The Rise of AI-Generated Legal Claims
Artificial intelligence is fundamentally changing how individuals approach dispute resolution. In recent cases, tenants have begun using AI to draft applications for the Tenancy Tribunal, leading to a noticeable shift in the nature of these filings.
Property management experts, including David Faulkner of Property Brokers, have observed that AI-written applications tend to be significantly longer and more complex. While the technology allows users to compile vast amounts of information, it often results in claims for excessive amounts of money that lack a factual basis in law.
The Gap Between AI Expectations and Legal Reality
A growing trend involves “AI hallucinations,” where the technology provides misleading information or suggests unrealistic outcomes. This creates a dangerous disconnect between what a claimant believes they are owed and what the law actually allows.

For example, some claimants have used AI to seek sums of $40,000, $50,000, or $60,000 for disputes involving issues like unsafe drinking water, retaliatory notices, and breaches of quiet enjoyment. When these claims are set out in the same repetitive format, it becomes clear to property managers and adjudicators that they are AI-generated.
The risk is that users may bypass traditional advice from tenant advocates or tenancy unions in favor of unverified AI information, leading to “excitement” over potential payouts that never materialize.
The Impact on Tribunal Efficiency
The surge in “bloated” applications is creating a significant backlog. Adjudicators must now sift through hundreds of pages of evidence and legislation to discover the core facts of a case.
This inefficiency puts pressure on staff and property owners alike. While the intent of tribunals is to provide expedited justice, the current “primitive” use of AI may be hindering that goal by slowing down the pipeline for genuine applications.
AI Hallucinations in Financial Complaints
The trend of misleading AI advice extends beyond tenancy disputes. The Insurance and Financial Services Ombudsman (IFSO) has warned that consumers are receiving incorrect guidance when making complaints.

In one instance, a Google AI summary suggested that 80% to 90% of insurance claim decisions are overturned if a consumer persists. Karen Stevens of the IFSO clarified that What we have is misleading, as escalated complaints are often complex and not always resolved in the consumer’s favor.
The Future: From Hindrance to Help
Despite current challenges, some industry experts view this as a necessary stage of technological evolution. Sarina Gibbon, director at Tenancy Advisory, suggests that if AI eventually enables more people to access justice by simplifying the application process, it will be a positive development.
The goal for the future is to move past the “primitive” stage of AI usage—characterized by hallucinated cases and excessive page counts—toward a system where AI provides clear, concise, and verified information.
As the industry adapts, the focus will likely shift toward quality over quantity. As noted by the IFSO, clear information about what has gone wrong is far more useful to a decision-maker than multiple pages of referenced case law that may not even be applicable.
For more insights on navigating rental disputes, check out our guide on understanding your tenant rights or visit the RNZ news portal for the latest updates on New Zealand property trends.
Frequently Asked Questions
AI often produces “bloated” applications—sometimes hundreds of pages long—that require adjudicators to spend more time filtering through irrelevant information to find the actual merits of the case.
An AI hallucination occurs when the technology generates false information, such as inventing previous legal cases or claiming unrealistic success rates (e.g., suggesting 80-90% of insurance claims are overturned), which the user then accepts as fact.
Yes, potentially. If used correctly, AI can help more applicants put forward their cases, making the process of seeking dispute resolution more accessible to people who cannot afford professional legal representation.
