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Property value rises accelerate

New Zealand residential property values rose at the fastest pace for five months in February, driven by strong demand in Auckland.

National property values rose 6.4 per cent over the past year, ahead of the 5.7 per cent pace in January and matching September's gain, according to state-owned valuer Quotable Value.

Auckland led values higher, with property values rising an annual 13 per cent, ahead of the 12 per cent pace the previous month and the biggest annual gain in nine months.

"The seemingly insatiable demand for Auckland property has resulted in the upward trend steepening" in the latest figures, said QV spokesperson Andrea Rush.

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"Values in Hamilton, Tauranga, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin are all showing moderate increases but nothing compared to the pace of Auckland values which continue to surge ahead."

More homes have come onto the market during February, helping ease a listing shortage, and sales and mortgage approvals are also ahead of January, she said.

Reserve Bank restrictions on high-debt mortgage lending have spurred demand for new homes, where the lending rules don't apply.

"The new build market across the country is in high demand, particularly amongst first home buyers," Ms Rush said.

Prices for new developments such as Addison, Stonefields and Flatbush in Auckland have increased as much as 10 per cent over three months for each new stage release.

Meanwhile, property values in Wellington rose at a 0.9 per cent annual pace, Christchurch city values increased 3.4 per cent, Hamilton advanced three per cent, Dunedin rose 1.2 per cent and Tauranga advanced 4.8 per cent.