We just had an FHA appraisal come back on a house and it came up $6,000 short of the asking price. The house is in exceptional condition with a heated saline inground pool. The appraiser did not give any value for the pool. Is this standard? In addition, the house has new roof and new hot water heater and these were not considered either. The house is in CT. Thanks!!
I am unsure if you understand what you posted means to a real estate appraiser. As my only response can be "
So? What's the problem?"
Read the definition of "Market Value" in the real estate appraisal and then ask yourself what "Asking Price" has to do with what the assignment of the appraiser was all about.
I ditto the other pool comments. A house
must have a functional roof. So comparing one functional roof to another functional roof often does not result in meaningful market extraction. You seem to be assuming none of the comparable had good roofs. A hot water heater? Yes, a good hot water heater is a good thing to have. Most houses that are sold generally have functioning hot water heaters. If your house is of an age it needed a new one, probably so were all the other sales (comparable) used around the same age, and it is likely many of them also had replaced the hot water heaters.
Part of the problem here is you don't understand that real estate appraising does not get down to that level of comparison on an item for item basis like that. We look at the overall condition and quality of a house, but we don't have a point system for each and every item imaginable under the sun that goes into building a house. The reason is we are not costing the house for construction, we are estimating the market value of homes with all sorts of various repairs, updates, and deferred maintenance all in one house. Your house has a new roof and hot water heater, a comparable sale used has new windows and carpeting, but your house does not. The idea is, overall they compare, and no condition adjustment should be made. So to perform an analyses of real estate values to a level you are implying, are you prepared to pay $5,000 for for the real estate appraisal?
I once had a home owner get upset because he felt he had better door knobs than everyone else had, and I didn't seem to care. Perhaps I should have forced him to get on the phone with real estate agents and ask them to identify the door knobs that the houses I was using for comparable had. I suspect after the first several phone calls the gentleman would have begun to understand why I didn't seem care. Besides, I'd just come from a multi-million dollar home, and honestly, I didn't care about the door knobs in his $300,000 house. So I suppose he was right about my not caring.
Best Wishes.