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Home Inspection near you in New Zealand

Known locally as building inspector. Compare researched prices and get free quotes from pros wherever you are in New Zealand.

Typical price: NZ$350–NZ$1,900

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What home inspection costs in New Zealand

Researched national ranges in NZD. City prices vary by cost tier.
Job size Low Typical High
Unit / small home Inspection of an apartment, unit or small home NZ$350 NZ$480 NZ$650
Standard house Full pre-purchase inspection to NZS 4306 with report NZ$450 NZ$650 NZ$900
Large / leaky-era home + moisture testing Bigger or monolithic-clad property with invasive moisture testing NZ$700 NZ$1,100 NZ$1,900

Full home inspection price guide for New Zealand

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How to hire a home inspection pro in New Zealand

  1. Use an inspector who reports to NZS 4306 (residential property inspection) standard
  2. Confirm professional membership and indemnity insurance
  3. In leaky-building-era homes (roughly 1994-2004), consider moisture testing
  4. Verify independence from the selling agent
  5. Ask what's accessible vs excluded (roof space, subfloor)
  6. Confirm turnaround for tight auction timelines

Frequently asked questions

Should I get a separate pest or damp inspection?

Often yes — many standard inspections exclude timber pests (termites) and invasive moisture testing. In termite-prone or damp-prone regions, a combined building-and-pest inspection or a specialist damp report is money well spent. Ask exactly what's included and what's excluded before booking.

What does a home inspection actually cover?

A standard inspection is a visual, non-invasive assessment of accessible areas: structure, roof, exterior, plumbing, electrical, heating/cooling, insulation and visible moisture. It does not open walls or guarantee hidden defects. The report should flag safety issues, major defects and items needing further specialist investigation.

What are red flags when hiring a home inspector?

Referred by the seller's agent with no independence, no professional qualification or indemnity insurance, a suspiciously fast walkthrough, a boilerplate report with no property-specific detail, and no clear statement of what's excluded. An inspector who downplays problems to keep the sale moving is working for the wrong party.

How long does a home inspection take?

A typical house takes two to three hours on-site, with the written report following within a day or two. Larger or older homes take longer. Attend if you can — walking the property with the inspector at the end turns a PDF into a practical to-do list and lets you ask about severity.

Do I really need a home inspection before buying?

For almost every purchase, yes — it's the cheapest insurance in the transaction. An inspection surfaces expensive hidden problems (structure, roof, damp, wiring) before you're committed, giving you grounds to renegotiate or walk away. Skipping it to save a few hundred can cost you tens of thousands after completion.

What should I do with the inspection report?

Read the summary of major defects first, then decide: proceed, renegotiate the price, ask the seller to fix items, or walk away. Get quotes for any big-ticket findings so your negotiation is grounded in real numbers. A good report is a negotiating tool, not just a formality.

How much does a building inspection cost in New Zealand?

A standard pre-purchase inspection commonly runs NZD 400-800, more for larger homes or where invasive moisture testing is needed. Reports to NZS 4306 are the benchmark.

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Planning a budget?

See the full home inspection cost guide or browse all New Zealand price guides.

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