Business Environment Profiles - New Zealand
Published: 02 January 2026
Non-residential building construction capital expenditure
8 $ billion
3.2 %
This report analyses the level of capital expenditure on non-residential building construction. This includes expenditure on new construction, alterations and additions to commercial, industrial and other non-residential buildings. Other buildings include schools, hospitals, libraries, farms, warehouses, factories and other miscellaneous developments. The data for this report is sourced from Stats NZ (Tatauranga Aotearoa). The data is presented in financial years and measured in billions of constant 2009-10 dollars.
We measure the upstream and downstream ramifications on thousands of industries so businesses can monitor their external operating environment. Explore membership options today.
Our industry reports include 35+ pages of data, analysis and charts, including:








You need a Membership for access
to this data.
You need a Membership for
access to this data.
IBISWorld forecasts non-residential building construction capital expenditure to decline by 0.1% to $7.58 billion in 2025-26, as earlier momentum from post-pandemic investment and strong business spending has faded. Subdued economic growth have encouraged firms to rein in capital expenditure, particularly on discretionary office, retail and hospitality projects. A softer pipeline of non-residential building consents has further constrained activity, limiting work flowing through to construction sites. Public sector restraint has compounded these pressures, with fewer new government-backed projects entering the market. While construction cost inflation has moderated, residual labour and material costs continue to weigh on margins, reinforcing caution among investors and contributing to the downturn in non-residential construction during 2025-26.
Commercial projects have dominated non-residential building construction over the past five years. In December 2025, they represented 48% of the total value of planned non-residential construction, followed by industrial at 11%, education 11% and health at 7%. The private sector remained the largest investor, contributing 67.3% of planned construction value, while the Central Government (Te Kawanatanga o Aotearoa) accounted for 18.8% and local governments contributed 13.9%.
The cooling residential construction market continues to weigh on non-residential building activity, as fewer housing developments reduce demand for supporting retail, office and industrial facilities. Elevated interest rates across much of 2024 and 2025 have constrained access to finance and weakened project viability, prompting businesses to defer or scale back capital spending. Softer economic conditions and heightened uncertainty have also encouraged caution among investors, particularly for discretionary commercial developments. While construction cost growth has moderated, persistently high labour and compliance costs continue to pressure margins. As a result, non-residential building construction capital expenditure has softened in the near term. Nevertheless, easing monetary policy and a gradual lift in business confidence are expected to support a modest recovery over the medium term, with IBISWorld forecasting capital expenditure to expand at a compound annual rate of 3.2% over the five years through 2025-26.
IBISWorld forecasts non-residential building construction capital expenditure to total $7.81 bill...
Gain strategic insight and analysis on thousands of industries.