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Who owns the Cook Islands?

So, Who Owns the Cook Islands? With its own government and ability to request assistance from New Zealand, rather than being controlled by New Zealand, the Cook Islands is its own country. In terms of owning the land physically, most freehold land in the Cook Islands is owned by hundreds of Cook Islands families.



People Also Ask

Is the Cook Islands Expensive to Visit? The Cook Islands is more expensive to visit than Australia, the US, Asia and Europe but cheaper than other Pacific destinations like Hawaii, Fiji and Tahiti (French Polynesia).

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Cook Islands, self-governing island state in free association with New Zealand, located in the South Pacific Ocean.

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It is possible and many expats live here or have a business. No one can own land on the island as it is all family land and what you do is lease a property. The lease time frame these days is 60 years. For example there was a house advertised yesterday with a 45 year lease left to run for NZ$185.

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Families relying on the tourist industry now are without a way to make a living during the pandemic. This makes the Cook Islands a superb place to visit, but an expensive place to live. The cost of importing goods is much greater than the trade income from making and selling goods to other countries.

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Ethnic groups and languages With the exception of the inhabitants of isolated Pukapuka, who are of predominantly Samoan and Tongan descent, almost all Cook Islanders have mixed Polynesian ancestry. Intermarriage with European, Chinese, and African settlers was common in the early 19th century.

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