How do I know if my property manager is actually performing?
Look at three things: are your vacancies being filled promptly, are your outgoings being actively managed (not just passed through), and are you receiving clear, regular reporting that you can actually understand? A good property manager should be proactive — calling you with opportunities and risks, not just responding when things break. If you only hear from your manager when an invoice needs signing, that is a problem. At AssetPro, we provide monthly reporting with commentary, not just numbers, so you always know where your asset stands.
Do I actually need a property manager, or can I manage my building myself?
You can, and some owners do — particularly those with a single tenant on a long lease. But once you have multiple tenants, OPEX reconciliations, maintenance coordination, lease renewals, and compliance obligations (BWOF, healthy buildings, asbestos registers), the time commitment escalates quickly. Most owners who come to us were self-managing and found that the cost of mistakes — a poorly negotiated rent review, a missed compliance deadline, a vacancy that dragged on — far exceeded the management fee. The question is not whether you can manage it, but whether your time is better spent elsewhere.
What should I expect to pay for commercial property management in Auckland?
Management fees in Auckland typically range from 3% to 8% of gross rental income, depending on the complexity of the asset, the number of tenants, and the scope of services. Single-tenant industrial properties sit at the lower end; multi-tenanted office or retail buildings with high OPEX and active leasing requirements sit higher. Be cautious of unusually low fees — they often come with reduced service levels or junior staff. We structure our fees transparently and tie them to the actual work involved, not a one-size-fits-all percentage.
How can I reduce the outgoings on my commercial property?
Start with your three biggest cost lines: insurance, rates, and maintenance contracts. Insurance should be market-tested every two to three years — many owners are paying premiums based on outdated valuations or legacy broker relationships. Council rates can sometimes be challenged if the capital value assessment is out of step with the market. Maintenance contracts (lifts, HVAC, fire systems) should be competitively tendered, not auto-renewed. We conduct an outgoings review for every property we take on, and typically find meaningful savings within the first quarter.
What is a Building Warrant of Fitness and do I need one?
If your commercial building has specified systems — fire alarms, sprinklers, emergency lighting, lifts, mechanical ventilation — then yes, you are legally required to have a current BWOF displayed. An Independent Qualified Person (IQP) must inspect and certify each system annually, and the building owner signs the BWOF to confirm compliance. Failing to display a current BWOF is an offence under the Building Act 2004. We manage the full BWOF cycle for our clients: scheduling IQP inspections, tracking remedial work, and ensuring the certificate is renewed on time.