Chad Calhoun
Freshman Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Arizona
Hi,
I have a question for the group. I am wondering how many appraisers report the comparable sales price per acre rather than the full sales price on a land appraisal? (i.e., the sale price is reported as $5,000 for a 10 acre parcel which closed for $50,000). I personally adjust the comps against the full sales price, but I have seen others adjusting on a per acre basis and then taking the reconciled adjusted per acre sale price and applying it to the subject's total lot size to determine value. Shouldn't the actual full sales price be reported where the form says "Sales Price?" Is this just a work decision and as long as the methodology and development is disclosed it's fine?
One concern is whether this may exclude consideration for excess land. Wouldn't a 5 acre parcel be more per acre versus a 40 acre parcel? Don't you have to divide the difference for items like utilities into the total acreage which makes this report more difficult to understand?
Thanks,
Chad
I have a question for the group. I am wondering how many appraisers report the comparable sales price per acre rather than the full sales price on a land appraisal? (i.e., the sale price is reported as $5,000 for a 10 acre parcel which closed for $50,000). I personally adjust the comps against the full sales price, but I have seen others adjusting on a per acre basis and then taking the reconciled adjusted per acre sale price and applying it to the subject's total lot size to determine value. Shouldn't the actual full sales price be reported where the form says "Sales Price?" Is this just a work decision and as long as the methodology and development is disclosed it's fine?
One concern is whether this may exclude consideration for excess land. Wouldn't a 5 acre parcel be more per acre versus a 40 acre parcel? Don't you have to divide the difference for items like utilities into the total acreage which makes this report more difficult to understand?
Thanks,
Chad