Timaru Central NZ
Timaru Central is in Canterbury, New Zealand, with population 285.
Usable evidence
Timaru Central is usable, but it still needs cross-checking.
Direct signals include Schools, Hospitals, Building consents, and Demographic baseline. Treat Weekly rent and Transport as the main gap before this becomes a stronger decision page.
Save suburbs here while you browse. Once the shortlist has two or more names, hand it straight into compare.
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No saved suburbs yet. Start with one ranking or suburb page, then compare once you have two candidates.
Open rankings to save the first candidates.
This page still helps with local context, but the evidence stack is too thin for a clean suburb-level call. Use nearby alternatives or compare mode before turning it into a shortlist decision.
School Quality: Average. Deprivation: High.
Timaru Central is a small community in Canterbury with a population of 285 and a median age of 38. Median personal income is $47K per year. The main ethnic groups are European, Māori, Pacific Peoples. Canterbury population estimates moved +1.6% in the year ended June 2024, after averaging +1.9% a year from 2018 to 2023, which should be read as a broader regional movement backdrop rather than suburb-level migration precision. The resident employment base moved from 210 in 2018 to 180 in 2023 (-14.3%), which should be read as a census-to-census employment backdrop rather than a live jobs series. Te Waihanga's December 2025 Pipeline snapshot tracked over 12,000 NZ infrastructure initiatives, with more than 2,700 under construction and transport taking 52% of projected 2026 pipeline spend, which should be read as a broader national delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project list.
Canterbury population estimates moved +1.6% in the year ended June 2024, after averaging +1.9% a year from 2018 to 2023. Read that as a broader regional movement backdrop, not suburb-level migration precision.
The resident employment base moved from 210 in 2018 to 180 in 2023 (-14.3%, -30). Median personal income is $47K a year. That points to a weaker resident employment backdrop across the 2018 to 2023 census window, not a short-term labour-market call.
Te Waihanga's December 2025 Pipeline snapshot tracked over 12,000 infrastructure initiatives from 130 contributors, with more than 2,700 under construction and $12.4b of 2026 spend projected in transport (52% of total pipeline spend). There is no matched local transport-stop count here, so read the infrastructure signal as broader NZ delivery context only. That still helps frame future delivery conditions, but it is not enough to infer a nearby catalyst on its own.
This page combines Stats NZ, MBIE, MoE, GTFS, and official service datasets. Check the data-status panel before treating every metric as equally fresh.
- Renters and buyers want to know if the suburb looks affordable before diving into charts.
- Families want a quick read on schools, deprivation, and local service coverage.
- Researchers want one page that ties Census, rent, transport, and approvals into a single suburb brief.
NZ suburb pages combine Stats NZ, MBIE, MoE, GTFS, and pinned service coverage. The key difference is that some items are direct feeds, while others are fallback or snapshot layers.
Treat current rent as a decision input, not as a guaranteed market quote.
This is a trusted coverage layer, but it is still a pinned snapshot rather than a live facility API.
It is good for stop presence and local network context, but not a guarantee that every operator or schedule is equally current.
Timaru Central is usable, but it still needs cross-checking.
Direct signals include Schools, Hospitals, Building consents, and Demographic baseline. Treat Weekly rent and Transport as the main gap before this becomes a stronger decision page.
Use compare before shortlisting so the missing evidence is balanced against nearby suburbs.
Schools, Hospitals, Building consents, Demographic baseline
No fallback or lower-precision signals flagged.
Weekly rent, Transport
Timaru Central currently reads as a thin-context candidate.
The profile is based on limited but still useful local context. The page is thin enough that nearby alternatives should be checked before shortlisting. Higher deprivation should be treated as a local-context caution.
Use stronger nearby reads or rankings before treating this suburb as a shortlist candidate.
No strong positive decision reason is visible yet.
The page is thin enough that nearby alternatives should be checked before shortlisting. Higher deprivation should be treated as a local-context caution. Small local population makes the signal set more fragile.
Weekly rent, Transport
Use as context
This page stays indexable because Timaru Central still carries enough real local context to help with NZ suburb discovery. It should still be read as a lighter locality brief, not as a fully covered suburb profile.
That leaves the page relying more on Census and service context than on a stronger market read.
The main gaps on this page are transport stops. That means you should avoid treating one sparse reading as the whole suburb story.
Start with the region hub, compare view, or nearby better-covered suburbs before treating this page as a full market decision.
The page still has enough real suburb context to remain searchable, but some market and service layers are too light for a full-confidence read.
Use this page to frame the locality, then pressure-test the story with compare, the region hub, or a nearby better-covered suburb before treating it as complete.
If Timaru Central feels too thin on its own, use these nearby suburbs as stronger local reads before treating it as a full shortlist call.
pop same · income -$11K · NZDep same
Similar local read: useful for context, but still compare the actual market signals.
pop +1700 · adds rent coverage · income -$13K
Better covered alternative: use this as the stronger reference point before judging the thin page.
Timaru Central FAQ
Common questions-
What is the livability profile for Timaru Central?
QuickProperty's livability signals for Timaru Central show: Average, High, Slowing. These are based on rent affordability, school EQI, NZDep deprivation index, and transport access.
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Where does QuickProperty get its data for Timaru Central?
Housing data comes from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ). Demographics are from Stats NZ Census 2023. Schools data uses the Ministry of Education Equity Index (EQI). The deprivation score uses NZDep2018. Transport data is sourced from GTFS feeds.
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How often is the Timaru Central data updated?
RBNZ macro data updates with each deploy. Demographics are from NZ Census 2023. School EQI scores are from the Ministry of Education latest release.
Full data detail
Timaru Central
NZDep 9Timaru Central is a small community in Canterbury with a population of 285 and a median age of 38. Median personal income is $47K per year. The main ethnic groups are European, Māori, Pacific Peoples. Canterbury population estimates moved +1.6% in the year ended June 2024, after averaging +1.9% a year from 2018 to 2023, which should be read as a broader regional movement backdrop rather than suburb-level migration precision. The resident employment base moved from 210 in 2018 to 180 in 2023 (-14.3%), which should be read as a census-to-census employment backdrop rather than a live jobs series. Te Waihanga's December 2025 Pipeline snapshot tracked over 12,000 NZ infrastructure initiatives, with more than 2,700 under construction and transport taking 52% of projected 2026 pipeline spend, which should be read as a broader national delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project list.
Livability indicators for Timaru Central: NZDep decile 9 (high deprivation); 1 school with avg EQI 438; 1 hospital nearby.
In 2026, Timaru Central recorded 0 building approvals (0 houses, 0 units), down 100% year-on-year.
Timaru Central is a small community in Canterbury with a population of 285 and a median age of 38. Median personal income is $47K per year. The main ethnic groups are European, Māori, Pacific Peoples. Canterbury population estimates moved +1.6% in the year ended June 2024, after averaging +1.9% a year from 2018 to 2023, which should be read as a broader regional movement backdrop rather than suburb-level migration precision. The resident employment base moved from 210 in 2018 to 180 in 2023 (-14.3%), which should be read as a census-to-census employment backdrop rather than a live jobs series. Te Waihanga's December 2025 Pipeline snapshot tracked over 12,000 NZ infrastructure initiatives, with more than 2,700 under construction and transport taking 52% of projected 2026 pipeline spend, which should be read as a broader national delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project list.
Livability indicators for Timaru Central: NZDep decile 9 (high deprivation); 1 school with avg EQI 438; 1 hospital nearby.
In 2026, Timaru Central recorded 0 building approvals (0 houses, 0 units), down 100% year-on-year.