Getting an
Appraisal of Your Home or Property
Getting an appraisal done on your home or property is one of the
first things you want to take care of when you decide to sell. Just
because you think you have some idea of what your home or property
is worth, the dollar amount that you come up with is most likely
drastically different from the dollar amount that a professional
appraiser would come up with.
An appraisal on your home is basically a professional opinion of
the worth of your home or property from someone who is trained to
analyze such things. Small factors such as a sun room, porch or
deck, number of bathrooms and whether they are whole or half
bathrooms are all factors that play into the net worth of your
home. Good appraisals also take neighborhood characteristics into
consideration, such as proximity to local schools, hospitals, and
grocery stores. Especially when families are concerned, convenience
is something that people are willing to pay for, and the closer a
property is to these things, and the better quality of the schools,
markets, etc, the more value added to your home in that
respect.
An appraisal is a professional opinion
and is to be respected, but keep in mind that it is just
that--an opinion. Opinions are not set in stone, no matter
who they come from whether it be your disapproving mother, a
circuit court judge, or a professional appraiser. If an
appraisal is too high or low, a bank or mortgage company may
reject the estimate, there by causing problems and delays for
your prospective home buyers, yourself, and any body else
that is involved in your real estate transaction.
Depending on the nature of the property, a professional appraiser
may take one of several approaches to determining the value of your
home. The cost or replacement approach is, in essence, a
determination of what the home would cost to rebuild should it burn
to the ground. This includes everything; your windows, porch, pool,
and even any money you have invested into your landscaping, yard or
garden are all taken into consideration. The comparison approach to
the appraisal takes into consideration all of the houses that are
similar to yours that have sold in your particular area in a given
set of time, usually the last six months.
From there, the appraiser adds value
and takes away value in accordance with the specifics to your
home. If you have a basement and most of the other homes
similar to yours that sold in the past few months didn't have
basements, the appraiser would be able to estimate the value
that having the basement adds to the property. If everyone on
the block with homes similar to yours had basements, but
theirs are finished and yours is not finished, or partially
finished, then the appraiser should have some approximation
of how much value to take away from the house in accordance
with that. The last approach is the income appraisal
approach, and it is used more commonly when commercial
properties are in question.
|