Why get an appraisal? - An appraisal is used to show the lender the value of your home and to secure financing for borrowers.There are different types of appraisals depending on the lenders requirements, and the intended use of the property. For example an appraiser may request a drive by appraisal where only an exterior inspection is needed, a full appraisal where the interior of the home is also looked at. If you are planning to use the home as an investment property the lender may also require the inspector to examine rental rates for similar homes in the area.
An appraisal is required on almost all real estate transactions. The lender usually requires an appraisal to be done to make sure the home is worth the amount that is being financed. The more money you are financing compared to the value of the home, the higher the risk the loan is to the lender. Therefore, the lender wants to protect their investment and have an appraisal done on the property.
Appraisal Report - An appraisal is a report that provides an opinion of value of the subject property and supports that opinion with the utilization of 3 approaches: a comparable sales approach, a cost approach, and an income approach. The appraisal is completed on a standardized Uniform Residential Appraisal Report form called a 1004 form.
An appraiser is a professional that specializes in developing opinions of property value for their clients.
Appraisals are used by lending institutions to make a decision of whether to lend on that particular property. The appraisal report will outline any apparent problems or hazards with a home.
The accuracy or lack of accuracy in a residential appraisal has just about everything to do with the comparable sales or comps as they are known. The more similar to the subject and recent the comps are, the more likely the lenders underwriter will accept the value stated on the appraisal report without question.
If an appraisal is found to be insufficient, inflated or no good by the lender's standards the lender has the right to refuse to accept the appraisal. Many lenders will either cut the value or simply request a new appraisal to be completed if they are not satisfied with the original appraisal.
A home appraisal is the process to estimate the value of the property. The appraised value is merely the opinion of the certified appraiser, based on the appraiser's experience, knowledge of the neighborhood the property is located, and knowledge of similar properties recently sold.
An appraisal will generally use the comparable approach for determining it's final opinion of value on a property. The other approaches can weigh in or factor into the final value decision but usually it will be the comparable approach that is most important. Keep in mind also that an appraisal is only an estimate of value and is not guaranteed to be the exact value of what you can get for your home if you were to sell the home. You could have your home appraised by 10 different appraisers and they could possibly all come up with a different final number. They should be fairly close and consistent with each other but they could easily all be slightly different in final value.