica in the context of what was happening in Greenland was not far-fetched.

Despite their differences in geography and governance, Antarctica and the Arctic “are, in some quite important ways, coupled”.

“At the most superficial level, we tend to talk about the polar regions as some sort of unitary whole,” Hemmings said.

Many states with a presence in Antarctica also operated in the Arctic – New Zealand is one of the few exceptions – and used the same equipment and staff across both polar regions.

Antarctica also has significant natural resources beneath the ice but, even more so than Greenland, the hostile conditions currently make drilling and extraction near-impossible.

It was “not a perfect analogy”, Hemmings said.

“[But] what we’ve seen so far [in Greenland] is enough to make any country, including New Zealand, that has United States forces operating from its territory and with whom it has some sort of treaty or memorandum of understanding, take pause.”

In the near future, a US administration could decide it had a “vital interest” in securing rare earth minerals from the Antarctic.

“It says, in order to do this, it must have a secure base and merely having an access agreement with New Zealand isn’t good enough,” he said.

“If I’d been talking with you five years ago, I wouldn’t have proposed such a contingency. It would have been fanciful, but if we’d been talking 10 years ago, I wouldn’t have anticipated what we’ve seen in relation to Greenland.”

The US has used Christchurch as a gateway to Antarctica since the 1950s. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Antarctica was “a hell of a place” to try to extract resources, but that might not stop a US administration driven by power projection and control of territory, rather than rational assessment, Hemmings said.

Klaus Dodds, a professor of geopolitics at Middlesex University London, said the US had been the linchpin for the Antarctic Treaty, deciding not to pursue a territorial claim there and convening the conference that led to the treaty, but it was now pursuing a security strategy of “western hemisphere dominance”.

“We have seen what that looks like in the case of the US pursuit of Greenland – what next?

“The US decides to resurrect a claim to the Antarctic, arguing that the threat posed by China needs to be neutralised by a firm approach, and that smaller states such as Chile, Argentina and the UK cannot be trusted with the security of the Antarctic Peninsula region.”

Resources and the growing Antarctic presence of other treaty parties, especially China and the Russian Federation, could draw US attention.

“Trump might conclude that Russia is on the verge of launching mining activity and China wants to fish more aggressively, and all of that means the US must act,” Dodds said. “The Arctic for now, but Antarctica could be part of tomorrow’s world for Trump.”

Quiet-quitting Antarctic science

University of Canterbury professor and polar law specialist Karen Scott said, in stark contrast to Greenland, she had not heard or read anything to indicate that the United States was interested in doing that.

“Obviously, that’s not impossible,” she said.

The way the US was interacting with Greenland showed “utter disregard for international law”.

“If the United States did decide that it had interest in Antarctica, which couldn’t be accommodated under the treaty, then I don’t think we would necessarily have any confidence that it would comply with international law in the Antarctic.”

University of Canterbury law professor and polar law expert Karen Scott. University of Canterbury

For now, though, Scott was more worried about the opposite risk – an apparent US disinterest in its scientific endeavours on the continent.

“The main concern at the moment, actually, is more whether the United States might withdraw from Antarctic activities and what implications that would have for the support of the science being undertaken by other states.”

The US National Science Foundation stopped operating its dedicated research icebreaker in Antarctica last year and cut polar research funding by 70 percent.

“There’s an indication that its science is potentially being impacted down there by the very significant cuts that the US is making domestically across its science programmes,” Scott said.

“If there were a significant withdrawal of logistics from the United States, I think that would make life quite difficult for New Zealand in terms of operating down in Scott Base.”

The US remains a member of the Scientific Council for Antarctic Research, despite announcing last week it would withdraw from 66 other international organisations.

However, it will withdraw from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, which together underpin the global scientific understanding of climate change and the political response to it.

US and New Zealand researchers at Cape Crozier during a recent summer season on the ice. Michelle LaRue

Scott said many states engaged in climate-change research in Antarctica, “so I think the research would go on”, but a US withdrawal, either formal or informal, could open up space for other states to dominate.

“China has an increasingly significant presence in the Antarctic. It has become much more likely to contribute to discussion and potentially to contest the traditional way of doing things.

“It and Russia, in recent years, have proven quite challenging to manage.”

Expert urges New Zealand autonomy

Hemmings said the US might change its science focus in Antarctica, but he believed the continent was too strategically important to withdraw from.

“The Antarctic Treaty area is one-tenth of the surface of the planet,” he said. “I think it’s very difficult to imagine an assertive US administration of any stripe, including this one, bailing out of engagement there.”

A change in US priorities may still have knock-on effects for New Zealand’s own programme and foreign policy, he said.

“If the United States continues to operate in the Antarctic, but on totally different criteria, what would that mean for New Zealand’s willingness to let it use New Zealand?”

In the short term, a diversion of US specialist polar resources from Antarctica to Greenland could still create difficulties, he said. That included the US Coast Guard’s only operational heavy icebreaker – the Polar Star – and the 10 ski-equipped LC-130 Hercules that the US Airforce operates.

“The Americans’ icebreaker is in the Antarctic every year to break a route into the Ross Sea, down to McMurdo, which enables New Zealand’s vessel HMNZS Aotearoa, the tourism industry and the Americans’ own logistics support vessels to actually get to McMurdo.”

The US Coast Guard Cutter, Polar Star, is the only heavy icebreaker the US now operates in the Antarctic and Arctic. Wikimedia Commons

New Zealand should consider how it could become more autonomous in Antarctica, Hemmings said.

“For example, it could co-operate with the Germans, with the Italians, with the Koreans, who all also operate in the Ross Sea.”

There had already been some helpful investment, he said.

“It’s in a better position now than it was 10 years ago. It’s got new Hercules [airplanes], it’s got [HMNZS] Aotearoa. and it’s got a couple of other vessels that are ice-strengthened. They’re not icebreakers, but it could change its dependence on the US over a 5-10-year time horizon.”

Antarctica New Zealand referred questions about co-operation with and reliance on the US Antarctic programme to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The ministry did not directly address questions about whether a withdrawal of US resources from Antarctica would create logistical challenges or if a shift in US focus would trigger a rethink of access arrangements.

In a written statement, a spokesperson said New Zealand “continues to enjoy close co-operation with the US in our Antarctic operations, in shared active engagement in the Antarctic Treaty System and in joint science activities”.

The science partnership with the US continued to expand, most recently in November, with the signing of a memorandum of co-operation and funding of up to $5 million MBIE’s Catalyst Fund, the MFAT spokesperson said.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Why do we all wish it was 2016?

Source: Radio New Zealand

In 2016, Drake and Justin Bieber topped our playlists. In New Zealand Broods and Six60 were turned up. It was the winter of Pokemon Go, faces were done up with matte makeup and Kylie lip kits. We copied Coachella outfits, wore flower crowns, used oversaturation on our selfies and played around with the “dog filter” on Snapchat.

There was no such thing as “doomscrolling” or “brain rot” or “enshitification”.

In 2026, social media is filled with images reflecting on our lives 10 years ago. Where did the idea come from? What is it about 2016 that we’re all clinging on to?

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Pay cuts confirmed as ANZ Premiership players face another uneasy year

Source: Radio New Zealand

The future of the ANZ Premiership is uncertain from 2027. Photosport

A big drop in broadcast rights revenue has inevitably led to player pay cuts for the domestic netball league and another year of uncertainty beckons for New Zealand’s top netballers.

In July last year, Netball New Zealand finally secured a broadcast deal for the 2026 ANZ Premiership, following months of negotiations.

Sky Sport had been the major broadcast partner since 2008, but the national body signed a one year agreement with TVNZ – marking the return of the sport on free-to-air television.

RNZ understands Sky TVs offer was substantially lower than any of its previous deals with Netball New Zealand. How much TVNZ are actually paying for the rights, if any, was not disclosed.

Despite the league being cut from three rounds to two last year, ANZ Premiership players managed to stave off pay cuts in 2025.

But NZ Netball Players Association executive manager Steph Bond said under the collective employment agreement signed off late last year, players are taking a 20 percent pay cut in 2026.

“That is slightly skewed by the fact that they will actually be doing less work than they were two year’s ago when they played more games, so it does I guess balance out pro-rata but in saying that it’s not an ideal position to be in,” Bond said.

“I think everyone recognises that players continuing to get paid and get paid well to play sport really helps make the sport successful.”

Under the 20 percent reduction, ANZ Premiership retainers now range from $20,800 to a maximum payment of $44,800.

RNZ understands in Australia the highest earning SSN players can earn around NZ$120,000.

ANZ Premiership players could still earn extra money via non-playing and third party agreements through their franchises at the same level as before.

Not every player will get less money this year.

With nine current and former Silver Ferns set to play in Australia’s Suncorp Super Netball (SSN) league this season, the ANZ Premiership has lost several Tier one players.

Some players who were once Tier 2 will now find themselves as Tier 1 players, so will earn the maximum retainer.

With no broadcast plan in place for the domestic league beyond this year, the collective contract only covers 2026 – a repeat of the situation players found themselves in last year.

“It is really concerning and it does feel like we have been in this position for a number of years but it is the position we find ourselves, in terms of what the broadcast market has put in front of us and that changing landscape and it is something that the players have learnt to live with over the last couple of years.

“It’s not a space we want to continually be in and I think being able to do more work around what the future looks like for the game and provide a bit more long-term certainty for each collective would be a place that everyone really wants to get to.”

Silver Ferns’ retainers have not been affected. It remains to be seen whether Sky TV will continue to broadcast Silver Ferns’ tests.

High Performance changes afoot

Chelsea Lane is the new Head of Performance – Silver Ferns. Supplied Chiefs Rugby, Instagram

Last week Netball NZ announced the appointment of interim CEO Jane Patterson, following the resignation of Jennie Wyllie in December after what was a disastrous year for the national body.

The biggest controversy came in September when Silver Ferns’ coach Dame Noeline Taurua and her coaching team were suspended, over concerns about the high performance environment.

Two Silver Ferns’ players on behalf of a group of seven, raised concerns with the Players’ Association in June.

Dame Noeline was later reinstated, with Netball NZ and Taurua agreeing to embed changes to the Silver Ferns’ programme and environment.

Stephen Hotter resigned earlier this month from his role as head of high performance, which he had held since the start of 2023.

Last week Netball NZ also announced that Chelsea Lane has been appointed Head of Performance – Silver Ferns. Lane’s experience includes senior roles in basketball’s NBA – one of the most high profile sports leagues in the world.

While Hotter’s role was broader, in that he also had an overview of the ANZ Premiership, U21’s programme, and NZ Secondary Schools, Lane’s sole focus will be on the Silver Ferns.

When Dame Noeline was reinstated, it wasn’t clear what would happen to her long-time assistant coach Deb Fuller, or specialist coach Briony Akle.

Netball NZ said Lane would help to “assemble the team that will take the programme forward” and “strengthen leadership” within the Silver Ferns high performance programme.

Bond said Lane’s appointment was a positive step.

“From all accounts Chelsea has a strong background around working in professional sport and in high performance environments so we have a lot of confidence that she can come in and support and we’ve already had several meetings with Chelsea around how she can I guess impact and influence that environment so it is a great environment moving forward.”

Bond said the Players’ Association will meet soon with Patterson, who just started this week.

Former Silver Fern legend Tracey Fear, who was brought in to support the team when Dame Noeline was suspended, is still contracted part-time supporting high performance due to her specific netball knowledge.

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Down to The Wire? New US test venue confirmed for All Blacks

Source: Radio New Zealand

M&T Bank Stadium during the AFC Championship Game between the Baltimore Ravens and the Kansas City Chiefs. Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

The All Blacks and Springboks will play the fourth test of this year’s Greatest Rivalry series in Baltimore, with the match to be held at the 70,000 seat M&T Bank Stadium on 13 September (NZT).

It’s the third season in a row the All Blacks will head to the USA, after their return to Chicago’s Soldier Field last October and a test against Fiji in San Diego in 2024. They also played against the US national team in Washington DC in 2021.

The Chicago match saw them defeat Ireland 26-13 in front of 62,000 fans, which resulted in NZ Rugby’s highest revenue from a test match since the 2017 British & Irish Lions series. The Baltimore match is expected to have a similar revenue split between NZ Rugby and SA Rugby.

“Having the opportunity to once again play in the US, less than a year after our last game, is exciting for the All Blacks and for New Zealand Rugby. The US is an important market for us and for rugby more broadly, as we look ahead to Rugby World Cup 2031,” said interim NZR CEO Steve Lancaster.

“Taking the Springboks to new audiences and territories is a key objective for South African rugby and the opportunity to do so in a ground-breaking match against our fiercest rivals was a major determinant in where the fourth test would be played,” said Rian Oberholzer, CEO of SA Rugby.

This will be the All Blacks’ first visit to Baltimore, which will come a week after they face the Springboks at Soweto’s FNB Stadium in front of what is predicted to be a sold out crowd of 95,000. That test is the culmination of what will be a brutal four weeks for the currently coach-less side, who will also play all four South African URC sides, and test matches at Ellis Park and Cape Town’s DHL Stadium, in what will be the first full tour of the country in 30 years.

Fabian Holland competes at the lineout with Pieter-Steph du Toit. Kerry Marshall / www.photosport.nz

It will be the Springboks’ first trip to US soil since 2018, when they lost to Wales 22-20 at RFK Stadium in Washington DC. The test marked the beginning of Rassie Erasmus’s coaching tenure and was a controversial one, as both sides were severely understrength.

However, it’s not the most controversial visit the Springboks have made to the US, with their test match in 1981 having to be played in secret due to fears of potentially violent anti-apartheid protests.

Fans, crowd and supporters during the national anthems, New Zealand All Blacks v Ireland, All Blacks Northern Tour rugby union test match at Soldier Field, Chicago, USA on Saturday 1 November 2025. Robin Alam / Photosport

There is an interesting bit of symmetry between the All Blacks and the usual tenants of M&T Bank Stadium, with the Baltimore Ravens NFL side having just fired their coach John Harbaugh as well. While Scott Robertson can count himself as the only All Black coach to suffer that fate, Harbaugh is at least in good company is one of 10 NFL head coaches relieved of his duties, despite the Ravens making the playoffs.

However in another stark contrast between the two sports, Harbaugh was unemployed for less than a fortnight, this week hired as coach of the New York Giants.

Greatest Rivalry tour schedule

* all dates NZT

Saturday 8 August: Stormers v All Blacks, DHL Stadium, Cape Town

Wednesday 12 August: Sharks v All Blacks, Kings Park, Durban

Sunday 16 August: Bulls v All Blacks, Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria

Sunday 23 August: Springboks v All Blacks, Ellis Park, Johannesburg (first test)

Wednesday 26 August: Lions v All Blacks, Ellis Park, Johannesburg

Sunday 30 August: Springboks v All Blacks, DHL Stadium, Cape Town (second test)

Sunday 6 September: Springboks v All Blacks, FNB Stadium, Johannesburg (third test)

Sunday 13 September: Springboks v All Blacks, M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore (fourth test)

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Weather live: Search continues for people buried in Mount Maungaui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow the RNZ liveblog above.

Search teams are still trying to find several people who were believed buried by landslides in the Tauranga area following this week’s devastating storms.

On Thursday morning at least two people – one of them a young girl – were missing after a landslide came down on several structures at campground at the base of Mauao, Mount Maunganui.

Meanwhile, a person was seriously hurt and two others killed after a landslide in Welcome Bay in Papamoa.

Follow the RNZ liveblog at the top of the page for the latest updates.

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McDonald’s gets consent for 24-hour restaurant in Wānaka

Source: Radio New Zealand

An artist’s impression of the new McDonalds at Three Parks. Supplied

There’s a strong appetite for McDonalds to maintain an environmentally and “socially responsible” standard when it arrives in Wānaka, a community leader says.

The fast food giant was finally given the green light to develop a 450 square-metre 24 hour restaurant and drive-through in the Otago town.

On Thursday, the Queenstown-Lakes District Council finalised its decision to grant resource consent for a McDonalds at the commercial precinct Three Parks on Sir Tim Wallis Drive.

It follows a previous failed bid to obtain clearance to build a restaurant in rural zoning, along a highway passage into the township below Mt Iron – plans that were met with overwhelming resistance from locals.

Wānaka will soon have a McDonalds. (File photo) RNZ / Tess Brunton

Almost 93 percent of the 366 public submissions opposed the initial application.

Key concerns included the visual and aesthetic impact on the town, litter, as well as the area’s values about protecting the natural environment.

Commissioners declined the application in February last year.

The latest proposal was approved on a non-notified basis under the Resource Management Act, meaning public consultation was refused.

Queenstown-Lakes deputy mayor Quentin Smith said some concerns remained.

“There’s no question that McDonalds generates a lot of litter, probably more than most food providers. That remains a concern for a lot of people,” he said.

“We just hope that when they do come here they’re socially responsible operators and they do work hard to keep that under control.

“I’ve seen it first hand, a large distance around a McDonalds site you see litter and all sorts.”

Waste management had been raised as a concern by disgruntled community groups during earlier public submissions.

In his decision, council senior planner Ian Bayliss said the issue of waste generation effects generated from the proposal on the wider environment were considered to be “no more than minor”.

Relocating the planned site into a commercial zone went a long way in allaying other concerns, Smith said.

“The visibility and the character of Mt Iron and the entrance to Wānaka on a rural site were legitimate things that were considered under that previous application. They were largely the reasons it failed,” he said.

In a statement, McDonalds said it was pleased to be granted resource consent at Three Parks.

“We will now move on to the next stage of development and construction planning. As it stands, we are hopeful of opening the McDonald’s Wānaka restaurant in the next 12 months,” a spokesperson said.

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Prime Minister skipping Rātana to visit weather-hit regions

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Prime Minister will be visiting regions affected by severe weather. Angus Dreaver / RNZ

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has pulled out of Rātana celebrations on Friday to visit regions hard hit by this week’s weather bomb.

A spokesperson from his office confirmed Luxon was making arrangements to travel to East Cape and Bay of Plenty instead.

They said the Prime Minister had spoken to Rātana church leaders on Thursday afternoon who asked he pass on their well wishes to those affected by the storm.

The National Party will still be represented at Rātana by Nicola Willis and Tama Potaka.

Labour, the Greens, New Zealand First and Te Pāti Māori are expected to be at the event.

The ACT Party doesn’t typically attend Rātana.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Two bodies recovered from slip at house in Papamoa

Source: Radio New Zealand

Damage on Welcome Bay Rd in Papamoa. RNZ / Jamie Troughton

Two bodies have been recovered from a landslide at Welcome Bay Rd, police confirmed.

Police earlier said two people were unaccounted for after a slip came down towards properties on the road overnight.

Another person at the property had been seriously injured.

At least one house on Welcome Bay Rd suffered damage in the early-morning slip, with others also evacuated.

Police said they were working to support the pair’s loved ones, and the deaths would be referred to the Coroner.

Emergency Management Minster Mark Mitchell confirmed the news during an interview with Australian news outlet ABC.

Meanwhile, multiple people remain unaccounted for at a Mt Maunganui campsite, after a large slip came down on campervans and a shower block just after 9.30am on Thursday.

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Rent drops for first time in a decade, data shows

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington had the largest drop of the main centres, down 9.7 percent. (File photo) RNZ / REECE BAKER

New Zealand’s average weekly rent has dropped for the first time in a decade – but one representative for renters says it’s not necessarily a sign they have it easy.

Realestate.co.nz said, based on its data, the national average weekly rent was down 1.8 percent in 2025 compared to 2024.

Wellington had the largest drop of the main centres, down 9.7 percent. Auckland was down 2.5 percent.

Realestate.co.nz spokesperson Vanessa Williams said there were a few factors driving the change.

“Just after National got in, there was all this talk about legislative changes around the bright-line test, loan-to-value rules and interest deductibility.

“What we saw was a bunch of rental properties come off the market, be done up to get ready for sale, and then the realisation that the property market hadn’t moved at all in terms of price so they came back on to the rental market at an elevated price point because they had been done up.

“Then basically that was when we saw a real shift in the volume of listings coming on to the market and saw that shift to more properties than renters.

“You couple that with the increased exodus of people going outside of New Zealand, more specifically to the Australian market, especially people who would typically rent like tradies, frontline workers and nurses… and there is also this phenomenon of younger people just not moving out of home.”

Stats NZ data for December showed an annual drop in rents of 0.3 percent based on the flow measure of new rental properties, and growth of 0.1 percent in the stock measure.

But Realestate.co.nz data showed over the ten years to 2025, the national average was still up almost 50 percent.

“Over the past 10 years, the national average weekly rental price has shown consistent growth, from an average of $424 in 2015 to $638 in 2024. To see weekly rents fall 1.8 percent between 2024 and 2025 is a clear signal the market has shifted,” Williams said.

“We’re seeing the effects of sustained rental supply meeting softer demand. Rental prices will need to remain realistic to be competitive.”

Over the ten years to 2025, the national average rental price increased 47.8 percent compared to inflation of 35.3 percent over the same period.

Gisborne’s rent more than doubled over the decade, from $290 in 2015 to $641.

Southland and Manawatu/Whanganui also doubled.

Luke Somervell, spokesperson for Renters United, said the increase in national rent over 10 years was “extraordinary”.

“This $214 increase in just 10 years, that’s a lot of money for people. That’s a lot of cash, let alone the capital gains that people will also make when they cash in after they pay off their mortgages and so on.”

He agreed many of the young people who had left the country recently were likely to have been renters.

“The fact that it’s only dropped a couple of percent is not that encouraging, especially when we know the average wages haven’t even been able to keep pace with inflation…Maybe rents have decreased a little bit but it’s definitely not a party for renters at the moment, that’s for sure.”

He said no steps had been taken to help renters get a fair deal.

“They’re just sort of getting buffeted by these trends. And investors are happy about that… they’re looking at this and they’re thinking, great, we’re going to be able to cash in in the next 10 years. Hopefully this is just going to be a little dip for now. But don’t worry, you’ll still get your profits, no problem.”

He said more properties needed to be built, but people also needed to be supported to negotiate with their landlords and dispute their rents.

Williams said people who thought they were paying more than market rent could have a conversation with their landlords.

“Say ‘hey look, I’ve been looking around these other three-bedroom houses for $50 less a week, this week, can we have a little bit of negotiation here, I don’t really want to move, but I also would like to save myself $50 a week if I can do that…”

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