155 days ago

Great job, good salary, no chance of a house? Kiwis fleeing to Australia in for a shock

Brian from Mount Roskill

Million-dollar homes now the norm across the ditch - even in “affordable” Adelaide and Brisbane.
- Kiwis moving to Australia for higher wages face expensive housing, especially in major cities like Brisbane and Sydney.
- Queensland is a popular destination, but affordable housing is scarce, with prices rising significantly.
- Despite higher wages, the cost of living, particularly housing, challenges Kiwis seeking a new life in Australia.
Kiwis heading across the ditch for higher wages and better jobs won’t find cheaper houses, Australian real estate agents have warned.
There were 70,000 migrant departures in the year to the end of March, with the latest Stats NZ figures highlighting that nearly 60% departing Kiwi citizens went to Australia.
Analysis of last year’s migration figures by Australian and New Zealand real estate agency Ray White found that Queensland was the favoured location for expats, closely followed by Victoria. Less than a fifth of migrants headed to NSW, down from a peak of 27%, while the number moving to Perth has grown by 14%.
And while jobs are easier to come by and offer better pay in Australia, property experts told that affordable housing in the state capitals was hard to find.
A news report in The Guardian Australia recently asked if Australia’s “bloated property market” was “destroying the middle class”, and highlighted the real estate plight of professionals with good jobs and a good education. Property prices in Australia, it said, were increasing at a faster pace than families can save for a deposit.
According to the latest figures from property analysis firm Cotality, one in three Australian homes has a value of A$1 million or more, with the nationwide median now A$838,00, up 41% in five years.
Brisbane, perceived by some Kiwis as more affordable than Auckland, is now Australia’s second-most expensive capital city after Sydney. Its median house value has jumped 76% since 2020 to just over A$1m.
Adelaide, another city that has attracted buyers on the hunt for cheaper homes, has seen house prices soar post-Covid. The South Australian capital’s median property value is hurtling towards the A$1m mark, with the average Adelaide house now costing nine times the median household income (New Zealand homes, by comparison, cost 7.3 times the median household income, the lowest level since 2019).
Cotality Australia head of research Eliza Owen told that housing in Australia was generally expensive, for both buyers and renters. Australia’s median rent had risen by 40.3% in the last five years to A$665 per week, whereas the growth rate has been much slower in New Zealand at 29%.
Rising house prices in Australia and flat or falling prices in New Zealand made it harder for Kiwis looking to start a new life across the ditch.
Ray White’s examination of what homeowners in New Zealand’s five biggest cities – Auckland, Christchurch, Wellington, Hamilton and Tauranga – could buy in Australia illustrates the challenges Kiwis face.
Senior data analyst Atom Go Tian looked at what the median sale price in each of the major Kiwi metros could get across the ditch. Unsurprisingly, Auckland money provides buyers with the most choice, with Go Tian identifying 54 districts in Australia’s state capitals and lower-tier towns and cities with a lower median value than Auckland’s.
However, homes in just three Sydney districts are cheaper than the cost of a typical Auckland home, and they are on the far-flung fringes. House prices in Sydney’s popular Eastern Suburbs and North Shore are more than double those in Auckland. Also out of reach would be houses on the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast.
Go Tian found that Tauranga and Wellington house prices were cheaper than 37 and 36 Australian districts respectively, including the outer suburbs of Perth, Brisbane and Melbourne, while Hamilton and Christchurch money wouldn’t be enough to get into Australia’s big cities.
Go Tian said the data suggested Kiwis might have to bypass Australia’s state capitals in favour of the more affordable regional centres like Bendigo, Ballarat, Cairns and Townsville.
Ray White AKG business owner Avi Khan, whose patch covers Queensland’s biggest markets, told that Kiwis expecting to land a property bargain on the Gold Coast or in Brisbane would be disappointed. “There’s a common misconception that it’s cheaper to buy houses in Australia,” he said.
“It’s harder to get into the Gold Coast market. The jobs are based around Brisbane, so most people end up buying in Brisbane.”
He said that a four-bedroom, two-bathroom house on 500sqm and about 35-40 minutes from Brisbane CBD could be picked up for between A$800,00 and A$900,000. The same property would have been about A$200,000 cheaper two years ago, he said.
“I think a lot of Kiwis heading over here are surprised at how expensive it is, relative to 24 months ago.”
However, they were still arriving, moving to Brisbane for job prospects. Some bought homes near friends and family, as well as close to the beach as they could afford.
Khan said a housing shortage in Australia and Brisbane, in particular, was a challenge for those looking to buy or rent. “It takes a little bit longer to buy a house here because there’s so much competition.”
Harcourts WA chief executive Shane Kempton said competition for homes in his patch was similarly “fierce”, adding that stock levels in Perth had dropped to 4000 – about a third of where they usually sit.
Houses were often selling above asking price, he said, adding that vendors would typically receive multiple offers.
However, the job opportunities in Western Australia’s mining, energy and resource sectors were strong pull factors for Kiwis. “WA is short of skilled tradespeople, so work in these fields is plentiful. Perth lifestyle is relaxed with plenty of outdoor options with beaches, bush, islands and forests to explore.”
Kempton said he often met Kiwis at sporting events – especially rugby and netball games - and said they seemed to favour certain Perth suburbs, including East Rockingham, Midland, and Butler.
For Kiwis looking for more affordable areas to live in, Kempton suggested Two Rocks and Mandurah, about an hour outside of Perth. Prices in both were just under A$600,000.
Michael Pallier, managing director of Sydney Sotheby’s International Realty, said most of the Kiwis who were shifting to Australia’s largest city were renting, not buying.
“Sydney is one of the most expensive cities in the world. The wages are also much higher here. So, they can get a good job when they come here, and they can still find places to live – there’s accommodation available.”
Pallier had employed a hardworking Kiwi to work in his office at the start of the year and had come across many others who had also made the move.
However, Pallier said they quickly discovered that accommodation was much more expensive than they had expected, and they had to move almost an hour away from the city to be able to buy anything for A$1m or less.
“You are going to pay A$1m-plus for a house, even in Sydney’s Western suburbs. It doesn’t really get you a lot. Rent is A$600 plus a week for a two-bedroom apartment, A$1000-plus if it’s in the CBD.”
Kevin Chokshi, director of Ray White The Bayside Group, said Melbourne’s property market had only started to pick up in the last few months after a relatively flat two years.
His advice to Kiwis and Australians looking to buy in Melbourne was simple: act now. But he warned that competition was building, with auctions the favoured sales method.
Entry-level prices for standalone houses in the city were around A$900,000, while units sat between A$600,000 and A$700,000.
Prices dropped the further out buyers went, and those willing to travel about 40 minutes to an hour into the CBD might be able to snag a home in Frankston, Pakenham, Sunbury, Werribee or Epping for around A$700,000.
One Kiwi who has no complaints about her shift from Auckland to Brisbane is Clarissa Searle. She told OneRoof the move across the ditch was one of the best things she had done.
Friends had been encouraging her for years to make the move, and in September 2023, she finally listened.
Most of her mates had settled in Sydney, but Searle decided to make Brisbane her new home. “I just felt like I needed a change and more opportunities career-wise,” she told.
The 33-year-old, who works for a property development company, was lucky enough to secure a one-bedroom apartment for A$600 a week overlooking the Brisbane River before she arrived.
It was much better than the two-bedroom unit she rented in Auckland’s Mount Eden. “I get a lot more for my money here,” she said. “It’s like I’m living in a resort hotel. It’s gorgeous.”
She has noticed substantial increases in both rents and house prices since arriving in the city – her own rent lifted to A$635 a week and is set to rise again to A$700.
“Prices have gone up like crazy in the last year. There are just so many people looking for places to live at the moment. You turn up to rental inspections and there are like 50 or 60 people viewing it.”
Searle recently met with a mortgage broker to talk about buying her first home in the city. While Brisbane property prices were cheaper than prices in Auckland when she first arrived, this was changing, and she wanted to jump on the property ladder before prices were out of her reach.
But higher wages and cheaper grocery bills – especially healthy food – meant she still had more money left in her pocket than she had when she was in Auckland.
Not everything is cheaper – cars aren’t – but the overall cost of living probably was, she said. There are also extra incentives for Queenslanders, such as rebates on power and appliance bills and cheap public transport.
“I will not move back to NZ anytime soon. It’s such a better lifestyle here,” she said.
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More messages from your neighbours
1 hour ago

Charities turning away high numbers of volunteer applications

Brian from Mount Roskill

Charities are turning away people wanting to volunteer amidst a flood of interest they say is linked to the high rate of unemployment.
It comes as some businesses receive thousands of applications for paid roles and people look for experience anywhere they can.
The advocacy organisation Volunteering NZ has been tracking the trend. Spokesperson Margaret McLachlan said there has been a considerable rise in applications for volunteer roles across a range of charities.
Many application forms asks people to divulge if they are job hunters.
"Over the last year or so, they are seeing more people coming in who are saying they are in that category. They are looking for work but doing volunteering while that process is taking place."
"As unemployment increases and the cost of living, times are tougher for everybody."
At the same time, she said community organisations supporting social services were busier and needed more helpers.
McLachlan said depending on the organisation, they might want to do a police check, a reference check and an interview.
"In some cases it can be a process to go through and not always, and that can take some time.
"It's actually the same barriers that a person might find in finding a job, can also apply to volunteering. It's not always a easy option."
SPCA had 120 op shops and animal rescue centres across the country in which volunteers worked.
General manager of retail Cathy Crichton said they received about 1300 extra applications for volunteer roles, a 32 percent increase, from June to November 2025, compared to 2024.
"There's definitely a nudge forward which is very exciting and we're very grateful."
But it meant they were not accepting any more volunteers in some areas.
"Because the applications are up it's a unique scenario. But at this point in time, in smaller locations, we've actually got a hold in 19 locations in New Zealand where we are at capacity - and that's very rare and it's a very new trend."
Crichton said anyone seeking volunteer work should think creatively about what skills they can offer - it could be in administration or marketing.
"We'd love to welcome as many people as we could because the more hands on deck the more we can do and the more we can contribute to the community."
She said people were self-motivated to apply for volunteer work.
The unemployment rate rose to 5.3 percent in the September quarter, meaning 160,000 people were jobless. The next quarterly figures are out in February.
"There's a willingness to give back and contribute to the community. Unemployment being high really does encourage people to engage with the workforce and get experience," Crichton said.
"It really is about staying connected with the community and meeting others."
She said they had also seen an increase in young people seeking volunteer work experience.
"It's a great opportunity to get work experience and a reference and there's an appeal there as an employer...I really do think it adds value to a CV."
Stats NZ data showed over half of New Zealanders, 53 percent, volunteered during March 2025 and of those, 27.6 percent volunteered through an organisation and 40.8 percent volunteered directly for another person.
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1 hour ago

The best board games to play (and gift) this summer

Brian from Mount Roskill

Over the holiday period, the right game can make all the difference. So which board games should you try out – and which ones should you gift?

1. Sushi Go Party
This colourful, fast-paced game has great art, and a "menu" that can be changed depending on the number of players (up to eight) and their familiarity with the game.
Players win the game by creating the best combination of cards, depending on what's available, by rotating the cards from player to player like a sushi train. It's easy to learn and relatively cheap.

2. Wavelength
In this party game, teams have to try and guess the location of a hidden target on a spectrum, using a clue from one "psychic" team member. The ends of the spectrum reflect two binaries, such as hot–cold or optional–mandatory, and the target falls somewhere in between.
The closer the team gets to where the psychic thinks the target should go, the more points they score. Wavelength is one of those games where no matter if your team gets it right or wrong, you can expect people to give their two cents.

3. Mysterium and Mysterium Park
In these team games, players play mediums seeking the counsel of another player – a ghost – who gives them clues to important information about murders in the house, including the ghost’s own murder.
The ghost offers the other players tarot cards with abstract artwork with which they must attempt to discern the murder weapon, location and culprit.

4. The Quacks of Quedlinburg
This game sees players take the role of potion makers at the local fair, who must push their luck by drawing ingredients out of a bag to make the best potions without them blowing up in their face. It’s simple to teach and hilarious when someone else blows up their cauldron (although arguably less when it’s you).

5. Modern Art
This is one of the most celebrated games from board game designer luminary Reiner Knizia. Players are art dealers auctioning off beautiful paintings done by five professional artists. Players might even forget to play as they get caught up in simply admiring the pieces they are auctioning off.
Modern Art remains a fiendishly clever game that is easy to learn but hard to master.

6. Heat: Pedal to the Metal
This strategic racing game is based on 1960s Formula 1 racing. The base game boasts four tracks on two gorgeous boards, and lovely little cars that pass each other and risk spinning out around corners.

7. Nemesis
By far the most expensive (and complicated) game on this list, Nemesis can best be described as Alien: the board game.

Players have to move through a spaceship, discovering rooms and items as they go, taking care not to alert the horrific extraterrestrials that have managed to get onto the ship – represented by amazingly designed pieces. It’s a truly tense and fun experience for a full afternoon.
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4 days ago

Today’s Mind-Bender is the Last of the Year! Can You Guess It Before Everyone Else? 🌟🎁🌲

The Riddler from The Neighbourly Riddler

I dance in the sky with green and gold, a spectacle few are lucky to behold; I’m best seen in the south, a celestial sight—what am I, lighting up the New Zealand night?

Do you think you know the answer? Simply 'Like' this post and we'll post the answer in the comments below at 2pm on the day!

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