11:27 am today

Hundreds of homes assessed following 'one-in-100-year' Nelson Tasman flooding

11:27 am today
Floodwaters washed through Te Paranui Animal and Farm Sanctuary, near SH1 at Tuamarina, in Tasman, overnight between 27 and 28 June, 2025.

Floodwaters washed through Te Paranui Animal and Farm Sanctuary, Tasman, 28 June, 2025. Photo: Supplied/ Facebook

Crews have assessed nearly 650 properties in Nelson Tasman after damaging floods and more heavy rain on Thursday.

Homes in Nelson, Tasman and Marlborough have been left uninhabitable, roads are damaged, and properties have been inundated with flood waters after last week's wild weather, dubbed by local authorities as a "one-in-100-year event".

However, another bout of heavy rainfall came and went on Thursday without any dramatic exacerbation of the existing post-flood crisis.

The region remains under a state of emergency.

Nelson Tasman Civil Defence said of the properties assessed, one has been red-stickered and 13 others have been yellow-stickered, and crews have encouraged 90 of them to reach out for support, and the Rural Support Trust has already followed up with some of the residents.

Response Controller Rob Smith said 42 staff were in the field on Saturday checking properties and people near Brooklyn and Wakefield.

Nelson flooding from plane

A birds eye view of Nelson's flood levels, June 2025. Photo: Kate Green

Two community meetings are lined up for today at Riwaka Memorial Hall and Ngātīmoti Hall.

The trust's chairperson for the top of the south, Richard Kempthorne, said the destruction was "looking huge".

"These are floods that you would expect to see maybe once every 100 years. So they are massive floods that pretty much everybody who's living by them haven't seen before."

Earlier this week, the government unlocked extra support for flood-affected farmers and growers, making up to $100,000 available to support and coordinate recovery efforts.

Kempthorne said the recovery would "cost millions of dollars".

People returning to their homes are urged to take photos of all flood damage before they start the clean-up and contact their insurance company as soon as possible.

For some spots at the top of the south, last month marked its wettest June since records began back in 1941.

MetService confirmed more than 250mm of rain fell in Blenheim across the month, whilst about 220mm fell in Nelson - a record for both areas.

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