If you live in employer-provided housing, you might think buying your first home is complicated. The good news is recent KiwiSaver settings have made things clearer and more flexible for service tenancy workers.
As mortgage brokers who’ve helped Kiwis into homes for over 26 years, we’re seeing real opportunity here.
Let’s answer the key questions.
Yes.
If you have been a KiwiSaver member for at least three years, you can withdraw most of your balance to use as a deposit for your first home.
This applies even if you live in employer-provided or tied accommodation.
Your housing arrangement does not stop you from accessing your KiwiSaver for a first home purchase.
Service tenancy usually means:
Your housing is provided as part of your employment
Rent may be subsidised or bundled into your contract
You may need to leave the property if you leave the job
Common examples include:
Farm workers
On-site hospitality managers
School caretakers
Forestry workers
Tourism operators
These roles are often stable and long-term, but lenders assess them carefully.
Historically, banks have found it harder to assess:
Your true housing costs
What happens if employment changes
Whether your income is fully sustainable
That created friction. Not rejection. Just complexity.
The updated KiwiSaver settings bring clarity around first home withdrawals and eligibility, which removes one layer of uncertainty.
The rest comes down to how your application is structured.
For a first home, you can usually withdraw:
Your contributions
Your employer’s contributions
Government contributions
You must leave at least $1,000 in your account.
For many service tenancy workers with lower living costs, KiwiSaver balances can build faster than expected. Your deposit may already be sitting there.
Yes. And this is where experience matters.
Some lenders are conservative around tied accommodation.
Others understand rural, tourism or specialist employment structures much better.
As brokers, we match you to the lender that fits your situation, rather than forcing your situation to fit the wrong lender.
That alone can determine whether your application feels simple or stressful.
If you’re in service tenancy and want to buy your first home, lenders focus on:
Length of employment
Stability of income
Overall debt levels
Your plan if employment changes
Deposit size including KiwiSaver
If you have:
Three or more years in KiwiSaver
Consistent employment history
Minimal consumer debt
You may be closer than you think.
At Luminate, we specialise in structured lending.
For service tenancy clients, we focus on four things.
We explain your housing arrangement so lenders see stability, not risk.
We show what happens if you change roles or locations. Banks want to see a plan. We build one.
Not all lenders assess service tenancy the same way. We know which ones understand it.
We help with your KiwiSaver withdrawal and finance approval and settlement so there are no delays.
Simple process. Clear strategy. No guesswork.
Interest rates have eased from their peaks. Banks are actively lending to strong borrowers. KiwiSaver balances have grown steadily.
If you’re in stable employment and contributing regularly, this could be your window.
The biggest mistake we see is people assuming they won’t qualify.
The smartest move is getting clarity.
Service tenancy does not mean you’re stuck renting forever.
In many cases, you have stable income, controlled living costs and a growing KiwiSaver balance.
That’s a strong foundation.
If you’re contributing to KiwiSaver and have been in your role for a while, it’s worth running the numbers properly.
At Luminate, we guide Kiwis into homes every day, including complex employment situations. If you’re in employer-provided housing and wondering whether this is possible, let’s have a conversation.
You might be closer to your first home than you think.