Natural hazards

Photo of erosion of cliffs at One Tree Point.

Find out what natural hazards are listed for your property and how this affects what you can do on your property.

Natural hazards include:

  • acid sulphate soil
  • coastal erosion and flooding
  • river flooding
  • land instability
  • liquefaction
  • mining subsidence.

First use the hazard layer in our GIS Maps to find what natural hazards your property is at risk from. Then check our District Plan to see how these hazards affect how you can develop your land.

Changes have been proposed to the natural hazard chapter of the district plan. Find further information about this proposed plan change on this page:  

Plan Change 1: Natural Hazards

What hazards apply to my property?

  1. Open the Hazards map within GIS
  2. Image for the search icon within GIS Maps. Enter your address in the top left hand search box
  3. Image for the layers icon within GIS Maps. Click on 'layers' in the banner
  4. Select the hazard layers from the right-hand side bar to see if it applies to your property. 
  5. legend-icon.png Click on 'legend' in the banner to see what each coloured area / pattern means. 

District wide rules for hazard areas

The District Plan includes rules for development in flooding, mining subsidence and coastal hazard areas. These rules may require you to obtain a resource consent, in addition to meeting building consent requirements relating to natural hazards. 

The Natural Hazards Chapter of the District Plan can be found under Part 2 District-Wide Matters of our ePlan. 

Whangārei ePlan Natural Hazards

Natural hazards - Building consents

On 31 May 2023 Plan Change 1 - Natural Hazards was notified. The plan change proposes new rules to manage the risk to people and property associated with the following natural hazards:

  • river flooding
  • coastal erosion and flooding
  • land instability
  • mining subsidence.

Read further information about this proposed plan change:

Plan Change 1 - Natural Hazards

Types of natural hazards

Additional information about natural hazards in New Zealand can be found on the Natural Hazards portal created by Toka Tū Ake EQC:

The Natural Hazards Portal – Toka Tū Ake EQC (naturalhazardsportal.govt.nz)