Not every Auckland plaster home needs recladding. Some need a $30,000 targeted repair. Some need a full reclad. Some are better sold and walked away from. The right answer depends on how far the damage has progressed, the home’s age and construction, your budget, and whether you plan to live in the home or sell it within the next decade.
This guide walks through the decision framework we use with Auckland homeowners who’ve just had a weathertight investigation come back with bad news. It covers when repair is enough, when reclad is the right call, when to sell, and how the numbers compare across all three paths.
First: get the facts
The biggest mistake homeowners make at this point is jumping straight to a decision before they have a real investigation report. A plaster home with one cracked window junction and dry framing is a completely different decision from a plaster home with systemic moisture across multiple elevations and 20% framing decay. Both look identical from the kerb.
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- Moisture readings at every high-risk junction.
- Invasive testing where readings are elevated, with photographic evidence.
- A documented framing condition assessment.
- A written recommendation: targeted repair, partial reclad, full reclad, or further investigation.
Without this report, every option is guesswork. With it, the decision usually becomes clear inside an hour.
When repair is enough
Targeted repair (cost: $15,000–$60,000) is the right call when the investigation shows:
- Moisture issues at one or two isolated junctions (typically a window, a single deck-wall interface, or one penetration).
- Surrounding framing tests as dry (under 20% moisture content).
- The rest of the cladding is sound — no widespread cracking, no soft spots, no other symptoms.
- The cladding system is otherwise within its design service life and the home was built post-2004 with a drained cavity behind the cladding.
A typical targeted repair involves removing 1–3m² of cladding around the failure point, drying the framing if needed, refixing flashings to current Code, replacing damaged cladding, and resealing. Done correctly, a targeted repair lasts as long as the rest of the cladding. Done badly, it fails again within 2–3 years.
Repair is the wrong call when:
- The home is monolithic plaster from 1994–2004 with no drainage cavity — the underlying construction risk persists regardless of the repair.
- The investigation found moisture at more than two locations.
- The framing tested wet in the bottom plates, indicating water has been tracking laterally.
- The cladding is at end-of-life and the repair would just be one in a sequence of patches.
When recladding is the right call
A full house recladding (cost: $135,000–$500,000+) is the right call when:
- The investigation found systemic moisture across multiple junctions or elevations.
- Framing tested wet or showed decay at the bottom plates, corner studs, or wall intersections.
- The home is monolithic plaster (1994–2004), with no drainage cavity behind the cladding, regardless of visible symptoms — the construction itself is the issue, and patching one symptom doesn’t address that.
- The cladding has reached or passed its design service life and is failing in multiple places.
- You plan to live in the home long-term, or you plan to sell within 5 years and want to capture the resale uplift from a recladded home.
The cost-benefit of recladding is strongest when the home is structurally sound otherwise and the location supports premium pricing — Remuera, Ponsonby, Mt Eden, Devonport, and other established Auckland markets where homes regularly sell over $1.5M. In these areas, a $250,000 reclad on a $1.8M home returns close to dollar-for-dollar at resale, and the home sells in normal timeframes rather than sitting on the market because of buyer caution.
The cost-benefit weakens when the home is small (under 130m²), in a price-suppressed area, or has other major issues that would need separate attention (foundation settlement, sub-floor moisture, structural movement). In those cases, the reclad investment doesn’t fully reflect in the resale price.
When selling is the answer
Selling without recladding is the right call when:
- The cost of a full reclad pushes the total project past the property’s realistic future market value.
- The owner doesn’t have access to renovation finance or doesn’t want to commit to a 5–6 month build.
- The home has multiple major issues stacking on top of weathertight failure (foundation problems, asbestos, fire damage, etc.) and the cumulative cost exceeds rebuild value.
- The owner’s circumstances have changed — relationship, health, work location — and selling is the right life decision regardless of the financial outcome.
The price discount on an unreclad leaky home is real but recoverable in the right market. Recent Auckland data shows unreclad monolithic plaster homes sell at roughly 9% discount to comparable never-leaky properties. On a $1.4M home that’s about $125,000 lost. Compared to a $250,000 reclad that would have lifted the home to full market value, selling can be the rational call if you don’t want the disruption — particularly for older owners who don’t plan to live in the home long enough to recover the reclad cost.
The legal disclosure requirement is significant: under the Property Disclosure Statement, you must disclose any known weathertight issues. Hiding it isn’t an option, and buyers’ lawyers will catch any LIM record showing past complaints or repairs. The honest disclosure approach usually nets the seller better than the “avoid the question” approach — buyers price in worse than reality when they sense evasion.
Real example: Lee’s family in Epsom
Our Epsom plaster home reclad walked all three options before deciding. Lee’s family had owned the home for 15 years. Investigation showed widespread moisture across both storeys with significant framing decay. Three paths:
- Sell unreclad: realistic market value sat 12–15% below comparable homes in the suburb, meaning $180,000–$240,000 of equity lost before sale costs.
- Reclad only: $280,000 quoted for a like-for-like reclad in fibre cement. Returns roughly $260,000 in market value uplift — close to break-even.
- Reclad plus second-storey extension: $440,000 combined cost (less than the two projects independently because of shared scaffold, consent, and project management). Adds two bedrooms and an ensuite. Returns roughly $520,000 in market value uplift plus the family gets a home they want to live in.
They chose option three. The combined project took 6 months on site, ended up with a fresh Code of Compliance Certificate, and is now a home the family loves. The same decision process applies to every plaster home reclad we work on — the right answer depends on the math, not on emotion.
The decision matrix
| Situation | Recommended path | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Plaster home, 1 isolated symptom, dry framing, post-2004 build | Targeted repair | The system is sound; address the one failure. |
| Plaster home, 1994–2004, no symptoms yet, monitoring | Investigate & plan | Construction risk is high; get the report before the symptoms appear. |
| Plaster home, multiple symptoms, framing wet at junctions | Full reclad | System failure; targeted repair will recur. |
| Weatherboard home, isolated rotten boards, sound framing | Targeted repair or partial reclad | Heritage detail worth preserving; localised fix usually works. |
| Plaster home, no budget for reclad, planning to sell within 5 years | Reclad and sell (after CCC) | Reclad usually returns 90–110% of cost; selling unreclad usually costs 9–15% of value. |
| Plaster home, no budget, multiple major issues, owner relocating | Sell as-is with disclosure | Reclad cost exceeds equity available; honest sale beats hidden risk. |
| Plaster home, planning major renovation anyway | Reclad + renovation combined | Combined project is 15–25% cheaper than two separate projects. |
What about “plaster homes are always toxic”?
The blanket claim isn’t accurate. Monolithic plaster cladding installed on a properly designed and built drainage cavity system after 2004 has the same service life as any other modern cladding. The Auckland leaky home crisis was specific to direct-fix plaster systems installed 1994–2004 with no cavity, often combined with untreated framing and high-risk design features (no eaves, complex roof junctions, decks built directly into the wall). Modern plaster cladding done correctly is safe. The market stigma still attaches to all plaster-clad homes, which affects resale — but the safety case is no longer a blanket concern.
Common decision-making mistakes
- Deciding before the investigation report. The cost of a $3,500 investigation pays for itself many times over by ensuring you choose the right path.
- Getting three quotes from generalist builders. Recladding is specialist work. Quotes from builders who do reclads occasionally are often 30–40% above or below what the work actually costs — both directions are problematic.
- Choosing the cheapest quote. A reclad quote that’s materially below market is almost always missing scope, will be varied up later, or is cutting corners on framing replacement.
- Combining a reclad with too many other projects. Adding a deck, a kitchen, a bathroom, and a master suite to a reclad in the same contract often pushes the project beyond the homeowner’s emotional bandwidth. Pick the highest-return additions only.
- Repairing without addressing the underlying construction risk. A targeted repair on a 1994–2004 monolithic plaster home with no drainage cavity is delaying the inevitable. The repair may hold for 5 years; the underlying construction will fail again somewhere else.
What we recommend
If you’re facing this decision, the highest-value first step is a free initial site visit to take moisture readings at the highest-risk junctions. That tells you whether a full paid investigation is worth commissioning, or whether the home is genuinely sound and you’re looking at a maintenance-grade fix. We’ll tell you straight which path makes sense for your home and your situation — including when selling really is the right call.
Frequently asked questions
How long do I have before I need to make a decision?
If the investigation shows active moisture and framing decay, the cost of inaction is measurable: damage spreads 6–18 months from the time it’s detected to the point where structural framing is materially affected. Homes can usually wait 6–12 months to organise consent and start work, but multi-year delays add real cost to the eventual fix.
Can I sell during a reclad?
Yes, with caveats. A home under reclad is hard to market because the cladding is removed and the scaffold is up — buyers can’t visualise the finished home. Most owners who sell mid-reclad complete the project, get the Code of Compliance Certificate, and then list. The recladded home with fresh paperwork typically sells faster and at a higher price than the same home mid-build.
What if the builder finds more damage than expected after stripping?
This is why the framing damage allowance matters. A properly priced reclad includes a treated framing replacement allowance built into the fixed price. If the actual damage falls within allowance, no extra cost. If it’s materially worse, the additional work is documented with photos and quoted as a variation before proceeding — you approve before any extra spend.
Will the Master Builder Guarantee cover the new cladding?
Yes. Every recladding project over $30,000 we deliver is covered by the Registered Master Builders 10-Year Guarantee. It covers workmanship for 2 years and structure and weathertightness for 10 years. This is the cover most homeowners care about — the new cladding is guaranteed weathertight for a decade post-completion.
Can I claim insurance for the recladding cost?
Standard residential insurance policies exclude gradual deterioration and weathertight failure, which covers the vast majority of leaky home damage. Some policies cover sudden accidental water damage events but not the underlying construction issue. The original Weathertight Homes Resolution Service Financial Assistance Package closed for new claims in 2016. Most modern reclads are funded privately or through renovation lending.
Does recladding affect the Council records on my home?
Yes — positively. A consented and inspected reclad results in a new Code of Compliance Certificate (CCC) being issued. This appears on the LIM report when the home is later sold, and is one of the strongest signals to buyers and their lawyers that the previous weathertight issue has been properly resolved. The original failure history will still appear on the LIM, but the documented resolution typically removes the deal-breaking objection.
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