thanks for further posts
thanks for taking the time guys and I appreciate the vast knowledge.
The area I just built in is rural in the custom home market segment although not exclusive high end million dollar homes. Since it takes about a year to complete a house--from design, permits to COO on a custom home--, the comps get somewhat dated and appraisers have normal difficulty obtaining comps in non-disclosure state. You can't run to county records for verification. We all can see other houses being built and know and find out what others are paying, but seem to have trouble finding appraisers like yourselves that do their homework and stay up with actual standards vs misconceptions since Dodd, Frank. Your jobs can be difficult to say the least and I also see you guys are highly scrutinized with portal submissions and corresponding quality review software. So you guys have to be on you toes and consistent in your application of data.
I have verified many misconceptions by researching this forum. ie, the highest appraisal for a home can be no higher than the last highest sale in the area.--a house just sold for 560k, so that is the new ceiling--. Or you can't use a comparable across a county line, even if it is close and otherwise comparable. seriously.
In the world we live in, privacy is an illusion even in Utah. The data is there if it can be found and verified. As you all know, appraisals are loaded into the Fannie Mae portal in most cases and lenders can access that information along with actual sales information even though it would seem appraisers can't.
Through personal experience as a homeowner, I have found MLS data to be about as accurate as zillow in Utah.
I found this post to helpful: Lender Letter LL-2014-02: Property and Appraisal Requirements for Properties Located in Small Towns and Rural Areas.
learning also that a lender does not need to blindly rely on submitting to an AMC and can specify an appraiser who knows the specific market area.
I was also able to find the Fannie Mae appraisal guidelines that include language like, appraiser can verify by viewing certain documents from a disinterested source.--paraphrasing--
I can see from further posts that the appraiser needs detailed info that can be verified and I can see the points on development fraud. I do also recognize that I might take a loss if I need to sell the house and every home buyer should realize that an appraisal does mean you can automatically sell a house for that amount.
As a consumer, I feel the need to be educated to make sure my lender is using a qualified appraiser and do so without exerting undue influence. I plan to simply ask the appraiser assigned how they apply and source comparables in a rural environment. My new lender does many rural loans even though it is a large bank being Wells Fargo. I would appreciate thoughts on how I could better approach that verification of the appraiser's knowledge and experience to the market area.
Thanks again.