News | 30 November 2021
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Property valuations ready for viewing

Wellington City property owners will soon receive a Notice of Rating Valuation in the post with an updated rating value for their property.

Wellington Harbour and central city viewed from Mt Victoria.

The new valuations can be viewed online at www.qv.co.nz - type in your address if you want to see the latest numbers.

The valuations have been prepared for 80,336 properties on behalf of the City Council by Quotable Value (QV). They show the total rateable value for the city is now $123,219,693,151 with the land value of those properties now valued at $79,045,542,201.

Rating valuations are usually carried out on all New Zealand properties every three years to help local councils set rates for the following three-year period. They reflect the likely selling price of a property at the effective revaluation date, which was 1 September 2021, and do not include chattels.

On average, the value of residential housing has increased 60.4% since 2018 with the average house value now sitting at $1,435,000, while the corresponding average land value has more than doubled to an average of $985,000.

QV area manager Paul McCorry commented: “It will come as no surprise to anyone that the demand for residential housing in the Capital City has been extremely buoyant over the last three years. In 2018 we were exclaiming at the number of million-dollar suburbs in the city. In 2021 there is not a single location with an average value less than $1 million – in fact, Kelburn, Oriental Bay, Roseneath and Seatoun have now pushed over $2 million.

“A lot of the value increases have stemmed from pressure on land. The demand for vacant land has seen land values more than double in many suburbs. We have started to see developers looking to demolish modest houses on sections with development potential. Rapid intensification is the model. It is not exclusively a Wellington City problem, but one that is exacerbated by the physical constraints to urban sprawl.”

Meanwhile, commercial property values have increased by 36.1%, and property values in the industrial sector have increased by 60.6% since the city’s last rating valuation in 2018. Commercial and industrial land values have also increased by 52.2% and 73.1% respectively.

“The commercial sector continues to have the greatest potential for impact from COVID-19. Our discussions with landlords and tenants across the city shows the retail space has seen little rental growth – particularly from those that rely on hospitality or tourism. On the flipside, the office sector continues to show strength in the face of the pandemic. Appetite is really robust for A-grade, seismically strong office accommodation. The government employment in this space has really helped that resilience.”

Meanwhile, Mr McCorry said the industrial market has compared favourably to commercial on a national scale for some time now – a trend that has continued in Wellington City.

“There are now relatively low numbers of true industrial properties, aside from the northern corridor, but good quality industrial space is very sought after and contributing to value growth. Across the commercial and industrial sector, the demand for yield/return on investment continues.”

The average land value increase for commercially zoned land has been 52.2% since 2018, which Mr McCorry attributes to a change in use from commercial to residential.

“We have seen huge demand for redevelopment land on the city fringes. Areas such as Te Aro, Mount Cook and Newtown, where you are in walking distance to the CBD are ideal for apartment living, and developers have been purchasing under-utilised sites to satisfy that need. With current supply-chain issues it remains to be seen how quickly some of these proposed developments will come to the market.”

Since 2018, the average capital value of an improved lifestyle property has increased by 55.57% to $1,600,000, while the corresponding land value for a lifestyle property increased by 91.18% to $1,025,000.

“Lifestyle property makes up a modest part of the Wellington City market, with a little over 500 lifestyle properties predominantly in the Makara, Ohariu Valley and Horokiwi areas. Typically, lifestyle values align with high-end residential properties and this segment of the market has been buoyant,” Mr McCorry added.

He said there were limited true rural properties in the city with less than 40 properties in total. Of these the forestry sector had performed the strongest, up 69.2% in three years.

The effective rating revaluation date of 1 September 2021 has now passed and any changes in the market since then will not be included in the new rating valuations. In many cases, this means a sale price achieved in the market today may be different to the new rating valuation set as at 1 September 2021.

The updated rating valuations are independently audited by the Office of the Valuer General and need to meet rigorous quality standards before the new rating valuations are certified. They are not designed to be used as market valuations for raising finance with banks or as insurance valuations.

New rating values will be posted to property owners after 8 December 2021. If owners do not agree with their rating valuation, they have a right to object through the objection process before 29 January 2022.

The City Council’s Financial Strategy and Treasury Manager, Marty Read, said it was important that property owners remember that a change in the rateable capital value of a property does not mean rates will change by a similar percentage.

He said the Council uses property values to allocate the rates it needs to collect between all ratepayers – it doesn’t collect more rates just because capital values have increased and it doesn’t collect less rates if capital values have decreased.

The actual rates increase for each property will depend on a range of factors, including:

  • the Council’s overall rates ‘budget’ calculated each year in the Annual Plan.
  • the capital value change for your property compared to the average change
  • any change in the mix of services the Council provides
  • any change in targeted rates or the Council’s rating differential.