Leasehold Property in New Zealand: What Buyers Need to Know

Leasehold Property in New Zealand: What Buyers Need to Know

*Leasehold property can offer affordability — but it comes with unique risks. This guide explains everything New Zealand buyers need to know about leasehold titles.*

Which document should you order?

  • Record of Title Current with Diagram: start here to confirm current ownership, legal description and registered interests.
  • Instruments Document: order this if the title lists a covenant, easement, consent notice or other instrument and you need the full terms.
  • Cadastral Survey Plan: use this if you need boundary, lot layout or plan details.

Order a Record of Title or order an instrument document.

What is Leasehold Property?

With leasehold property, you own the building but lease the land from a landowner (the lessor). You pay ground rent for the right to use the land, and your ownership is limited to the term of the lease.

This is fundamentally different from freehold, where you own both the land and the building outright.

How Leasehold Works

| Aspect | Freehold | Leasehold |

|--------|----------|-----------|

| Land ownership | You own it | Someone else owns it |

| Building ownership | You own it | You own it |

| Ongoing costs | Rates, insurance | Rates, insurance + ground rent |

| Duration | Permanent | Limited to lease term |

| Flexibility | Full control | Restricted by lease terms |

Where Leasehold Property Exists in New Zealand

Keys handover

Leasehold property is more common than many people realise:

Common Leasehold Situations

  • Māori land — significant areas, particularly in Rotorua, Bay of Plenty, and Auckland
  • Church and trust land — various locations, often historic holdings
  • Crown land — some government-owned land is leased
  • Council land — some local authorities lease land for residential use
  • Commercial property — common in CBD areas
  • Notable Leasehold Areas

  • Rotorua — large areas of residential leasehold on Māori land
  • Auckland CBD — commercial leasehold common
  • Wellington — some harbour-area leasehold
  • Various coastal areas — camping ground and bach sites
  • What Your Title Shows for Leasehold

    A leasehold title looks different from a freehold title. Key things you'll see:

    Title Type

    The title will be identified as a leasehold estate rather than a freehold (fee simple) estate.

    Lease Details

  • Lessor (landowner) identity
  • Lease term — when it started and when it expires
  • Renewal rights — whether and how the lease can be renewed
  • Ground rent — how much and how it's calculated
  • Registered Interests

    Like freehold, leasehold titles can also have:

  • Mortgages (on the leasehold interest)
  • Easements
  • Caveats
  • Other encumbrances
  • 🔍 Order Your Title Search Now

    Key Risks of Leasehold Property

    1. Ground Rent Increases

    Ground rent is typically reviewed periodically (every 7, 14, or 21 years). Reviews can result in significant increases based on:

  • Current land value
  • Review mechanism in the lease
  • Market conditions
  • Real example: Ground rents in some areas have increased by 300-500% at review, transforming affordable properties into expensive ones.

    2. Lease Expiry

    When the lease expires:

  • You may lose the right to occupy the land
  • Building ownership may transfer to the landowner (depending on lease terms)
  • The value of your investment could be significantly reduced
  • Your mortgage lender may refuse to lend as the term shortens
  • 3. Mortgage Difficulties

    As a lease gets shorter, lending becomes harder:

  • Most banks want at least 20-30 years remaining on the lease
  • Shorter leases may require larger deposits
  • Some lenders won't lend on leasehold at all
  • This limits your buyer pool when selling
  • 4. Limited Control

    Leasehold owners typically need lessor consent for:

  • Major alterations or additions
  • Assignment (selling) of the lease
  • Subletting
  • Change of use
  • 5. Declining Value

    As the lease term decreases, the property value typically decreases too — even if the building is in excellent condition.

    Ground Rent: Understanding the Costs

    Reviewing property title documents

    How Ground Rent is Calculated

    Most ground leases in New Zealand calculate rent as a percentage of land value:

  • Typically 4-7% of land value per year
  • Reviewed at set intervals
  • Based on current market valuation of the land
  • Example Calculation

    | Factor | Amount |

    |--------|--------|

    | Land value (at review) | $500,000 |

    | Rental percentage | 5% |

    | Annual ground rent | $25,000 |

    | Monthly payment | $2,083 |

    This is on top of your rates, insurance, and any mortgage payments.

    Rent Review Shock

    If the land value increases significantly between reviews:

    | Review Period | Land Value | Annual Rent |

    |---------------|-----------|-------------|

    | 2005 review | $200,000 | $10,000 |

    | 2019 review | $600,000 | $30,000 |

    | Increase | 200% | 200% |

    Due Diligence for Leasehold Property

    If you're considering buying leasehold, these additional checks are essential:

    1. Read the Full Lease

    Don't just rely on the title summary. Get the complete lease document and understand:

  • Exact term and expiry date
  • Renewal provisions
  • Ground rent review mechanism
  • Conditions and restrictions
  • What happens at lease end
  • 2. Check Rent Review History

    Request records of past ground rent reviews:

  • What were previous rent levels?
  • How much did they increase?
  • When is the next review?
  • What is the current land value trend?
  • 3. Calculate True Costs

    Add up the real cost of ownership:

  • Purchase price + mortgage costs
  • Ground rent (current and projected)
  • Rates
  • Insurance
  • Maintenance
  • Compare total to equivalent freehold property costs
  • 4. Understand the Lessor

    Research who owns the land:

  • Are they responsive and reasonable?
  • What's their track record on rent reviews?
  • Are there any disputes with other leaseholders?
  • Is there any prospect of purchasing the freehold?
  • 5. Get Specialist Legal Advice

    Leasehold transactions are more complex than freehold. Use a lawyer experienced in leasehold property who can:

  • Explain all lease terms clearly
  • Identify potential risks
  • Advise on the fairness of the ground rent
  • Guide you through the purchase process
  • 🔍 Order Your Title Search Now

    Advantages of Leasehold

    It's not all risk. Leasehold can offer some benefits:

    Lower Purchase Price

    Leasehold properties are typically significantly cheaper than equivalent freehold — sometimes 30-60% less.

    Location Access

    Some leasehold properties are in desirable locations where freehold simply isn't available.

    Suitable for Some Buyers

    If you plan to live somewhere short-term and the lease is long, the lower price may work in your favour.

    Leasehold vs Other Title Types

    Online property research

    | Feature | Freehold | Cross Lease | Unit Title | Leasehold |

    |---------|----------|-------------|------------|-----------|

    | Own the land? | Yes | Share | Share | No |

    | Ongoing land costs? | Rates only | Rates only | Rates + levies | Rates + ground rent |

    | Duration | Permanent | Permanent | Permanent | Limited |

    | Lending ease | Easy | Moderate | Moderate | Difficult |

    | Neighbour consent? | No | Yes | Some matters | Some matters |

    | Complexity | Low | Medium | Medium | High |

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is leasehold property a good investment?

    It depends on the lease terms, ground rent levels, and how long you plan to own. Generally, leasehold carries more risk than freehold and may not appreciate as well.

    Can I convert leasehold to freehold?

    Sometimes — if the landowner is willing to sell the freehold interest. This is often expensive but can significantly increase property value.

    What happens when a ground lease expires?

    Depends entirely on the lease terms. Some leases include a perpetual right of renewal; others revert to the landowner. Read the lease carefully.

    Will banks lend on leasehold property?

    Some will, but requirements are stricter. Expect to need a larger deposit, and lending may be unavailable for leases with short remaining terms.

    How do I find out if a property is leasehold?

    Order a certificate of title. The title type will clearly show whether it's freehold or leasehold, and the registered lease will appear as an interest.

    Can ground rent be negotiated?

    The rent review mechanism is set by the lease terms. However, you can challenge a valuation if you believe it's incorrect — usually through an arbitration process.

    Check the Title First

    Whether you're considering leasehold or want to confirm a property is freehold, a title search is your starting point.

    Certificate of Title NZ delivers:

    Title type identification — freehold, leasehold, cross lease, or unit title

    Lease details visible — see term, expiry, and conditions

    Fast delivery — within 2 hours

    Complete information — all registered interests

    🔍 Order Your Title Search Now

    *Considering leasehold property? Get your title search first and understand exactly what you're buying.*

    Need your property title? From $42.90 · ⚡ 47 min delivery

    Get Your Title →

    📋 Official NZ · ✅ Council Accepted · 🔒 Secure

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    Record of Title with Diagram

    ⭐ BEST SELLER ⭐

    Electronic property title record, showing current proprietor, legal description, registered rights and restrictions (mortgage, easement, covenant). Includes a plan or diagram of the land.

    $42.90

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    Guaranteed Search

    Same as current title, plus shows any documents recently lodged but not yet formally registered (e.g., a newly created covenant). Generally requested by solicitors for property transactions.

    $45.90

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    Historical Title

    Shows all interests registered when the title was created, and since. May include scan of original paper Certificate of Title.

    $42.90

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    Instruments

    Official copies of documents registered against a title: consent notices, mortgages, easements, land covenants, and more.

    $39.90

    Buy Now

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