Lobo Fan
Elite Member
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2004
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- New Mexico
I had an interesting experience yesterday. First a little background. I did a refi appraisal for a home in Sandoval county. The base house was about 2000 square feet, with a 600 square foot addition to the rear. I am usually pretty careful about what I include in the GLA. In this case the addition appeared to be of better construction than the original.
I checked with the county. They can only look up building permits by the date issued. House was 25 years old, the addition was about the same. I could not determine the descade let alone the month and year.
I included the area in the GLA with a note explaining that the permit status could not be verified, but the work appeared to be of similar condition to the main house.
This turns into a big UW thing. Per the lender FNMA will not loan on non-permitted additions. First I heard of this. So I ended up backing the addition out of the GLA, and giving it some value.
Now for the recent part. I get an assignment from the same lender to look at a house in Rio Rancho. Based upon the e-mail address, the borrower is a big hitter with the lender. He knows the difference between a 2055 and a 1004. He sends me an appraisal done in 2005 in order to give me a head start (and a target I suspect). The old appraisal indicates a converted garage. I call the city and they can only check records back to 1999. No record of a permit of course. I go back to the guy and explain that I will need to see a permit to count the garage conversion in the GLA. Has a meltdown and cancels the appointment.
The question I have is if FNMA is really cracking down on non-permitted additions or if I was just dealing with a nervous UW? I run into non-permitted work all the time.
I checked with the county. They can only look up building permits by the date issued. House was 25 years old, the addition was about the same. I could not determine the descade let alone the month and year.
I included the area in the GLA with a note explaining that the permit status could not be verified, but the work appeared to be of similar condition to the main house.
This turns into a big UW thing. Per the lender FNMA will not loan on non-permitted additions. First I heard of this. So I ended up backing the addition out of the GLA, and giving it some value.
Now for the recent part. I get an assignment from the same lender to look at a house in Rio Rancho. Based upon the e-mail address, the borrower is a big hitter with the lender. He knows the difference between a 2055 and a 1004. He sends me an appraisal done in 2005 in order to give me a head start (and a target I suspect). The old appraisal indicates a converted garage. I call the city and they can only check records back to 1999. No record of a permit of course. I go back to the guy and explain that I will need to see a permit to count the garage conversion in the GLA. Has a meltdown and cancels the appointment.
The question I have is if FNMA is really cracking down on non-permitted additions or if I was just dealing with a nervous UW? I run into non-permitted work all the time.