Guest post by Dave Rhodes
For decades, the Council of Outdoor Recreation Associations of New Zealand (CORANZ) has raised concerns about overseas ownership of rural land. Not because of where buyers come from, but because of what tends to happen after ownership changes: access disappears, gates go up, and long-standing informal arrangements quietly vanish.
Recent changes to New Zealand’s foreign buyer rules - allowing a narrow class of wealthy overseas investors to purchase high-value residential property - have reignited those concerns. On paper, the change is modest. In practice, it carries risks that are familiar to anyone who has spent time dealing with access issues on the ground.
The danger is not sudden or dramatic. It is slow, incremental, and easy to dismiss - until one day a valley that was once walked, hunted, or fished is no longer accessible at all.

What Has Changed - and What Hasn’t
The recent policy change allows a limited group of high-net-worth overseas investors to purchase residential property above a high value threshold, as part of an investor visa framework. It does not remove the foreign buyer ban entirely, nor does it explicitly open the door to the purchase of farms or large rural estates.
That distinction matters - but it is not the whole story.
Access loss in New Zealand has never been driven primarily by large working farms. It has been driven by lifestyle blocks, rural-residential land, and semi-rural estates - exactly the types of properties most attractive to wealthy overseas buyers seeking privacy, space, and amenity.
This is where CORANZ’s concern lies.
Why “Lifestyle” Rural Land Is the Real Pressure Point
From an overseas buyer’s perspective, New Zealand’s appeal is not its suburban housing stock. It is the landscape.
A multi-million-dollar lifestyle block offers what few other countries can: sweeping views, water access, isolation, and a sense of personal estate ownership. These properties are often marketed internationally as lifestyle assets rather than productive land - even though they sit in rural environments that have long been part of New Zealand’s shared outdoor heritage.
From an access perspective, this is precisely where problems arise.
Lifestyle blocks are where:
- informal walking access once existed
- hunting permission was granted on trust
- anglers crossed paddocks to reach rivers
- local knowledge substituted for formal rights
When ownership changes - especially to absentee or overseas owners - these informal arrangements are usually the first thing to go.
The Limits of Goodwill
New Zealand has long relied on goodwill to maintain recreational access across private land. That goodwill developed within a shared cultural understanding: rural landowners and recreational users were often part of the same communities, with overlapping networks, expectations, and norms.
That system is fragile.
It depends on:
- local presence
- shared custom
- trust
- reciprocity
It does not survive well when ownership becomes:
- distant
- investment-driven
- privacy-focused
- legally cautious
Overseas buyers are not acting in bad faith when they restrict access. They are acting according to the norms they know - norms where private land is exclusive, liability risk is tightly managed, and informal access is unusual or discouraged.
The problem is not intent. It is mismatch.
Why the Overseas Investment Office (OIO) Matters
CORANZ has consistently expressed concern that the Overseas Investment Office (OIO) has been too liberal in approving overseas purchases of rural and quasi-rural land, particularly where access impacts are treated as secondary considerations.
In many cases:
- access conditions are vague
- undertakings rely on goodwill rather than enforceable rights
- monitoring and enforcement are minimal
- breaches carry little consequence
Even where access is technically preserved, it is often narrowed, conditional, time-limited, or practically unworkable.
Over time, the cumulative effect is the same: less land available for outdoor recreation.
Why This Policy Shift Raises Red Flags
While the current change targets residential property, it sends a broader signal: that high-value overseas ownership is once again welcome.
Signals matter.
Once a principle is accepted - that foreign ownership is desirable at the top end of the market - pressure inevitably builds to expand exemptions, reinterpret definitions, or create adjacent categories. Lifestyle rural land, sitting between “residential” and “productive”, is particularly vulnerable to this kind of policy creep.
From CORANZ’s perspective, the concern is not a sudden flood of overseas buyers, but a steady erosion of access over time, driven by:
- incremental ownership change
- weak access safeguards
- cultural disconnect
- inadequate oversight
This is not hypothetical. It is a pattern that has repeated across regions and decades.
Access Loss Is Rarely Loud
One of the reasons access issues struggle to gain political traction is that they are rarely dramatic.
A gate is quietly locked.
A track is “temporarily” closed.
Permission is withdrawn “for insurance reasons”.
A river crossing is fenced off.
Each instance is small. Each is defensible in isolation. Together, they amount to a fundamental shift in how New Zealanders can experience their own country.
Foreign ownership accelerates this process not through malice, but through structural incentives that favour exclusivity over openness.
This Is Not About Nationality
CORANZ’s position is often mischaracterised as opposition to foreign buyers per se. That is incorrect.
The concern is not nationality. It is ownership structure and outcome.
New Zealanders can - and do - block access too. But historically, overseas ownership has been associated with:
- faster loss of informal access
- lower tolerance for recreational use
- higher reliance on legal exclusion
- reduced local engagement
These are observable outcomes, not ideological claims.
If domestic ownership patterns produced the same results at the same scale, CORANZ would be equally concerned.
Why Legal Access Matters More Than Ever
As goodwill becomes less reliable, legal access protections become essential.
CORANZ has long argued that:
- access should not depend solely on personal relationships
- statutory mechanisms must be strengthened
- access outcomes should be a condition of consent, not an afterthought
This is especially important where overseas ownership is involved. Cultural assumptions cannot substitute for enforceable rights.
If New Zealand chooses to allow overseas ownership of high-amenity land, it must also choose to protect public access explicitly, not hope it survives by tradition alone.
A Call for Caution, Not Alarm
This article is not a warning of imminent disaster. It is a call for caution grounded in experience.
The recent policy change does not immediately overturn existing protections. But it fits a broader trend that deserves scrutiny - particularly when combined with:
- a permissive OIO
- weak enforcement of access conditions
- increasing land commodification
- growing separation between ownership and community
CORANZ’s role is to highlight these risks before they become irreversible.
What CORANZ Will Continue to Advocate For
In light of these developments, CORANZ will continue to advocate for:
- Stronger OIO scrutiny of lifestyle and rural-residential land
- Explicit access protections attached to overseas purchases
- Enforceable access conditions, not voluntary undertakings
- Recognition of recreation as a public interest, not a secondary concern
- Long-term access planning, rather than reliance on goodwill
These are not radical demands. They are practical responses to a changing ownership landscape.
Learning from What We’ve Already Seen
New Zealand does not need to guess what happens when overseas ownership increases in rural areas. We have already seen it.
Access becomes harder.
Informal routes disappear.
Recreation is squeezed to the margins.
The recent foreign buyer changes may be limited, but they sit within a policy environment that increasingly treats land as a financial asset rather than a shared landscape.
CORANZ exists to remind decision-makers that outdoor recreation, access, and connection to place are not incidental benefits. They are core to New Zealand’s identity.
Once access is lost, it is rarely regained.
That is why vigilance now matters more than reassurance later.
I have attached an image of an OIO summary giving the Chinese owners of 10 dairy farms purchased from Synlait, freehold title for land previously owned by the Selwyn District Council, (paper roads), LINZ and land vested with DOC, part of (encroached) Rakaia River bed.
The OIO’s response to the new owners question was to simply “regularize” the title.
Of little moment for the OIO perhaps, but removing vehicle access to salmon holes in the Rakaia River near the pylons impacted on salmon anglers such as myself.
OIO approval for the separate purchase of the massive Synlait dairy factory at Dunsandel and 10 large scale dairy farms is a bit more significant than flicking off a few lifestyle blocks. It seems all of New Zealand is for sale to the highest bidder.
See the link below [Browse] DSC_0979(2).JPG
YES .. public access .. particularly, across private land to get to the public land beyond .. is a foundational cornerstone of our egalitarian society.
Quite apart from playing a very important role in public recreation .. it also plays a vital role in wild, introduced species population management – and thus protection of our biodiversity (modern and indigenous).
For without public access .. pockets of wild, introduced species can be inaccessible, by Recreational Hunters .. and this go unchecked.
This is something successive governments have trampled over roughshod .. collateral damage, amongst bigger considerations.
Kiwi’s have lost out big time, as a result.
And largely out of feckless, blind ignorance.
There has been an appalling erosion of public access all over New Zealand, as a result of government decisions to allow foreign ownership with this issue unchecked.
Public access is generally given far less consideration than it should be .. and we, the people, suffer unnecessarily, as a direct consequence.
Glad CORANZ is looking into this.
How about a letter-writing campaign directed to James Meager, our glorious Minister for Hunting and Fishing? Tell him 200,000 votes will be lost if the outdoor opportunities of ordinary NZers are extinguished.
NZ trout fishers may end up like those in the US, by having to put a boat into a river at a bridge and fish from that because riparian land access is blocked.
Well done in opening all those Pandora boxes Andi, It is all part of a creeping petulance as highlighted by your wording: The recent policy change does not immediately overturn existing protections. But it fits a broader trend that deserves scrutiny - particularly when combined with: “a permissive OIO, weak enforcement of access conditions, increasing land commodification, growing separation between ownership and community”. Road access to a couple of lakes in North Canterbury has dried up since foreign owners moved in. Soon the only land in NZ ownership with be Maori land. We should learn from them the value of what our ancestors developed for us and those who come after us.