Is this a good street
to live on?
A practical NZ checklist for property buyers and investors. It does not pretend to know everything automatically; it shows what to check, where to check it, and how to think about the result.
Know what to check
before you offer.
This is a due-diligence guide, not an address search. Choose the council area if you want the property-map and LIM links pointed in the right direction.
Create a practical source pack.
Use this to organise the checks before you rely on a street, suburb or investment story. No address is required because this page is not returning property-specific data.
Start with the street story, then prove it.
Use the checklist below to gather evidence. The scorecard is deliberately manual because the quality of a street depends on context, not one automatic number.
These links help you verify the evidence yourself. Use suburb or statistical-area data where exact street-level data is not available.
Turn street feel
into evidence.
Each category below shows what useful evidence looks like, common red flags, and the best source to verify it.
The data will not
walk the street for you.
Visit at different times and compare what you see with the data. The best streets usually pass both tests.
Where to verify
the information.
These sources are starting points. Each source has its own search method; use suburb, statistical area, council, school name, or property details only where that source asks for it.
Stats NZ
Use for population, age, income, household type, tenure, dwelling type, ethnicity, languages, education and occupation at area level.
Open Stats NZEducation Counts and ERO
Find nearby schools, zones, roll information and Education Review Office reports.
Find schoolsNZ Police data
Compare area-level crime and victimisation patterns, then verify the street in person.
Open Police dataCouncil GIS, LIM and LINZ
Check flood, landslip, coastal risk, zoning, title, services, land records and council files.
Open LINZ Data ServiceTenancy Services
Use market rent data and active bond counts to test realistic rent and demand.
Open market rentrealestate.co.nz
Use current listings and suburb insights to compare asking prices, supply, rent and trend context.
Open insights