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Appraisals are provided for a variety of reasons. An appraiser is a contracted as an independent party to determine the fair market value of a property. Appraisals are prepared for the purpose of a Financial Transaction, Assessment Appeals, Divorce, Estate Purposes, to determine a market value for a sale.
Appraisals are performed for financial transaction to protect the lender and the purchaser. The appraisal determines that the buyer is not paying too much for the property and that the lender is lending fair market value for a property.
The appraiser is an unbiased third party that has no personal interest in the property being appraised. An appraiser should be determining what fair market value is and not trying to achieve a number for someone. It is unethical for an appraiser to "hit a target number" when appraising a property.
Inspection of the property
An appraiser will call and schedule a time to come take a look at the property being appraised. The appraiser will walk through the home, take some interior and exterior photographs and make notes regarding condition, features, upgrades and any cosmetic concerns or defects. The appraiser will then take some measurements to calculate the living area of the property.
Once the site has been inspected, an appraiser uses two or three approaches to determining the value of real property: a cost approach, a sales comparison and, in the case of a rental property, an income approach.
Cost Approach
The cost approach is the easiest to understand. The appraiser uses information on local building costs, labor rates and other factors to determine how much it would cost to construct a property similar to the one being appraised. This value often sets the upper limit on what a property would sell for. Why would you pay more for an existing property if you could spend less and build a brand new home instead? While there may be mitigating factors, such as location and amenities, these are usually not reflected in the cost approach.
Sales Comparison
Instead, appraisers rely on the sales comparison approach to value these types of items. Appraisers get to know the neighborhoods in which they work. They understand the value of certain features to the residents of that area. They know the traffic patterns, the school zones, the busy throughways; and they use this information to determine which attributes of a property will make a difference in the value. Then, the appraiser researches recent sales in the vicinity and finds properties which are ''comparable'' to the subject being appraised. The sales prices of these properties are used as a basis to begin the sales comparison approach.
Using knowledge of the value of certain items such as square footage, extra bathrooms, hardwood floors, fireplaces or view lots (just to name a few), the appraiser adjusts the comparable properties to more accurately portray the subject property. For example, if the comparable property has a fireplace and the subject does not, the appraiser may deduct the value of a fireplace from the sales price of the comparable home. If the subject property has an extra half-bathroom and the comparable does not, the appraiser might add a certain amount to the comparable property.
In the case of income producing properties - rental houses for example - the appraiser may use a third approach to valuing the property. In this case, the amount of income the property produces is used to arrive at the current value of those revenues over the foreseeable future.
Reconciliation
Combining information from all approaches, the appraiser is then ready to stipulate an estimated market value for the subject property. It is important to note that while this amount is probably the best indication of what a property is worth, it may not be the final sales price. There are always mitigating factors such as seller motivation, urgency or ''bidding wars'' that may adjust the final price up or down. But the appraised value is often used as a guideline for lenders who don't want to loan a buyer more money than the property is actually worth. The bottom line is: an appraiser will help you get the most accurate property value, so you can make the most informed real estate decisions.