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本帖最后由 NewLynnHse 于 2017-11-16 11:51 编辑
45% rise: Property values jump across Auckland region
Auckland property revaluation trends revealed
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=11944587
Auckland Council has revealed the total value of all residential properties across the region today, including a breakdown by property type and suburb.
Auckland properties have risen in value by an average 45 per cent across the region - with Papakura, Papatoetoe-Otara and Waiheke jumping by more than 60 per cent in value.
Waiheke Island has jumped the most up 64 per cent.
Otara-Papatoetoe follows closely in second place having risen by 62 per cent since the last valuation in 2014.
Meanwhile Papakura has risen in value by 61 per cent.
Auckland Council chief economist David Newman said the rise in residential property values reflects at least three things.
Individual rateable values (RV) for the roughly 548,000 properties analysed will be released next Monday.
Property owners were being advised that higher valuations did not automatically translate to rates rises.
CoreLogic head of research Nick Goodall said rates rises were more to do with the rise in proportion to the change in values in other suburbs.
"Households whose property values have risen at a higher percentage than others in the city could be hit with a higher rates rise in proportion to those whose values have not risen as much."
Goodall also said the valuations were not indicative of the property's actual worth, but more a reflection of the market as at July 1, 2017.
"It is used to understand the relative difference between properties to assist when setting rates for each individual property."
New RVs are released triennially, after a regionwide revaluation of all commercial, industrial and rural properties that every council in New Zealand is legally required to carry out.
Property owners who had subscribed would receive an email on Monday detailing their individual property valuations, otherwise the information would be on the council website.
In 2014 public interest in individual valuations crashed the website - just how the council plans to avoid a repeat crash should be revealed at the media briefing today.
Individual valuations will also be available on qv.co.nz and on the Herald website on Monday.
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