The fee question is worth taking seriously because the workload is genuinely increasing. I've been going through
the 3.6 requirements and talking with experienced appraisers about what's changing, and as many of you have
rightfully pointed out, this is more work — and here's why. A 1004 had roughly 150-200 fields. The 3.6 dynamic
form has over 1,600 required or conditionally required fields. That's not a minor update.
There are entire new categories that didn't exist before — energy efficiency ratings, green certifications like
LEED, disaster mitigation features with installation dates, environmental conditions as structured data, and data
source attribution where the appraiser has to document exactly where each piece of information came from. The
energy and environmental stuff is genuinely new knowledge for most appraisers. Identifying a HERS score or
knowing the difference between types of renewable energy ownership isn't something that was part of the job
before. If that requires training, the cost of that training should be factored into fees too.
But here's the thing — more data going to the client means the end product is more valuable than what appraisers
were delivering before. That should mean higher compensation, not less. And the appraisers making the switch
early have real leverage right now. The supply of 3.6-capable appraisers is small, and so is the number of
software vendors that can actually produce quality 3.6 files. If AMCs need 3.6 work done and not many appraisers
are up to speed yet, early adopters are in a position to set their rates, not accept whatever's offered. That
window won't stay open forever, but right now the demand is growing faster than the supply.
As for the "death of the appraiser" concern — I'd argue the opposite. The 3.6 form asks for more professional
judgment, not less. Ceiling heights by room, per-room condition ratings, structured narratives — that's an
appraiser's expertise, not something a spreadsheet replaces. The software should handle the tedious data entry so
appraisers can focus on the parts that actually require their knowledge. If anything, this makes experienced
appraisers more valuable.