40 datasets found
  1. NZ Suburbs and Localities

    • data.linz.govt.nz
    • geodata.nz
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Jun 16, 2023
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    Land Information New Zealand (2023). NZ Suburbs and Localities [Dataset]. https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/113764-nz-suburbs-and-localities/
    Explore at:
    geopackage / sqlite, dwg, kml, mapinfo tab, csv, pdf, shapefile, mapinfo mif, geodatabaseAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 16, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    License

    https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Area covered
    New Zealand,
    Description

    NZ Suburbs and Localities describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Data Dictionary and the LINZ Website

    Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

    Change Request Guidance Documents: - Change Request Process - Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules

    APIs and web services

    This dataset is available via ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS REST services, as well as our standard APIs. LDS APIs and OGC web services ArcGIS Online map services

  2. Suburb Locality - Major Name

    • geodata.nz
    • data.linz.govt.nz
    Updated Jun 19, 2023
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    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand (2023). Suburb Locality - Major Name [Dataset]. https://geodata.nz/geonetwork/srv/api/records/a4ce8830-bbcd-58f7-faeb-ce03557d88c3
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand
    Area covered
    Description

    The Major Name data table is part of NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. Major names describe the wider area in which the boundary is located.

    NZ Suburbs and Localities is an easy to use layer generated from the normalised NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. It describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:

    Data Dictionary "https://www.linz.govt.nz/products-services/data/types-linz-data/suburbs-and-localities-data">Change Request Process "https://www.linz.govt.nz/products-services/data/types-linz-data/suburbs-and-localities-data">Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  3. Suburb Locality

    • data.linz.govt.nz
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Aug 8, 2023
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    Land Information New Zealand, Suburb Locality [Dataset]. https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/113763-suburb-locality/
    Explore at:
    shapefile, pdf, dwg, mapinfo tab, geodatabase, kml, csv, mapinfo mif, geopackage / sqliteAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Aug 8, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    License

    https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Area covered
    Description

    The Suburb Locality layer is part of NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. This layer contains the identifier and key information of suburbs and localities data including names and types.

    NZ Suburbs and Localities is an easy to use layer generated from the normalised NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. It describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:

    Data Dictionary Change Request Process Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  4. Suburb Locality - NZ Gazetteer

    • data.linz.govt.nz
    • geodata.nz
    csv, dbf (dbase iii) +4
    Updated Jul 1, 2023
    + more versions
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    Land Information New Zealand (2023). Suburb Locality - NZ Gazetteer [Dataset]. https://data.linz.govt.nz/table/113008-suburb-locality-nz-gazetteer/
    Explore at:
    geodatabase, dbf (dbase iii), mapinfo tab, csv, geopackage / sqlite, mapinfo mifAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 1, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    License

    https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Area covered
    New Zealand
    Description

    The NZ Gazetteer data table is part of NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. This table contains the linkage between the NZ Suburbs and Localities data and NZGB official place name.

    NZ Suburbs and Localities is an easy to use layer generated from the normalised NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. It describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:

    Data Dictionary Change Request Process Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  5. Suburb Locality - Territorial Authority

    • data.linz.govt.nz
    csv, dbf (dbase iii) +4
    Updated Jul 1, 2023
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    Land Information New Zealand (2023). Suburb Locality - Territorial Authority [Dataset]. https://data.linz.govt.nz/table/110596-suburb-locality-territorial-authority/
    Explore at:
    csv, geopackage / sqlite, mapinfo tab, geodatabase, mapinfo mif, dbf (dbase iii)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 1, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    License

    https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Description

    The Territorial Authority data table is part of NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. This table contains the linkage between suburbs and localities data and Territorial Authorities. Most suburbs and localities are located in one or multiple Territorial Authorities. Please note some offshore islands are not included in Territorial Authority boundaries.

    NZ Suburbs and Localities is an easy to use layer generated from the normalised NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. It describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:

    Data Dictionary Change Request Process Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  6. LINZ NZ Suburbs and Localities

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • digital-earth-pacificcore.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 19, 2023
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    Land Information New Zealand (2023). LINZ NZ Suburbs and Localities [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/datasets/LINZ::linz-nz-suburbs-and-localities/about
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    New Zealand,
    Description

    LINZ Data Service (LDS) Item Page - NZ Suburbs and Localities | LINZ Data ServiceNZ Suburbs and Localities describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:Data DictionaryChange Request ProcessChange Request Principles, Requirements and RulesChanges to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  7. Suburb Locality - Adjacent Name

    • geodata.nz
    • data.linz.govt.nz
    Updated Jun 19, 2023
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    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand (2023). Suburb Locality - Adjacent Name [Dataset]. https://geodata.nz/geonetwork/srv/api/records/22e05246-fb49-47fd-4cc9-0d9152b2cbeb
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand
    Area covered
    Description

    The Adjacent Name data table is part of NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. This table enables users to identify all neighbouring suburbs and localities.

    NZ Suburbs and Localities is an easy to use layer generated from the normalised NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. It describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:

    Data Dictionary "https://www.linz.govt.nz/products-services/data/types-linz-data/suburbs-and-localities-data">Change Request Process "https://www.linz.govt.nz/products-services/data/types-linz-data/suburbs-and-localities-data">Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  8. NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot) (Deprecated)

    • geodata.nz
    Updated Sep 1, 2022
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    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand (2022). NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot) (Deprecated) [Dataset]. https://geodata.nz/geonetwork/srv/api/records/6790962b-c58b-c435-719b-ac49f26e9893
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Sep 1, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand
    Area covered
    New Zealand,
    Description

    Please note: this dataset is now deprecated and replaced by NZ Suburbs and Localities in June 2023. This layer will be removed in one month.

    The NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot) dataset describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) to help locate people and properties. It is based on the NZ Localities dataset which is maintained by Fire and Emergency NZ.

    At this stage, NZ Localities continues to be maintained by Fire and Emergency NZ and published on the LINZ Data Service. Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) will establish a new dataset to replace NZ Localities in 2023. NZ Localities will continue to be available for a period of six months to allow for the transition to NZ Suburbs and Localities. Updates to both datasets will be limited to priority changes required by the Fire and Emergency Communications Centre during this transition.

    While creating NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot), LINZ has taken the opportunity to restructure the data based on customer feedback. Our intention is to make the suburbs and localities data easier to understand and use.

    The key changes introduced in NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot) are:

    All suburb and locality names are now held in a single field, to replace the 4th, 3rd, 2nd and 1st order names New Zealand Geographic Board official place names have been adopted, including macrons. Additional name field, to hold alternative common or in-use names Each name field has a corresponding ascii field to provide the names without macrons or other special characters Territorial Authority has been added Small lakes and tarns have been removed A simple version of the data has been created to removed the related tables. A complex version of the data has three related tables to provide a one to many relationship for Territorial Authority, Additional Names and Adjacent Names. The complex version will be published once the data structure for the pilot has been confirmed Please refer to the "https://data.linz.govt.nz/document/24345-nz-suburbs-and-localities-migration-guidance/">NZ Localities Data Migration Guidance for more information.

    Your feedback

    We welcome your feedback on NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot)

    Are the changes to the NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot) dataset useful? Have you identified any opportunities to improve NZ Suburbs and Localities (Pilot) ? Any other feedback? Please provide feedback via this short survey.

    APIs and web services

    This dataset is available via ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS REST services, as well as our standard APIs. "https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/110443-nz-suburbs-and-localities-pilot/">LDS APIs and OGC web services "https://linz.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=78d8aa32ccba449fb02b3695a67a3365">ArcGIS Online map services

  9. Most expensive suburbs for residential housing New Zealand 2023, by median...

    • statista.com
    Updated Jul 11, 2025
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    Statista (2025). Most expensive suburbs for residential housing New Zealand 2023, by median value [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1445454/new-zealand-most-expensive-residential-housing-suburbs-by-median-value/
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 11, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Area covered
    New Zealand
    Description

    Herne Bay in Auckland was the most expensive residential housing suburb in New Zealand in 2023, with a median property value of over *** million New Zealand dollars. In comparison, the median property value in the Flagstaff suburb of Hamilton came to around **** million New Zealand dollars.

  10. Suburb Locality - Additional Name

    • geodata.nz
    • data.linz.govt.nz
    Updated Jun 19, 2023
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    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand (2023). Suburb Locality - Additional Name [Dataset]. https://geodata.nz/geonetwork/srv/api/records/106c5feb-f78c-b614-797e-2cfea40a9c60
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 19, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand
    Area covered
    Description

    The Additional Name data table is part of NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. The intention of the additional name field is to capture any common, in use names for the suburb or locality.

    "https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/113764-nz-suburbs-and-localities/">NZ Suburbs and Localities is an easy to use layer generated from the normalised NZ Suburbs and Localities Dataset. It describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

    The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

    Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

    For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Guidance documents:

    Data Dictionary "https://www.linz.govt.nz/products-services/data/types-linz-data/suburbs-and-localities-data">Change Request Process "https://www.linz.govt.nz/products-services/data/types-linz-data/suburbs-and-localities-data">Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

  11. Most affordable suburbs for residential housing New Zealand 2023, by median...

    • statista.com
    Updated Jul 10, 2025
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    Statista (2025). Most affordable suburbs for residential housing New Zealand 2023, by median value [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1445459/new-zealand-most-affordable-residential-housing-suburbs-by-median-value/
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jul 10, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Area covered
    New Zealand
    Description

    The Cobden suburb in New Zealand's West Coast region was the most affordable residential housing suburb in the country in 2023, with a median property value of around *** thousand New Zealand dollars. The South Dunedin suburb in Dunedin was the second-most affordable residential housing suburb.

  12. Fire and Emergency NZ Localities (Deprecated)

    • geodata.nz
    Updated 2020
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    Fire and Emergency NZ Localities (Deprecated) (2020). Fire and Emergency NZ Localities (Deprecated) [Dataset]. https://geodata.nz/geonetwork/srv/api/records/2693e3cc-a85c-6d9b-4c9b-7dcfda55bc40
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    2020
    Dataset provided by
    Fire and Emergency New Zealandhttps://fireandemergency.nz/
    Area covered
    New Zealand,
    Description

    Please note : the dataset Fire and Emergency NZ Localities dataset is now deprecated and replaced by NZ Suburbs and Localities in June 2023. This layer will be removed in November 2023.

    The Fire and Emergency NZ Localities dataset provides suburbs (urban areas) or localities (rural areas) for all New Zealand. The data also includes in-use geographical names and alias names.

    The complete dataset is comprised of this spatial dataset, as well as three aspatial auxiliary tables.

    NZ Localities are used by Fire and Emergency NZ for locating and responding to emergencies within New Zealand. Coverage includes the New Zealand mainland, Stewart Island/Rakiura and offshore islands, as well as lakes and inland islands.

    This dataset is maintained by Fire and Emergency New Zealand and has been made available via the LINZ Data Service as part of LINZ’s key datasets for resilience and climate change programme.

    For detailed metadata about this dataset, see the attached Fire and Emergency NZ Localities Data Dictionary below.

    Licensing The Fire and Emergency NZ Localities dataset is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence (CC BY 4.0). However, an additional request has been made to users of this dataset.

    Important: This dataset is used by Fire and Emergency New Zealand in the delivery of emergency services and helps in confirming where to send emergency services. As such, the factual accuracy of this data is very important.

    Fire and Emergency New Zealand therefore requests that you do not:

    • alter the data in any way that changes its factual accuracy. For example, do not change suburb boundaries and/or naming conventions; and

    • knowingly make any misrepresentations or misstatements about the data or Fire and Emergency New Zealand; and

    • knowingly do anything that adversely reflects on the data, or the reputation of Fire and Emergency New Zealand.

    Official names The Fire and Emergency NZ Localities dataset currently contains many names that are not the official names for those features, suburbs or localities. The New Zealand Geographic Board (Ngā Pou Taunaha o Aotearoa) Act 2008, Section 32 requires all official documents to identify names which are not the official place names as recorded in the New Zealand Gazetteer. Please refer to the New Zealand Gazetteer for information on which names are official in this dataset.

    APIs and web services This dataset is available via ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS REST services, as well as our standard APIs. "https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/104830-fire-and-emergency-nz-localities/webservices/">LDS APIs and OGC web services "https://linz.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=f9e7b50a90bc4cbf9c4ad6969af71edb">ArcGIS Online map services

  13. Porirua Suburbs

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Nov 23, 2012
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    Porirua City Council (2012). Porirua Suburbs [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/6073-porirua-suburbs/
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    mapinfo tab, shapefile, geodatabase, csv, kml, geopackage / sqlite, mapinfo mif, dwg, pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 23, 2012
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Porirua City Councilhttps://poriruacity.govt.nz/
    License

    https://koordinates.com/license/attribution-share-alike-3-0-new-zealand/https://koordinates.com/license/attribution-share-alike-3-0-new-zealand/

    Area covered
    Description

    Porirua City Council Suburb boundaries that have been ratified with New Zealand Geographic Board as Official placenames 2012.

  14. S

    Statistical Area 3 2025

    • datafinder.stats.govt.nz
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Dec 15, 2022
    + more versions
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    Stats NZ (2022). Statistical Area 3 2025 [Dataset]. https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/layer/120967-statistical-area-3-2025/
    Explore at:
    pdf, geodatabase, mapinfo mif, mapinfo tab, csv, shapefile, geopackage / sqlite, dwg, kmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 15, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics New Zealandhttp://www.stats.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Stats NZ
    License

    https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Area covered
    Description

    Refer to the current geographies boundaries table for a list of all current geographies and recent updates.

    This dataset is the definitive version of the annually released statistical area 3 (SA3) boundaries as at 1 January 2025 as defined by Stats NZ. This version contains 929 SA3s, including 4 non-digitised SA3s.

    The SA3 geography aims to meet three purposes:

    1. approximate suburbs in major, large, and medium urban areas,

    2. in predominantly rural areas, provide geographical areas that are larger in area and population size than SA2s but smaller than territorial authorities,

    3. minimise data suppression.

    SA3s in major, large, and medium urban areas were created by combining SA2s to approximate suburbs as delineated in the Fire and Emergency NZ (FENZ) Localities dataset. Some of the resulting SA3s have very large populations.

    Outside of major, large, and medium urban areas, SA3s generally have populations of 5,000–10,000. These SA3s may represent either a single small urban area, a combination of small urban areas and their surrounding rural SA2s, or a combination of rural SA2s.

    Zero or nominal population SA3s

    To minimise the amount of unsuppressed data that can be provided in multivariate statistical tables, SA2s with fewer than 1,000 residents are combined with other SA2s wherever possible to reach the 1,000 SA3 population target. However, there are still a number of SA3s with zero or nominal populations.

    Small population SA2s designed to maintain alignment between territorial authority and regional council geographies are merged with other SA2s to reach the 5,000–10,000 SA3 population target. These merges mean that some SA3s do not align with regional council boundaries but are aligned to territorial authority.

    Small population island SA2s are included in their adjacent land-based SA3.

    Island SA2s outside territorial authority or region are the same in the SA3 geography.

    Inland water SA2s are aggregated and named by territorial authority, as in the urban rural classification.

    Inlet SA2s are aggregated and named by territorial authority or regional council where the water area is outside the territorial authority.

    Oceanic SA2s translate directly to SA3s as they are already aggregated to regional council.

    The 16 non-digitised SA2s are aggregated to the following 4 non-digitised SA3s (SA3 code; SA3 name):

    70001; Oceanic outside region, 70002; Oceanic oil rigs, 70003; Islands outside region, 70004; Ross Dependency outside region.

    SA3 numbering and naming

    Each SA3 is a single geographic entity with a name and a numeric code. The name refers to a suburb, recognised place name, or portion of a territorial authority. In some instances where place names are the same or very similar, the SA3s are differentiated by their territorial authority, for example, Hillcrest (Hamilton City) and Hillcrest (Rotorua District).

    SA3 codes have five digits. North Island SA3 codes start with a 5, South Island SA3 codes start with a 6 and non-digitised SA3 codes start with a 7. They are numbered approximately north to south within their respective territorial authorities. When first created in 2025, the last digit of each code was 0. When SA3 boundaries change in future, only the last digit of the code will change to ensure the north-south pattern is maintained.

    High-definition version

    This high definition (HD) version is the most detailed geometry, suitable for use in GIS for geometric analysis operations and for the computation of areas, centroids and other metrics. The HD version is aligned to the LINZ cadastre.

    Macrons

    Names are provided with and without tohutō/macrons. The column name for those without macrons is suffixed ‘ascii’.

    Digital data

    Digital boundary data became freely available on 1 July 2007

    Further information

    To download geographic classifications in table formats such as CSV please use Ariā

    For more information please refer to the Statistical standard for geographic areas 2023.

    Contact: geography@stats.govt.nz

  15. d

    Auckland South, New Zealand 2016

    • catalog.data.gov
    • datadiscoverystudio.org
    Updated Nov 12, 2020
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    Land Information New Zealand (Originator); AAM New Zealand Limited (Originator); null (Originator); Auckland Council (Originator) (2020). Auckland South, New Zealand 2016 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/auckland-south-new-zealand-2016
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 12, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    Land Information New Zealand (Originator); AAM New Zealand Limited (Originator); null (Originator); Auckland Council (Originator)
    Area covered
    New Zealand, South Auckland, Auckland
    Description

    Lidar was captured for Auckland Council by AAM New Zealand between September 2016 through to June 2017. The original dataset was generated by AAM New Zealand and their subcontractors. The survey area covers the southern Auckland suburbs and regions. Data management and distribution is by Land Information New Zealand.

  16. K

    NZ Populated Places - Polygons

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Jun 16, 2011
    + more versions
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    Peter Scott (2011). NZ Populated Places - Polygons [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/3658-nz-populated-places-polygons/
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    kml, csv, dwg, mapinfo tab, pdf, geodatabase, shapefile, mapinfo mif, geopackage / sqliteAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 16, 2011
    Authors
    Peter Scott
    Area covered
    Description

    ps-places-metadata-v1.01

    SUMMARY

    This dataset comprises a pair of layers, (points and polys) which attempt to better locate "populated places" in NZ. Populated places are defined here as settled areas, either urban or rural where densitys of around 20 persons per hectare exist, and something is able to be seen from the air.

    RATIONALE

    The only liberally licensed placename dataset is currently LINZ geographic placenames, which has the following drawbacks: - coordinates are not place centers but left most label on 260 series map - the attributes are outdated

    METHODOLOGY

    This dataset necessarily involves cleaving the linz placenames set into two, those places that are poplulated, and those unpopulated. Work was carried out in four steps. First placenames were shortlisted according to the following criterion: - all places that rated at least POPL in the linz geographic places layer, ie POPL, METR or TOWN or USAT were adopted. - Then many additional points were added from a statnz meshblock density analysis.
    - Finally remaining points were added from a check against linz residential polys, and zenbu poi clusters.

    Spelling is broadly as per linz placenames, but there are differences for no particular reason. Instances of LINZ all upper case have been converted to sentance case. Some places not presently in the linz dataset are included in this set, usually new places, or those otherwise unnamed. They appear with no linz id, and are not authoritative, in some cases just wild guesses.

    Density was derived from the 06 meshblock boundarys (level 2, geometry fixed), multipart conversion, merging in 06 usually resident MB population then using the formula pop/area*10000. An initial urban/rural threshold level of 0.6 persons per hectare was used.

    Step two was to trace the approx extent of each populated place. The main purpose of this step was to determine the relative area of each place, and to create an intersection with meshblocks for population. Step 3 involved determining the political center of each place, broadly defined as the commercial center.

    Tracing was carried out at 1:9000 for small places, and 1:18000 for large places using either bing or google satellite views. No attempt was made to relate to actual town 'boundarys'. For example large parks or raceways on the urban fringe were not generally included. Outlying industrial areas were included somewhat erratically depending on their connection to urban areas.

    Step 3 involved determining the centers of each place. Points were overlaid over the following layers by way of a base reference:

    a. original linz placenames b. OSM nz-locations points layer c. zenbu pois, latest set as of 5/4/11 d. zenbu AllSuburbsRegions dataset (a heavily hand modified) LINZ BDE extract derived dataset courtesy Zenbu. e. LINZ road-centerlines, sealed and highway f. LINZ residential areas, g. LINZ building-locations and building footprints h. Olivier and Co nz-urban-north and south

    Therefore in practice, sources c and e, form the effective basis of the point coordinates in this dataset. Be aware that e, f and g are referenced to the LINZ topo data, while c and d are likely referenced to whatever roading dataset google possesses. As such minor discrepencys may occur when moving from one to the other.

    Regardless of the above, this place centers dataset was created using the following criteria, in order of priority:

    • attempts to represent the present (2011) subjective 'center' of each place as defined by its commercial/retail center ie. mainstreets where they exist, any kind of central retail cluster, even a single shop in very small places.
    • the coordinate is almost always at the junction of two or more roads.
    • most of the time the coordinate is at or near the centroid of the poi cluster
    • failing any significant retail presence, the coordinate tends to be placed near the main road junction to the community.
    • when the above criteria fail to yield a definitive answer, the final criteria involves the centroids of: . the urban polygons . the clusters of building footprints/locations.

    To be clear the coordinates are manually produced by eye without any kind of computation. As such the points are placed approximately perhaps plus or minus 10m, but given that the roads layers are not that flash, no attempt was made to actually snap the coordinates to the road junctions themselves.

    The final step involved merging in population from SNZ meshblocks (merge+sum by location) of popl polys). Be aware that due to the inconsistent way that meshblocks are defined this will result in inaccurate populations, particular small places will collect population from their surrounding area. In any case the population will generally always overestimate by including meshblocks that just nicked the place poly. Also there are a couple of dozen cases of overlapping meshblocks between two place polys and these will double count. Which i have so far made no attempt to fix.

    Merged in also tla and regions from SNZ shapes, a few of the original linz atrributes, and lastly grading the size of urban areas according to SNZ 'urban areas" criteria. Ie: class codes:

    1. Not used.
    2. main urban area 30K+
    3. secondary urban area 10k-30K
    4. minor urban area 1k-10k
    5. rural center 300-1K
    6. village -300

    Note that while this terminology is shared with SNZ the actual places differ owing to different decisions being made about where one area ends an another starts, and what constiutes a suburb or satellite. I expect some discussion around this issue. For example i have included tinwald and washdyke as part of ashburton and timaru, but not richmond or waikawa as part of nelson and picton. Im open to discussion on these.

    No attempt has or will likely ever be made to locate the entire LOC and SBRB data subsets. We will just have to wait for NZFS to release what is thought to be an authoritative set.

    PROJECTION

    Shapefiles are all nztm. Orig data from SNZ and LINZ was all sourced in nztm, via koordinates, or SNZ. Satellite tracings were in spherical mercator/wgs84 and converted to nztm by Qgis. Zenbu POIS were also similarly converted.

    ATTRIBUTES

    Shapefile: Points id : integer unique to dataset name : name of popl place, string class : urban area size as above. integer tcode : SNZ tla code, integer rcode : SNZ region code, 1-16, integer area : area of poly place features, integer in square meters. pop : 2006 usually resident popluation, being the sum of meshblocks that intersect the place poly features. Integer lid : linz geog places id desc_code : linz geog places place type code

    Shapefile: Polygons gid : integer unique to dataset, shared by points and polys name : name of popl place, string, where spelling conflicts occur points wins area : place poly area, m2 Integer

    LICENSE

    Clarification about the minorly derived nature of LINZ and google data needs to be sought. But pending these copyright complications, the actual points data is essentially an original work, released as public domain. I retain no copyright, nor any responsibility for data accuracy, either as is, or regardless of any changes that are subsequently made to it.

    Peter Scott 16/6/2011

    v1.01 minor spelling and grammar edits 17/6/11

  17. WCC Suburb Boundaries

    • data-wcc.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jan 16, 2020
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    Wellington City Council (2020). WCC Suburb Boundaries [Dataset]. https://data-wcc.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/wcc-suburb-boundaries/api
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 16, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Wellington City Councilhttps://wellington.govt.nz/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    Wellington City Council Suburb Boundaries.This item has been created to be used in WCC's Open Data Portal.

  18. A

    Auckland South, New Zealand 2016-2017

    • portal.opentopography.org
    • search.dataone.org
    • +2more
    point cloud data
    Updated Jan 13, 2020
    + more versions
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    OpenTopography (2020). Auckland South, New Zealand 2016-2017 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5069/G9KP8095
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    point cloud dataAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 13, 2020
    Dataset provided by
    OpenTopography
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Sep 9, 2016 - Feb 6, 2017
    Area covered
    Variables measured
    Area, Unit, LidarReturns, PointDensity
    Dataset funded by
    Auckland Council
    Description

    Lidar was captured for Auckland Council by AAM New Zealand between September 2016 through to June 2017. The original dataset was generated by AAM New Zealand and their subcontractors. The survey area covers the southern Auckland suburbs and regions. Data management and distribution is by Land Information New Zealand.

  19. S

    Statistical Area 2 2023 (generalised)

    • datafinder.stats.govt.nz
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Dec 20, 2022
    + more versions
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    Stats NZ (2022). Statistical Area 2 2023 (generalised) [Dataset]. https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/layer/111227-statistical-area-2-2023-generalised/
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    geodatabase, kml, mapinfo tab, shapefile, dwg, mapinfo mif, pdf, csv, geopackage / sqliteAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 20, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics New Zealandhttp://www.stats.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Stats NZ
    License

    https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Area covered
    Description

    Statistical Area 2 2023 update

    SA2 2023 is the first major update of the geography since it was first created in 2018. The update is to ensure SA2s are relevant and meet criteria before each five-yearly population and dwelling census. SA2 2023 contains 135 new SA2s. Updates were made to reflect real world change of population and dwelling growth mainly in urban areas, and to make some improvements to their delineation of communities of interest.

    Description

    This dataset is the definitive version of the annually released statistical area 2 (SA2) boundaries as at 1 January 2023 as defined by Stats NZ. This version contains 2,395 SA2s (2,379 digitised and 16 with empty or null geometries (non-digitised)).

    SA2 is an output geography that provides higher aggregations of population data than can be provided at the statistical area 1 (SA1) level. The SA2 geography aims to reflect communities that interact together socially and economically. In populated areas, SA2s generally contain similar sized populations.

    The SA2 should:

    form a contiguous cluster of one or more SA1s,

    excluding exceptions below, allow the release of multivariate statistics with minimal data suppression,

    capture a similar type of area, such as a high-density urban area, farmland, wilderness area, and water area,

    be socially homogeneous and capture a community of interest. It may have, for example:

    • a shared road network,
    • shared community facilities,
    • shared historical or social links, or
    • socio-economic similarity,

    form a nested hierarchy with statistical output geographies and administrative boundaries. It must:

    • be built from SA1s,
    • either define or aggregate to define SA3s, urban areas, territorial authorities, and regional councils.

    SA2s in city council areas generally have a population of 2,000–4,000 residents while SA2s in district council areas generally have a population of 1,000–3,000 residents.

    In major urban areas, an SA2 or a group of SA2s often approximates a single suburb. In rural areas, rural settlements are included in their respective SA2 with the surrounding rural area.

    SA2s in urban areas where there is significant business and industrial activity, for example ports, airports, industrial, commercial, and retail areas, often have fewer than 1,000 residents. These SA2s are useful for analysing business demographics, labour markets, and commuting patterns.

    In rural areas, some SA2s have fewer than 1,000 residents because they are in conservation areas or contain sparse populations that cover a large area.

    To minimise suppression of population data, small islands with zero or low populations close to the mainland, and marinas are generally included in their adjacent land-based SA2.

    Zero or nominal population SA2s

    To ensure that the SA2 geography covers all of New Zealand and aligns with New Zealand’s topography and local government boundaries, some SA2s have zero or nominal populations. These include:

    • SA2s where territorial authority boundaries straddle regional council boundaries. These SA2s each have fewer than 200 residents and are: Arahiwi, Tiroa, Rangataiki, Kaimanawa, Taharua, Te More, Ngamatea, Whangamomona, and Mara.
    • SA2s created for single islands or groups of islands that are some distance from the mainland or to separate large unpopulated islands from urban areas
    • SA2s that represent inland water, inlets or oceanic areas including: inland lakes larger than 50 square kilometres, harbours larger than 40 square kilometres, major ports, other non-contiguous inlets and harbours defined by territorial authority, and contiguous oceanic areas defined by regional council.
    • SA2s for non-digitised oceanic areas, offshore oil rigs, islands, and the Ross Dependency. Each SA2 is represented by a single meshblock. The following 16 SA2s are held in non-digitised form (SA2 code; SA2 name):

    400001; New Zealand Economic Zone, 400002; Oceanic Kermadec Islands, 400003; Kermadec Islands, 400004; Oceanic Oil Rig Taranaki, 400005; Oceanic Campbell Island, 400006; Campbell Island, 400007; Oceanic Oil Rig Southland, 400008; Oceanic Auckland Islands, 400009; Auckland Islands, 400010 ; Oceanic Bounty Islands, 400011; Bounty Islands, 400012; Oceanic Snares Islands, 400013; Snares Islands, 400014; Oceanic Antipodes Islands, 400015; Antipodes Islands, 400016; Ross Dependency.

    SA2 numbering and naming

    Each SA2 is a single geographic entity with a name and a numeric code. The name refers to a geographic feature or a recognised place name or suburb. In some instances where place names are the same or very similar, the SA2s are differentiated by their territorial authority name, for example, Gladstone (Carterton District) and Gladstone (Invercargill City).

    SA2 codes have six digits. North Island SA2 codes start with a 1 or 2, South Island SA2 codes start with a 3 and non-digitised SA2 codes start with a 4. They are numbered approximately north to south within their respective territorial authorities. To ensure the north–south code pattern is maintained, the SA2 codes were given 00 for the last two digits when the geography was created in 2018. When SA2 names or boundaries change only the last two digits of the code will change.

    For more information please refer to the Statistical standard for geographic areas 2023.

    Generalised version

    This generalised version has been simplified for rapid drawing and is designed for thematic or web mapping purposes.

    Macrons

    Names are provided with and without tohutō/macrons. The column name for those without macrons is suffixed ‘ascii’.

    Digital data

    Digital boundary data became freely available on 1 July 2007.

    To download geographic classifications in table formats such as CSV please use Ariā

  20. S

    Statistical Area 3 2023 (generalised)

    • datafinder.stats.govt.nz
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Dec 1, 2022
    + more versions
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    Stats NZ (2022). Statistical Area 3 2023 (generalised) [Dataset]. https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/layer/111202-statistical-area-3-2023-generalised/
    Explore at:
    kml, shapefile, dwg, pdf, geopackage / sqlite, mapinfo tab, geodatabase, mapinfo mif, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 1, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics New Zealandhttp://www.stats.govt.nz/
    Authors
    Stats NZ
    License

    https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://datafinder.stats.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

    Area covered
    Description

    Statistical area 3 (SA3) is a new output geography, introduced in 2023, that allows aggregations of population data between the SA2 geography and territorial authority geography.

    This dataset is the definitive version of the annually released statistical area 3 (SA3) boundaries as at 1 January 2023 as defined by Stats NZ. This version contains 929 SA3s, including 4 non-digitised SA3s.

    The SA3 geography aims to meet three purposes:

    1. approximate suburbs in major, large, and medium urban areas,

    2. in predominantly rural areas, provide geographical areas that are larger in area and population size than SA2s but smaller than territorial authorities,

    3. minimise data suppression.

    SA3s in major, large, and medium urban areas were created by combining SA2s to approximate suburbs as delineated in the Fire and Emergency NZ (FENZ) Localities dataset. Some of the resulting SA3s have very large populations.

    Outside of major, large, and medium urban areas, SA3s generally have populations of 5,000–10,000. These SA3s may represent either a single small urban area, a combination of small urban areas and their surrounding rural SA2s, or a combination of rural SA2s.

    Zero or nominal population SA3s

    To minimise the amount of unsuppressed data that can be provided in multivariate statistical tables, SA2s with fewer than 1,000 residents are combined with other SA2s wherever possible to reach the 1,000 SA3 population target. However, there are still a number of SA3s with zero or nominal populations.

    Small population SA2s designed to maintain alignment between territorial authority and regional council geographies are merged with other SA2s to reach the 5,000–10,000 SA3 population target. These merges mean that some SA3s do not align with regional council boundaries but are aligned to territorial authority.

    Small population island SA2s are included in their adjacent land-based SA3.

    Island SA2s outside territorial authority or region are the same in the SA3 geography.

    Inland water SA2s are aggregated and named by territorial authority, as in the urban rural classification.

    Inlet SA2s are aggregated and named by territorial authority or regional council where the water area is outside the territorial authority.

    Oceanic SA2s translate directly to SA3s as they are already aggregated to regional council.

    The 16 non-digitised SA2s are aggregated to the following 4 non-digitised SA3s (SA3 code; SA3 name):

    70001; Oceanic outside region, 70002; Oceanic oil rigs, 70003; Islands outside region, 70004; Ross Dependency outside region.

    SA3 numbering and naming

    Each SA3 is a single geographic entity with a name and a numeric code. The name refers to a suburb,recognised place name, or portion of a territorial authority. In some instances where place names are the same or very similar, the SA3s are differentiated by their territorial authority, for example, Hillcrest (Hamilton City) and Hillcrest (Rotorua District).

    SA3 codes have five digits. North Island SA3 codes start with a 5, South Island SA3 codes start with a 6 and non-digitised SA3 codes start with a 7. They are numbered approximately north to south within their respective territorial authorities. When first created in 2023, the last digit of each code was 0. When SA3 boundaries change in future, only the last digit of the code will change to ensure the north-south pattern is maintained.

    For more information please refer to the Statistical standard for geographic areas 2023.

    Generalised version

    This generalised version has been simplified for rapid drawing and is designed for thematic or web mapping purposes.

    Macrons

    Names are provided with and without tohutō/macrons. The column name for those without macrons is suffixed ‘ascii’.

    Digital data

    Digital boundary data became freely available on 1 July 2007.

    To download geographic classifications in table formats such as CSV please use Ariā

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Land Information New Zealand (2023). NZ Suburbs and Localities [Dataset]. https://data.linz.govt.nz/layer/113764-nz-suburbs-and-localities/
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NZ Suburbs and Localities

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geopackage / sqlite, dwg, kml, mapinfo tab, csv, pdf, shapefile, mapinfo mif, geodatabaseAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Jun 16, 2023
Dataset authored and provided by
Land Information New Zealandhttps://www.linz.govt.nz/
License

https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/https://data.linz.govt.nz/license/attribution-4-0-international/

Area covered
New Zealand,
Description

NZ Suburbs and Localities describes the spatial extent and name of communities in urban areas (suburbs) and rural areas (localities) for navigation and location purposes.

The suburb and locality boundaries cover New Zealand including North Island, South Island, Stewart Island/Rakiura, Chatham Islands, and nearby offshore islands.

Each suburb and locality is assigned a name, major name, Territorial Authority and, if appropriate, additional in use names. A population estimate is provided for each suburb and locality by Stats NZ.

For more information please refer to the NZ Suburbs and Localities Data Dictionary and the LINZ Website

Changes to NZ Suburbs and Localities can be requested by emailing addresses@linz.govt.nz

Change Request Guidance Documents: - Change Request Process - Change Request Principles, Requirements and Rules

APIs and web services

This dataset is available via ArcGIS Online and ArcGIS REST services, as well as our standard APIs. LDS APIs and OGC web services ArcGIS Online map services

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