Mischa Mannix-Opie, of investment manager and visa advisory firm Greener Pastures New Zealand, told the Wall Street Journal the appeal was clear. “The draw is lifestyle, political stability, and safety,” Mannix-Opie said. “Being able to buy a home is the icing.”
New Zealand immigration minister Erica Stanford said American applicants had made a strong impression. “The caliber of the Americans applying has been absolutely outstanding,” Stanford said.
Former attorney-general Judith Collins acknowledged the economic reasoning behind welcoming foreign investment. “We are a little bit short of capital, which is why we love our American friends,” Collins said at a January dinner attended by about 30 American tech industry figures.
Reversal of a ban
The shift marks a dramatic reversal from New Zealand’s 2018 ruling that banned most foreign investors from buying houses. That ban had been enacted under then-prime minister Jacinda Ardern amid public concern over housing affordability, though foreign buyers had accounted for only 2% to 3.5% of property sales before restrictions took effect. The reversal came after New Zealand’s economy contracted in the second half of 2024 and remained weak through early 2025.
The property rules underpinning the program were still taking shape as interest surged. A new law received Royal Assent on 19 December 2025 and is set to come into force by Order in Council in early 2026, automatically taking effect by May 2026 at the latest. The law carves out a narrow exception to the foreign buyer restrictions, allowing holders of certain investor-residency visas to buy or build residential property – but only homes valued above NZ$5 million, and only one property per eligible investor. All other overseas persons remain unable to buy existing New Zealand homes.