Site icon HouseLogic

What You Must Know About Home Appraisals

Home appraisal inspection need to knows; graphic of a man inspecting a house.

When you refinance or sell your home, the lender will insist that you get an appraisal — an opinion of the value of your home based on what similar homes in your area have sold for in recent months.  

Here are five points about the appraised value of your home. 

1. An Appraisal Isn’t an Exact Science

When appraisers evaluate a home’s value, they’re giving their best opinion based on how the home’s features stack up against those of similar homes recently sold nearby. One appraiser may factor in a recent sale, but another may consider that sale too long ago, or the home too different, or too far away to be a fair comparison. The result can be differences in the values two separate appraisers set for your home.

2. Appraisals Have Different Purposes

An appraisal may be used to figure out how much to insure your home for or to determine your property taxes. Depending on the goal, an appraiser may consider different factors and arrive at different values. For example, though an appraisal for a home loan evaluates today’s market value, an appraisal for insurance purposes calculates what it would cost to rebuild your home at today’s building material and labor rates. The two goals can produce two different numbers.

3. An Appraisal Is a Snapshot

Appraisals differ from CMAs, or competitive market analyses. With a CMA, a real estate agent relies on market expertise to estimate how much your home will sell for in a specific time period. The price your home will sell for in 30 days may vary from the price your home will sell for in 120 days. Because real estate agents don’t follow the rules appraisers do, there can be variations between CMAs and appraisals on the same home.

Home prices shift, and appraised values will shift with those market changes. Your home may be appraised at $250,000 today, but in two months, when you refinance or list it for sale, the appraised value could be lower or higher depending on how your market has performed.  

4. Appraisals Don’t Factor in Your Personal Issues

You may have a reason to sell immediately, such as a job loss or transfer, which can affect the amount of money you’ll accept to complete the transaction in your time frame. An appraisal doesn’t consider those personal factors.  

5. You Can Ask for a Second Opinion

If your home appraisal report comes back at a value that is less than the negotiated purchase price, you can request that a second appraisal be performed by a different appraiser. You, or potential buyers, if they’ve requested the appraisal, will have to pay for the second appraisal. But it may be worth it to keep the sale from collapsing. On the other hand, the appraisal may indicate you need to adjust your pricing or the size of the loan you’re refinancing.

Related:

Other web resource:

Where to find an appraiser

You May Also Like:

First-Time Buyer is presented by The National Association of REALTORS®
Exit mobile version