NEW ZEALAND’S MAIN STREETS
From Queen Street and Ponsonby Road in Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland to Lambton Quay and Cuba Street in Te Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington, and Cashel Street (The Crossing) in Ōtautahi/Christchurch, Aotearoa’s prime high streets remain anchors for brand visibility, tourism spend, and everyday convenience. These corridors are where retailers build community, trial new formats, and deliver the kind of in-person experiences Kiwis still love.
HOW NEW ZEALAND COMPARES AND KEY TAKE-AWAYS
While New Zealand isn’t individually ranked in this year’s global list, Asia Pacific’s headline streets provide useful benchmarks. You can view the latest retail rents in our Main Street Across the World 2025 Report.
Based on insights from the report here’s our take on what it means for New Zealand brands and landlords:
- Tourism-linked catchments still win. APAC’s top corridors continue to benefit from resilient international tourism and “destination” retail. Think about how that translates to Auckland’s waterfront-to-CBD axis and Wellington’s parliamentary/Te Papa visitor flows.
- Experience beats transaction. Flagship-style storytelling, pop-ups and hospitality crossovers are driving dwell time and spend across the region - tactics that translate well to Queen Street, Cuba Street and Cashel Street.
- Rents are rising - selectively. Asia Pacific’s average prime-street rent growth moderated to ~2.1% YoY, with Sydney and Tokyo among the notable improvers, underscoring ongoing demand for the right addresses.