The New Zealand Herald

Three-bedroom rentals wane

Those with fewest and most number of rooms rising

- Anne Gibson property editor

Single-bedroom places and t hose with f our- plus bedrooms are becoming more common in Auckland’s rental property mar- ket.

Barfoot & Thompson has released figures from the past 20 years showing one-bedroom places are rising in popularity and the number of places with four or more bedrooms has risen by 300 per cent.

Kiri Barfoot, a director, said: “The three-bedroom bungalow or villa we tend to picture as the standard rental is quickly waning. When we look at what is being rented, the home type, size, and number of bedrooms has changed markedly over a period of just 20 years.

“Today, around one third of all tenancies are for three-bedroom homes, whereas these were close to half of Auckland’s rental property market 20 years ago,” she said.

“Tenancies are now spread across properties with any number of bedrooms, with the biggest change being for properties with the fewest and most number of bedrooms.”

The proportion of one-bedroom property tenancies has increased by 85 per cent and now represents almost a quarter of all properties let within the Auckland region.

The North Shore has the biggest places while the CBD has the smallest.

The Shore had the largest share of rental agreements for four or more bedroom homes, making up 23 per cent of its rentals, Barfoots found.

Auckland city had the largest share of one-bedrooms at 36 per cent. Waitakere had the least one-bedroom rentals, at just 4 per cent.

“Auckland’s housing needs have changed. The drivers of this have been changing family structures, increasing internatio­nal immigratio­n and multicultu­ralism, and evolving attitudes to lifestyles and expectatio­ns among Auckland’s population.

“Combined with this shift in what renters need and want, the housing stock itself has been evolving. This is evident in new developmen­ts, such as the Antipodean in the CBD, with a range of different sized homes being integrated into the plans.

“Another interestin­g trend we noticed in the data is that it’s only recently that the proportion of onebedroom and four or five-plus bed- room properties being rented increased. Our data also shows a large increase in properties with more than four bedrooms compared with five years ago,” Barfoot said.

Residentia­l property manager Crockers also released research findings this month and weekly rental price data. “Over the past month, average Auckland rents for a twobedroom residentia­l property decreased slightly from $481 to $477,” Crockers said of weekly payments.

“New Zealand two-bedroom rents also decreased slightly over the same period from $395 to $390. The Auckland two-bedroom premium has held steady at 22 per cent in April.

“Rents for three-bedroom properties in Auckland increased from $606 to $614 in April, while three-bedroom rents across New Zealand remained steady at $460. This has resulted in the Auckland three-bedroom premium rising slightly to 34 per cent in April.”

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