McKenzie said there was strong residential building consent growth in many regions in 2017, led by gains in Auckland, Otago and Wellington, although consents in Canterbury declined for a third year after rising significantly during the post-2011 earthquake rebuild.
In Auckland, where building supply has failed to keep up with population growth in the nation's largest city, residential consents lifted 8.4 per cent to a 13-year high of 10,867.
"Over a third of all new homes in New Zealand were consented in the Auckland region last year, which is in line with Auckland's share of the New Zealand population," McKenzie said.
"This is the first time since 2004 that the proportion of new homes consented in Auckland exceeded their share of the population."
Record numbers of retirement village units, townhouses, flats, and other units were consented in Auckland last year.
While apartment units were also a significant part of building consents in Auckland in 2017, there were bigger numbers of apartments consented in the early 2000s.
Only a quarter of all new stand-alone houses consented in New Zealand were for Auckland.
Elsewhere, Wellington consents advanced 15 per cent to 2,294 and Otago consents surged 24 per cent to a record 2,240 reflecting more new houses, townhouses and apartments in Queenstown, Stats NZ said. In Canterbury, consents dropped 15 per cent to 5,004 while Waikato consents fell 1.3 per cent to 3,507 and Bay of Plenty consents slid 0.6 per cent to 2,506.
For the month of December, nationwide residential consents fell a seasonally adjusted 9.6 per cent, reversing a 9.6 per cent gain in November, Stats NZ said.
The value of non-residential building permits climbed 8 per cent to $6.5 billion last year, while the floor area consented advanced 6.8 per cent to 2,851,000 square metres.