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The numbers behind the noise
Cost of Living

South Island Food Bills Hit $15,305 — But Inflation Means You're Actually Spending Less

While the government unveils its infrastructure plan, South Island households face a confusing reality: grocery bills have jumped $2,796 since 2020, yet adjusted for inflation, families are actually buying less food than they were five years ago.

2026-02-17T23:01:47.005556 Stats NZ AI-generated from open data
📰 This story connects government data to current events reported by RNZ, RNZ, RNZ.

Key Figures

$15,305
2024 annual food spend
The average South Island household outside main centres spent this on food in 2024, up 22% from 2020 but barely ahead of inflation.
$2,796
Four-year increase
South Island food bills have risen by this much since 2020, almost exactly matching the 20-25% inflation rate over the same period.
Flat to negative
Real purchasing power
When adjusted for inflation, families are spending roughly the same or less in real terms, meaning they're buying less food or cheaper alternatives.
$294
Weekly cost
Breaking the annual figure down to weekly terms shows how little room there is for unexpected costs like storm damage or lost work days.

On the same day the government unveiled New Zealand's first national infrastructure plan, promising billions for roads and utilities, South Island families are dealing with a more immediate infrastructure crisis: the one in their pantries.

The average South Island household outside the main centres spent $15,305 on food in 2024. That's up from $12,509 in 2020 — a jump of $2,796 in just four years. (Source: Stats NZ, food-price-index-regional)

Here's the twist nobody's talking about: that's not actually a real increase. With New Zealand's inflation running at roughly 20-25% since 2019, those 2024 dollars are worth significantly less than 2020 dollars. When you adjust for what money can actually buy, South Island families are spending about the same — or even slightly less — than they were before COVID.

Which means they're eating less. Buying cheaper cuts. Skipping the fresh stuff.

The numbers reveal the squeeze: food costs rose 22% between 2020 and 2024, almost perfectly tracking overall inflation. But wages? They haven't kept pace everywhere. A household earning $70,000 in 2020 would need to be making $87,500 today just to stand still. Most aren't.

This explains the behaviours you're seeing everywhere. The reason your local supermarket now has budget ranges taking up half an aisle. The reason KiwiSaver withdrawal applications are up. The reason food banks are serving families who never needed them before.

Look at the trajectory: $12,509 in 2020, $15,305 in 2024. In raw dollars, that's a 22% jump. But in real purchasing power? Families are treading water at best, drowning at worst.

The South Island figure sits in the middle of the pack nationally — not the highest, not the lowest. But for rural communities already dealing with storm damage cutting them off from work, there's no buffer left. When your weekly shop costs $294 and a weather event costs you three days of wages, the maths stops working.

The government can build all the infrastructure it wants. But the infrastructure that matters most to South Island families right now is the one that gets affordable food from farm to table. And that system — judging by these numbers — is asking households to pay more while getting less.

The $15,305 figure isn't just a number. It's a household budget stretched to breaking point, measured in meals skipped and compromises made.

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Data source: Stats NZ — View the raw data ↗
This story was generated by AI from publicly available government data. Verify figures from the original source before citing.
cost-of-living food-prices inflation south-island household-budgets