A 3.5 Million listing is not a comparable for a $750K subject ... ignoring it would be the best thought process you might have.
How do you know that the two properties are not comparable? Only from the price? Is that how we do comparable searches . . by price? I thought that was a big no-no.
I think we throw around the word comparable too much, without knowing what it is. I have asked for the definition of comparable in this forum and have never got an answer. In fact, aren't all properties comparable, but only a few are "Good" comparables? Can't we make adjustments for size, view, location, etc? When I wrote my narrative, I was told to just use all sales in the past 3 years in the neighborhood. After proving all of the adjustments, and applying them to each comparable, I was very surprised at how close the adjusted values were.
I was once told that a $600,000 home is not comparable to a $300,000. They said that it was because someone that can qualify for a $300,000 home would not be able to qualify for a $600,000 home. My reply was "couldn't a person that was considering the $600,000 on a golf course, buy the same exact home for $300,000 without backing the golf course?"
Of course. And maybe that person would think that even if he can qualify for a $600,000 house, he would rather spend half the money and not get hit by golf balls all day. He could take his extra $300,000 in loans and buy rentals, start a business, buy a Lamborghini, etc.
It seems that this is a recent trend. Somehow the sales prices determine if something is comparable. The old fashioned way was to find the best comparables out of a large list of comparables, no matter what price.
How about if a guy gets an amazing deal for a house at $300,000. All of the sales in the area of the same house are at $600,000. Do you then say to the client "There are NO comparables available"
Of if the guy buys the house for $300,000, but he is from California and thinks this is a good deal in Arizona. You find that all of the same size houses are selling for $100,000. Do you say "Well these homes are not comparable because they sold for $200,000 less and do not attract the same buyer"
That was a mistake appraisers used to make in the 1980's. We were told over and over again, do not use price ranges to determine your comparables.
I just bought a home. This is a great market to buy homes. I looked at buying multiple cheap homes, buying two mid range priced homes, or buying an expensive home and using my old home as a rental. I am the same potential buyer and was looking at homes ranging from $20,000 to $300,000. All of the homes in that price range appealed to the same buyer.
So when someone tells me that at the top of the second page of the URAR that my low range of $50,000 is not comparable to $250,000 homes, because they appeal to a different buyer, I just have to laugh.
I can use myself as a source to prove them wrong.
