- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
"I've only used the GLA "standards" per county, community, area etc. and the experience of my mentors in these areas."
aka "the list". In doing this you're not extracting the adjustments from your sales data. You're working off a predetermined list and assuming those factors will work. Most likely your supervisor was trained the same way so that's why they're training you to do it this way. As well, all the other adjustments they're using are usually also coming off their "list".
Usually the way this is explained to new appraisers is based off the idea that "this is what the lender will accept", which when you think about it is not an appropriate way to appraise a property.
If you think about what it is you're actually supposed to be doing, it should be entirely market-centric, not lender-centric. It should be based entirely on what you think the market participants will do in these situations, not upon "what the lender will accept". The definition of value upon which these appraisals are based refers to the actions of the buyers and sellers. It doesn't refer to the actions of the lenders.
As for "what the lenders will accept", that's still a valid concern but the appropriate way to address that concern is to sell to them the credibility of your analysis. You are the appraiser, not them. You should be showing them how a legitimate appraisal is done, not the other way around.
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