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First Home Buyer Guide NZ 2026 — Complete Pathway to Your First Home

Updated

Buying your first home in New Zealand is one of the most significant financial steps you’ll take. It involves more moving parts than most people expect — KiwiSaver withdrawals, loan applications, LVR restrictions, legal processes, and a competitive property market.

This guide brings all of it together in one place: the complete pathway from “thinking about buying” to holding the keys.


The First Home Buyer Landscape in NZ (2026)

The NZ property market has been through a turbulent cycle since 2021. After a sharp price run-up during COVID-19 (the national median peaked at ~$925,000 in late 2021), prices corrected through 2022–2023 and have been gradually recovering. In many regional centres, values remain below peak; in Auckland, prices are elevated relative to income by almost any historical measure.

Median house prices by region (indicative, 2026):

RegionApproximate median
Auckland$950,000–$1,050,000
Wellington$750,000–$830,000
Canterbury (Christchurch)$650,000–$720,000
Waikato (Hamilton)$650,000–$720,000
Bay of Plenty (Tauranga)$750,000–$820,000
Otago (Dunedin)$550,000–$650,000
Provincial NZ$400,000–$600,000

Data is indicative only. Check REINZ and CoreLogic for current regional figures.

Despite affordability challenges, first home buyers remain active — particularly outside major metros, where prices, deposit requirements, and competition are all more manageable.


The Four Pillars of First Home Buying in NZ

Every NZ first home buyer needs to address four things:

  1. Deposit — how much you have and how much you need
  2. Borrowing capacity — how much a bank will lend you
  3. KiwiSaver — using your balance as part of your deposit
  4. First Home Loan — how to buy with a 5% deposit if eligible

Getting all four aligned is the goal. Let’s work through each.


Pillar 1: Your Deposit

How much do you need?

The standard requirement is 20% of the purchase price (80% LVR). On a $700,000 home, that’s $140,000.

For most first home buyers, this is the largest barrier. However, two pathways exist to buy with less:

DepositRouteRequirement
20%+Standard mortgageNo restrictions
10%–19%Bank discretionStrong application; high-LVR premium applies
5%–9%Kāinga Ora First Home LoanIncome and price caps; lender criteria

What counts as a deposit?

  • Your own savings (most important — lenders want genuine savings)
  • KiwiSaver first home withdrawal (explained below)
  • Gifted funds from family (requires gift letter; not a loan)
  • Sale proceeds from another asset
  • KiwiSaver HomeStart grant (note: the First Home Grant closed in May 2024 and is no longer available)

For a detailed breakdown of how the deposit calculation works, see our guide on how much deposit you need in NZ.


Pillar 2: Your Borrowing Capacity

How much a bank will lend depends on:

Debt-to-income (DTI) limits

Since July 2024, the RBNZ caps owner-occupier lending at 6× gross household income:

Gross incomeDTI 6× maximumPractical limit (after stress test)
$80,000$480,000~$400,000–$440,000
$100,000$600,000~$500,000–$550,000
$120,000$720,000~$600,000–$660,000
$150,000$900,000~$750,000–$820,000

Serviceability stress test

Banks test your ability to repay at rates 2–3% above the current rate. This reduces practical borrowing capacity below the DTI limit.

Living expenses

Banks scrutinise 3–6 months of bank statements. High spending on dining, subscriptions, and entertainment reduces your assessed borrowing capacity. This isn’t about restricting your lifestyle permanently — but the 3 months before application is not the time for large discretionary spending.

Existing debt

Student loans, car finance, credit cards, and BNPL all count against you. A $10,000 credit card limit (even unused) typically reduces borrowing capacity by $30,000–$40,000.

Use our mortgage affordability calculator to estimate your personal position.


Pillar 3: Your KiwiSaver First Home Withdrawal

This is one of the most valuable tools available to NZ first home buyers and is widely underused by people who don’t understand the rules.

What you can withdraw

If you’ve been a KiwiSaver member for at least 3 years and have never owned property before, you can withdraw your entire KiwiSaver balance minus a compulsory $1,000 minimum that must remain in your account.

There is no upper limit on the withdrawal amount. If you have $80,000 in KiwiSaver, you can withdraw $79,000.

What the withdrawal covers

The withdrawn funds go directly towards the purchase of your first home — either as part of your deposit at settlement, or to reduce the amount you borrow.

Eligibility at a glance

CriterionRequirement
Membership durationMinimum 3 years (from enrolment, not from first contribution)
Property ownership historyMust never have owned residential property
Property typeMust be residential (no commercial, no lifestyle blocks over certain size)
IntentionYou must intend to live in the property
LocationNZ only

For the full eligibility rules, including the “second chance” withdrawal for people who have previously owned, see our first home withdrawal eligibility guide.

How to apply for the withdrawal

  1. Find a property and have an offer accepted (or at least signed a Sale and Purchase Agreement)
  2. Contact your KiwiSaver provider at least 10–15 working days before settlement (some providers need longer — check with yours)
  3. Submit the withdrawal application with the Sale and Purchase Agreement
  4. Your provider transfers the funds to your solicitor’s trust account in time for settlement

For detailed steps and how to estimate your withdrawal amount, see how much KiwiSaver you can withdraw for a first home.

Timing tip

Your KiwiSaver balance on the day of withdrawal is what you get — there’s no “locking in” a balance earlier. If markets fall in the weeks before settlement and you’re in a growth fund, your balance could be lower than expected. Consider switching to a conservative fund 3–6 months before you plan to buy to reduce this risk.


Pillar 4: The First Home Loan (Kāinga Ora)

The First Home Loan is a government-backed scheme that allows eligible first home buyers to purchase with as little as 5% deposit, with the government underwriting the lender’s risk. This means no low-deposit premium — standard bank rates apply.

Eligibility

CriterionRequirement
Income (single)Up to $95,000 gross per year
Income (joint)Up to $150,000 gross per year
Property price capVaries by region
First home statusMust not have previously owned a home
DepositMinimum 5% (can include KiwiSaver withdrawal)

House price caps (indicative 2026)

RegionPrice cap
Auckland$875,000
Wellington$750,000
Canterbury$650,000
Other regions$600,000–$650,000

Caps are reviewed periodically by Kāinga Ora. Check kaingaora.govt.nz for current figures.

Which banks offer First Home Loans?

ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac, Kiwibank, and several non-bank lenders participate. The loan is processed through the lender directly — Kāinga Ora provides the guarantee backstage.

For the full guide, see our First Home Loan NZ article.


Step-by-Step: The First Home Buying Process in NZ

Stage 1: Financial preparation (3–12 months before purchase)

Actions:

  • Build your deposit through consistent saving (and KiwiSaver contributions — minimum to qualify for the member tax credit is ~$20/week)
  • Pay off credit cards, BNPL, and other unsecured debt
  • Avoid new credit applications
  • Check your credit report (free from Centrix, Equifax, or illion)
  • Establish 3–6 months of demonstrated savings behaviour

Key number: Know your target purchase price, required deposit, and current savings gap. Work backwards from there.

Stage 2: Get pre-approval (6–12 weeks before actively searching)

Actions:

  • Approach your bank or use a mortgage broker (recommended — they access multiple lenders)
  • Submit income evidence, bank statements, and KiwiSaver balance statement
  • Receive pre-approval: a conditional commitment to lend up to a specified amount for 60–90 days

Pre-approval lets you make offers confidently and signals to vendors that you’re a serious buyer. See our mortgage pre-approval guide for what’s required.

Stage 3: Property search and making an offer

Actions:

  • Define your must-haves vs nice-to-haves (bedrooms, location, land size, transport)
  • Research comparable sales in your target areas (OneRoof, homes.co.nz, QV)
  • Engage a solicitor before you find a property — not after
  • Attend open homes; make offers when you find a match

Before making an offer, always get:

  • LIM report — council records on the property ($200–$400, takes 10 working days from council)
  • Building inspection — registered inspector checks physical condition ($400–$800)
  • For older homes: consider a specialist weathertightness assessment if there are any signs of leaky building risk

Offer types:

  • Private treaty: Negotiate directly; offer contains finance and due diligence conditions
  • Auction: No conditions — you must be fully prepared before bidding (finance, building report, LIM)
  • Tender: Deadline offer; conditions may or may not be accepted depending on vendor

Stage 4: Going unconditional

Once your offer is accepted (with conditions), you have a set period (usually 5–10 working days per condition) to:

  1. Obtain formal mortgage approval from your lender
  2. Complete your building inspection and LIM review
  3. Waive or satisfy all conditions in writing

When all conditions are waived, the contract becomes unconditional — legally binding. You cannot withdraw without significant financial penalty (typically 10% of the purchase price).

Stage 5: Preparing for settlement

Actions (typically 2–6 weeks before settlement):

  • Apply for your KiwiSaver first home withdrawal (give your provider at least 10–15 working days)
  • Arrange home and contents insurance (required by your lender; starts on settlement date)
  • Confirm settlement funds with your solicitor (your contribution + mortgage drawdown = purchase price)
  • Conduct a pre-settlement inspection (your right under the Sale and Purchase Agreement)

Costs to have ready on settlement day:

  • Balance of your deposit (less any paid at signing)
  • Solicitor’s fees ($1,500–$3,000)
  • LIM and building inspection (already paid by this point)
  • Moving costs ($500–$3,000+)
  • First year of insurance (sometimes paid upfront)

Stage 6: Settlement day

  1. Your solicitor requests mortgage funds from your bank
  2. Bank transfers funds to your solicitor’s trust account
  3. Solicitor pays vendor’s solicitor the full purchase price
  4. LINZ registers title transfer and mortgage
  5. Keys are released — usually by mid-afternoon once funds are confirmed

From settlement day, your mortgage repayments begin. Congratulations — you own your first home.


First Home Buyer Checklist

Finances:

  • Deposit saved (including KiwiSaver estimate)
  • Debt minimised (credit cards, BNPL closed or paid off)
  • Credit report checked and clean
  • Consistent savings demonstrated over 3–6 months
  • Pre-approval obtained

KiwiSaver:

  • 3-year membership confirmed
  • Current balance checked (via myIR or your provider)
  • Fund type reviewed (switch to conservative 3–6 months before purchase)
  • Withdrawal application process understood

Legal and due diligence:

  • Solicitor engaged
  • LIM report obtained (before going unconditional)
  • Building inspection completed

Insurance:

  • Home and contents insurance arranged (starts on settlement date)
  • Life and income protection insurance considered (new mortgage = new liability)

Common First Home Buyer Mistakes

1. Underestimating total purchase costs

Buyers focus on the deposit but overlook legal fees, LIM, building inspection, moving costs, and immediate maintenance needs. Budget at least $5,000–$10,000 on top of your deposit for transaction costs alone.

2. Waiting for the “right time” to buy

No one reliably times the property market. If you can afford a home in a location you want to live in for 7+ years, the timing matters far less than people think. Waiting costs you KiwiSaver compound growth, rent paid to others, and potential price appreciation.

3. Using KiwiSaver too late

Many first home buyers don’t realise the 3-year clock starts from the date of enrolment — not the date of their first contribution. Getting enrolled as early as possible (even at a low contribution rate) starts the clock running.

4. Overextending on the purchase price

Pre-approval tells you the maximum you can borrow — not what you should borrow. Leave a buffer for rate rises, unexpected costs, and life changes. Borrowing at the absolute limit of your serviceability leaves no room.

5. Not using a mortgage broker

First home buyers who go direct to a single bank often miss better rates and policies at other lenders. Brokers cost you nothing and can make a significant difference — both in rate and in which lenders will actually approve your application.


Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to buy a first home in NZ? From “active searching” to keys: typically 1–6 months depending on market competition and how quickly you find a suitable property. The preparation phase (saving, pre-approval) can take much longer — 1–3 years for most buyers building a deposit from scratch.

Can I use my KiwiSaver if I’m buying with a partner who has owned property before? Your eligibility is assessed individually. If you’ve never owned a home, you can still withdraw your KiwiSaver even if your co-buyer has previously owned. The previously-owning buyer cannot withdraw their KiwiSaver unless they meet the “second chance” criteria. See the first home eligibility guide for the second-chance withdrawal rules.

Is the First Home Grant still available? No. The First Home Grant (formerly HomeStart Grant) was closed in May 2024 as part of Budget 2024. It is no longer available to new applicants. See our First Home Grant guide for context and what alternatives remain.

What is the First Home Loan and is it worth using? The First Home Loan (Kāinga Ora) allows eligible buyers to purchase with a 5% deposit at standard bank rates. It’s worth using if you meet the income and price caps — it allows you to buy 3–5 years earlier than saving a 20% deposit might otherwise allow. The risk is a smaller equity buffer if prices fall after purchase.

Can I buy a first home on a single income in NZ? Yes, but borrowing capacity is lower. On a $75,000 income with a 20% deposit, a single buyer in many regional centres can purchase a home in the $450,000–$550,000 range. In Auckland, the same income would face significant constraints. The First Home Loan is particularly valuable for single-income buyers as it reduces the deposit barrier.

How does the buying process differ at auction? At auction, there are no conditions — you must have formal finance approval, a completed building inspection, and a reviewed LIM report before you bid. If the hammer falls at or above the reserve, you’re unconditionally committed. Organising everything before auction day requires more planning but gives you a significant competitive advantage.