What’s to come for Residential Property Management?

Picture of PropertySage

PropertySage

TRUSTED PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

As a landlord, it's important to stay informed about the various changes and updates in the residential property management sector. The proposed regulations cover four key areas:

Share Post:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Pellentesque sed sagittis magna.

Suspendisse lacinia ornare luctus. Nulla ac nulla in mi consequat vestibulum sed nec lorem. Duis blandit lorem quis tincidunt rhoncus. Duis eu finibus velit. Nullam mollis orci ipsum, in consequat orci hendrerit et. Suspendisse tempor orci malesuada libero egestas vehicula. Integer vitae cursus ligula. Etiam blandit facilisis eleifend. Proin in neque at massa imperdiet lobortis pharetra et dolor. Praesent quis mauris in sapien dictum consequat. Morbi neque enim, tempor a purus et, sodales facilisis lectus. Donec at tempor ligula.

Morbi quis iaculis massa, id tincidunt leo. Nam placerat faucibus neque gravida dignissim.

Suspendisse non ipsum nec lectus blandit consequat. Donec laoreet elit orci, eu blandit enim fermentum vel. Curabitur dignissim felis et cursus tristique. Mauris iaculis rhoncus sapien quis porta. Duis erat ligula, vestibulum a lorem bibendum, varius fringilla quam. Duis dignissim ultrices sapien, et commodo nulla tincidunt lobortis. Cras bibendum neque vel lacus vestibulum accumsan. Proin finibus leo ac est vulputate ultrices iaculis nec nulla. Ut tempus metus quis metus feugiat accumsan. Cras et sollicitudin turpis, et blandit libero.

Ut vitae eros nibh. Sed nec eros dapibus, pharetra dui vitae, blandit erat. Nam vitae consequat ex. Sed sed metus egestas, luctus magna a, lobortis libero. In nec ex quis massa semper consectetur id sit amet velit. Nullam a molestie urna. Aliquam faucibus eros id ex vulputate, id pretium lorem tempus. Maecenas nec neque libero.

Integer ac nisl a sem vestibulum rutrum eu ac nisi tellus metus, sodales vel auctor sed, pellentesque ac metus phasellus eget massa efficitur euismod erat sit amet

Pellentesque eget consectetur enim, vel luctus felis. Maecenas volutpat nisl at bibendum congue. Curabitur quis lobortis tortor. Pellentesque sagittis lorem quis faucibus posuere aenean mattis eleifend imperdiet. Morbi ultrices ligula mauris, id euismod leo placerat eget. Integer aliquam posuere purus eget vulputate. Aenean maximus sit amet quam eu porttitor. Donec pretium odio ut nibh interdum, ac porttitor tortor placerat. Ut odio ante, luctus vitae ornare sit amet, blandit nec massa. Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus.

Stay Connected

More News & Blog

Interest Rate Predictions for 2026: What Property Managers and Buyers Need to Know

Interest rates in New Zealand are expected to remain steady or increase modestly throughout 2026, with major banks forecasting one-year fixed mortgage rates around 4.7% to rising slightly by 2027. The Reserve Bank’s official cash rate is predicted to either hold steady or rise gradually, influencing these lending rates. Experts recommend considering mortgage term fixes carefully, with options ranging from one-year to three-year terms depending on personal circumstances and market outlook

What Rising Inflation Means for Property Buyers and Investors in 2026

The recent rise in inflation to 3.1% has sparked concern but is expected to ease as the economy adjusts, possibly delaying interest rate hikes until later in 2026. First-home buyers remain strong, making up over 27% of market activity due to lower mortgage rates and supportive policies like KiwiSaver. Migration and service sector improvements suggest steady economic recovery, which may boost rental demand and overall housing market health.

What’s Next for Mortgage Interest Rates in 2026?

After trending downwards throughout 2025, interest rates are widely believed to have reached their bottom, with some experts predicting a slight further drop in early 2026. However, the consensus indicates rates will likely plateau or gradually increase throughout 2026 and 2027, and longer-term fixed rates are already rising.