Clinton ‘opportunity’ NZ’s cheapest?

This two-bedroom Main St, Clinton home is on the market for $25,000. Photos by Helena de Reus.
The house also comes with this shed.
The bathroom.
 


The country’s cheapest home on the market may be in South
Otago for a mere $25,000 but real estate agents warn this is
the exception, not the rule.

For $25,000, 22 Main Rd, Clinton offers a weatherboard
two-bedroom home, with one bathroom and a car space. It sits
on a sunny 1012sq m section near the heart of the township.

The building’s contents – a piano, several free-standing
wardrobes and three road signs – are included in the price.

It has New Zealand’s lowest asking price for a stand-alone
home that is not for removal or on leasehold land, according
to listings on realestate.co.nz, which compiles all property
listed on real estate sites.

The house was listed last week by Ray White Balclutha with
the title ”DIY’ers Opportunity Here”.

Ray White Balclutha owner Stuart McElrea said the house was
”really a one-off”, although the company had auctioned off
another Clinton property for a similar price last year.

Demand for sections in Clinton was low, he said.

”Houses like these are past their use-by dates. Some of
these have been abandoned, and in places like Clinton you
don’t get a lot of money for the sections.”

Mr McElrea said properties listed by Ray White Balclutha
usually ranged between $170,000 and $500,000.

Elizabeth Nidd, of Real Estate Institute of New Zealand
(REINZ), said the $25,000 Clinton home was not usual.

”Something worth $25,000 is a rarity. The old story is you
get what you pay for.”

Mrs Nidd is the director of REINZ region 5, which covers an
area from the Waitaki River south.

This week there were 57 homes listed for less than $50,000
around the country, mostly in small rural towns.

The other Otago homes listed under $50,000 were cribs at
Gemmels Crossing in North Otago and Toko Mouth in South
Otago, while avid skiers might prefer one of five cabins
scattered around Queenstown.

The cheapest, in Glasgow St, has an asking price of $17,000,
boasts sweeping views of the Remarkables and has three
bedrooms and one bathroom.

Mrs Nidd said in the eight weeks over November and December,
eight houses under $65,000 were sold in Otago. The sales were
in Kaitangata, Lawrence, Milton, Owaka and Waikouaiti. The
cheapest homes were in Lawrence and Milton and both sold for
$50,000.

She said the average price for a Dunedin house last month was
$255,000. The cheapest Dunedin house was between $100,000 and
$124,000 and although Mrs Nidd could not recall the details,
she believed it was most likely to be a small bungalow built
about 1909.

She said the number of cheap houses on the market could be
misleading because supply and demand played a big part in the
property market.

Sales for the 10 cheapest houses last year totalled just
$282,000.

Five of the homes were in the North Island and five in the
South Island. They were all in small rural towns.

The lowest price paid was $20,000, shared by three houses in
Bluff, Murupara and Ohura.

Southern houses in Tapanui ($27,000), Mataura ($30,000),
Kaitangata ($35,000) and Otautau ($35,000) also made the top
10.

PropertyIQ research director Jonno Ingerson said the
information only covered sales that had settled and
registered with the local council, so it was possible there
were sales that could still make the list for 2012 but were
yet to settle.

The cheapest homes sold last year were $10,000 more expensive
than 2011’s cheapest sale, when a home in the Southland town
of Ohai sold for $10,000.

The 10 cheapest for 2011 totalled $207,000.

– Additional reporting The New Zealand Herald

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