Mejappz
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
Yea. That true. A couple of days ago I put up on a forum that I was just finishing an appraisal for Montara and was surprised that almost all of my comps were within 1%. I went back to do more work on it and saw that the MLS I had actually stuck in one that was simply an average and also one of the comps actually had an ocean view. Those damned ocean views!!!. You know, they are not all the same, and the MLS only says "TRUE" or "FALSE". I have 220+ comps and there is no way I could go through everything and check and rate the ocean view. Although, I think in terms of whether there is at least a "peak ocean view" 90%+ are correct. I had to go over everything again.
I spend a hell of a lot of time on this for $700. But for me, being retired, well I like doing it.
Anyway, going over everything very carefully, so that the models do make sense. No weird stuff except there is a 2-way interaction between baths and sale age (COE age) that I really can't get rid of, it is very persistent.
This is what the deviations of the comps from the average come in at - and I was shocked:
View attachment 51293
That is to say, each of these comps was adjusted within 1/5th of one percentage point of their average (the concluded value) ... And this was spit out by my computer program. Of course I had to do a lot of work getting the data correct and using MARS. And no one is going to believe you can get this close. But yes. I have one model that I consistently applied to each of these homes to get the adjusted price, and the model is not all that complicated. These are all custom built homes ages 15-80 years in a small California Coastside community.
But the point is, to do this, you really have to understand the characteristics and what make sense or doesn't
Bert: that’s a tight range for high-end properties. What was the R-squared and SEE for the entire model?


