Moisture and Drainage Requirements for NZ Rentals: Healthy Homes Standard
Moisture and drainage is one of the 5 Healthy Homes Standards and often the least understood. Many landlords think it is just about stopping leaks — but it covers subfloor vapour barriers, stormwater drainage, and moisture control in bathrooms and kitchens. Here is what NZ landlords need to know.
The Moisture Ingress and Drainage Standard
Regulation 9 of the Healthy Homes Standards requires rental properties to have:
- Efficient drainage systems: Gutters, downpipes, and stormwater drainage that effectively remove water from the roof, site, and exterior of the building
- No water entering the property from the roof, exterior walls, or subfloor (no leaks or moisture ingress)
- A subfloor vapour barrier where the subfloor space is enclosed and accessible (ground moisture is a major source of internal dampness)
The Subfloor Vapour Barrier
This is the part of the standard that surprises many landlords. If your property has a suspended timber floor with an accessible subfloor space, you must have a ground-covering vapour barrier. This is typically a polythene sheet laid over the ground under the house, which prevents ground moisture from evaporating up into the subfloor space and entering the home.
Requirements:
- The vapour barrier must cover the ground in the subfloor space
- It must be at least 0.25mm thick polythene
- It must be lapped and secured so it stays in place
Existing vapour barriers should be checked for tears, gaps, and coverage. Old plastic sheeting can degrade and may need replacing. A subfloor inspection is the only way to know what is there — get a quote from an insulation or building company if you have not checked.
Drainage Requirements
The gutters, downpipes, and stormwater drainage must effectively remove roof water and surface runoff. Blocked gutters, disconnected downpipes, or poor site drainage that causes water to pool near the foundation are all non-compliant.
For landlords, this means:
- Check gutters are clear and not sagging or overflowing
- Check downpipes are connected and discharging away from the foundation
- Check that surface water drains away from the house (not toward it)
- Check for any signs of past flooding or water pooling under or around the house
No Water Ingress
The property must not have moisture entering through the roof, walls, or subfloor from external sources. This means:
- No leaking roof or skylights
- No moisture penetrating exterior walls (check for water staining on interior walls)
- No rising damp from the ground into the subfloor structure
Note the distinction between "moisture ingress" (water from outside) and "condensation moisture" (humidity generated by occupants). The standard addresses ingress — condensation is addressed through the ventilation standard (requiring extractor fans and openable windows).
What About Extractor Fans?
Extractor fans in bathrooms and kitchens are required under the ventilation standard, but they also contribute to moisture control. A bathroom without an extractor fan traps steam, which leads to condensation on walls and ceilings, then mould. Both the ventilation and moisture standards reinforce each other.
Compliance Deadline
All private rental properties must have met all 5 Healthy Homes standards (including moisture and drainage) by 1 July 2025.
Checking and Documenting
For a typical NZ property, checking moisture and drainage compliance means:
- Inspect gutters and downpipes — clear and connected?
- Check subfloor space — is there a vapour barrier? What condition is it in?
- Check interior walls and ceilings for water staining or mould that could indicate ingress
- Check the roof — any missing or damaged tiles, flashing issues?
Document what you find with photos. Record in the Healthy Homes compliance statement for each tenancy. RentManager lets you record compliance items per property, including subfloor condition, drainage inspection dates, and any remediation work done.
The Bigger Picture: All 5 Standards Together
This is the fifth and final Healthy Homes Standard. Together, the 5 standards address:
- Heating — fixed heater capable of reaching 18°C in the main living room
- Insulation — minimum R-values for ceiling and underfloor
- Ventilation — extractor fans and openable windows
- Moisture and drainage — gutters, vapour barriers, no ingress
- Draught stopping — gaps and holes blocked to prevent cold air entry
Meeting all 5 standards should be a baseline for any well-managed NZ rental. Properties that meet the standards have better tenant retention, fewer maintenance disputes, and lower risk of Tribunal complaints.