Michigan CG
Elite Member
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2006
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Michigan
I'd say your advice is misguiding Tim. This is a residential appraisal. Since when does a res appraiser consider subdevelopment value or tree farm value or corn farm land value? We don't. Your advice does not pertain to the OP's question except in a commercial sense. I guess when they say CG's are the worst residential appraisers they weren't kidding lol. You've lost touch of what residential appraisal is and you confuse the commercial aspect into your assessment.
You CG's really shouldn't be giving advice to res appraisers imo. You complicate things more than they need to be and dismiss welcome guidance as incomplete and berate the poster. Your opinion isn't needed for a residential valuation - sorry, but that's the way it is. Anybody notice the OP author hasn't posted? Because this thread has gone way off track.... Consider that. I'm out of here, pictures need to be taken.
So what you are saying is that a modest home sitting in Clinton County Iowa on 40 acres of the most productive farm land in the world should only be considered as a residential property and you think that "$1500" an acre is too high for the excess/surplus land when they are selling that land for $7,500/acre. When valuing rural land you consider the contribution of the improvements. If the house is a 1,200 SF house built in 1950 and contributes $50/SF then you have a house contributing $60,000 in value to land worth $300,000.
You really need to read this book (I have) before you post on this subject any further:
http://www.appraisalinstitute.org/store/p-16-appraisal-of-rural-property.aspx
.........Since when does a res appraiser consider subdevelopment value or tree farm value or corn farm land value? We don't........
You should so that you can be sure that you are competent to complete the assignment. In this case you are not competent to complete the assignment.
...........Your advice does not pertain to the OP's question except in a commercial sense..........
Rural residential/farms have income potential. They therefore potentially have more value than your estimated <$1,500/acre.
..........I guess when they say CG's are the worst residential appraisers they weren't kidding.........
I love meeting people like you in litigation. Appraising things you having no clue what you are getting yourself into. I will put my residential work up against most. There are many on this forum who have seen my residential work. Maybe someone will opine.
.......You've lost touch of what residential appraisal is and you confuse the commercial aspect into your assessment.
You CG's really shouldn't be giving advice to res appraisers imo............
50% of my billing is residential work.