Checkout the Top Suburbs of Christchurch in 2026/2027 before planning to buy a house in New Zealand. If you are an investor checkout the NZ House Prices of major Christchurch Suburbs
By Nathan Najib
Before buying, selling, or investing in the New Zealand property market, there are a few costly mistakes every Kiwi should understand.
By Nathan Najib
If you are looking to buy your next property in New Zealand, or thinking about where to invest in 2026/2027, three major cities usually dominate the conversation: Auckland, Christchurch, and Wellington.
By Nathan Najib
As affordability worsens in New Zealand, a new guide from Nathan Najib aims to help Kiwis better understand house prices and get ahead
By Nathan Najib
Whats the current New Zealand Mortgage Rate? How much do kiwis need to buy their first home in New Zealand?
By Nathan Najib
The Reserve Bank's Official Cash Rate (OCR) gets most of the headlines, but it’s only one of five variables that truly drive property outcomes. Look at these five together and you can understand where the market is, why it behaves the way it does, and what sensible next steps look like for buyers, sellers and investors.
By Nathan Najib
NZ Property Market Update | Will 2026 Elections affect NZ House Prices?
Tips for Investors and First Home Buyers
By Nathan Najib
If you’re thinking about buying a house in NZ in 2026, it’s important to look beyond the headlines. Property markets don’t move on emotion alone — they move on data. Supply, demand, interest rates, and policy decisions all work together, and when these factors align, real opportunities appear.
By Nathan Najib
Nathan Najib breaks down NZ house price predictions for 2026 using real data. Is New Zealand stabilising? how are townhouses vs houses performing in major cities, interest rates, affordability & what comes next?
By Nathan Najib
Why New Zealand Is Going Broke and What It Will Take to Turn Things Around
Where the problem starts: a narrow, fragile economy
New Zealand's prosperity has been built on a surprisingly narrow base. Around 60 percent of goods exports come from a handful of primary products, many of them minimally processed before they leave the country. That concentration creates vulnerability.
By Nathan Najib