Mountain Man
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Georgia
If you are going through an agent, sit down and look at the sales and listing data.
If not, then you may need to hire an experienced broker. Maybe even hire an experience appraiser, not one who has jumped in the biz in 2000 and has done nothing but form appraising for Appraisal Management Companies. Unfortunately, and with the lax licensing requirements in recent years, many newer residential appraisers (and real estate agents) haven't been properly trained... all they do is find the most recent 3 or 4 sales in the past 6 months to make the lender happy. When working for a grand fee of $190 to $220 from big box lenders, they can't spend enough time to do a thorough analysis. I've run into the same thing on several occasions, and have been successful in proving the appraiser wrong. However, it must be done professionally, tactfully, and with solid market data. Believe me, a good RE agent earns every $$$$ they get at closing.
If not, then you may need to hire an experienced broker. Maybe even hire an experience appraiser, not one who has jumped in the biz in 2000 and has done nothing but form appraising for Appraisal Management Companies. Unfortunately, and with the lax licensing requirements in recent years, many newer residential appraisers (and real estate agents) haven't been properly trained... all they do is find the most recent 3 or 4 sales in the past 6 months to make the lender happy. When working for a grand fee of $190 to $220 from big box lenders, they can't spend enough time to do a thorough analysis. I've run into the same thing on several occasions, and have been successful in proving the appraiser wrong. However, it must be done professionally, tactfully, and with solid market data. Believe me, a good RE agent earns every $$$$ they get at closing.