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Income Needed to Afford a $1,200,000 Home in NZ (2026)

Updated

A $1.2 million property covers many established Auckland suburbs and Wellington’s premium locations. Here is exactly what income, deposit, and repayments are required for this price point in 2026.

Quick answer

To buy a $1,200,000 home in NZ with a standard 20% deposit ($240,000), you need a gross annual income of at least $160,000 under DTI 6×. Monthly repayments on the $960,000 loan at 5.50% over 30 years are approximately $5,451/month. This is firmly two-income or high-single-income territory — $160,000 places you in approximately the top 8% of NZ earners.

The Numbers at a Glance

20% deposit30% deposit
Deposit required$240,000$360,000
Loan amount$960,000$840,000
Min gross income (DTI 6×)$160,000$140,000
Monthly repayment (5.50%, 30yr)$5,451$4,770
Weekly repayment (5.50%, 30yr)$1,258$1,101

Minimum Income Required

With a 20% deposit ($240,000):

  • Loan amount: $960,000
  • Minimum gross income: $960,000 ÷ 6 = $160,000 per year

With a 30% deposit ($360,000):

  • Loan amount: $840,000
  • Minimum gross income: $840,000 ÷ 6 = $140,000 per year

A 30% deposit — often from equity in a prior home — meaningfully reduces both the income requirement and the monthly repayment.


Repayments at Different Rates

Monthly repayments on a $960,000 loan (20% deposit scenario), 30-year term:

RateMonthlyFortnightlyWeeklyTotal interest (30yr)
5.20%$5,272$2,432$1,216$937,900
5.50%$5,451$2,516$1,258$1,002,200
5.80%$5,632$2,600$1,300$1,067,300
6.20%$5,881$2,714$1,357$1,157,200
6.50%$6,073$2,802$1,401$1,226,200

Saving the Deposit

Saving a 20% deposit of $240,000:

Weekly savingsMonths to reach $240,000
$500/week111 months (9.2 years)
$800/week69 months (5.8 years)
$1,000/week55 months (4.6 years)
$1,500/week37 months (3.1 years)

At this price point, most buyers contribute significant equity from a prior home sale rather than saving from scratch. KiwiSaver first home withdrawal is available for first home buyers but the $1.2M price point exceeds the First Home Loan and First Home Grant price caps in all regions.


What Does $1.2M Buy in NZ?

  • Auckland: Established 3–4 bedroom homes in mid-inner suburbs (Mt Roskill, Henderson, Manukau City, Howick). Older character homes in Ponsonby, Grey Lynn, Mt Eden at the bottom end.
  • Wellington: Quality established 3–4 bedroom homes in Khandallah, Ngaio, Karori, Hataitai, Miramar
  • Christchurch: Premium family homes in Fendalton, Merivale, St Albans, Cashmere
  • Tauranga: Established homes in Mount Maunganui or quality suburbs near the harbour
  • Queenstown: Lower to mid-range for townhouses; well below the median

Two-Income Household Scenario

EarnerIncome
Partner 1$100,000 gross
Partner 2$75,000 gross
Combined$175,000 gross

DTI 6× maximum: $1,050,000 — covers the $960,000 loan. Combined take-home approximately $10,500–$11,000/month; repayment of $5,451/month represents approximately 50–52% of net income. Tight but manageable for households with controlled expenses.


Frequently Asked Questions

What salary do I need for a $1.2 million house in NZ?

With a 20% deposit, a minimum gross income of $160,000 (sole or combined) under DTI 6×. This places you in approximately the top 8% of NZ individual earners, or a two-income household earning $80,000–$100,000 each.

Can I buy a $1.2M house with existing home equity in NZ?

Yes — equity from a prior home sale is the most common path to purchasing at $1.2M. If you sell a $800k home with $400k equity, your net deposit could be significantly above 20%, reducing the loan needed and the income required.

Are the repayments on a $1.2M NZ mortgage too high?

At $5,451/month (5.50%, 30yr), the “30% of net income” rule of thumb requires a net income of at least $18,170/month — approximately $265,000 gross household income. At $160,000 gross (~$10,700/month net combined), the repayment is approximately 51% of net income — above standard guidelines but manageable for high-saving households.

How much deposit do I need for a $1.2M home in NZ?

The standard 20% deposit is $240,000. A 10% deposit is possible if you qualify for a bank’s high-LVR speed limit allocation — but at $1.2M purchase price you would need $120,000 deposit and $160,000+ income. Non-bank lenders can go lower but at significantly higher rates.

What is the total interest on a $960k NZ mortgage over 30 years?

At 5.50%, approximately $1,002,200 in total interest — meaning you pay more in interest than the original loan amount. A 25-year term reduces this to approximately $810,000.