KD247
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- California
Sorry, I'm not going to take the time to read your entire post. As soon as I saw that you had to thoroughly massage the data, including equalizing other important value-influencing factors (in appraising, eliminating variables that way begs the question regarding the relationship between the variables themselves) in order to produce your extremely "accurate" coefficient, I knew that you were on the wrong track. You're bypassing the big picture and hiding in the details.
If the market in your area was as predictable as you imply, there wouldn't be any disagreement with the appraisal. If the sales in your area are as disparate as you make them sound, then you absolutely shouldn't be ignoring comparables that are distant, older, vary in lot size, or vary in improvements. Ranking comparables is different than categorically rejecting them.
Even though the appraisal form requires component-based analysis and reporting, it sounds unlikely that buyers in your area look at properties that way. The secret to appraising in your area is likely to have a "feel" for which attributes (or the lack of) buyers consider to be deal breakers, which attributes buyers are willing to pay a premium for, which attributes they are willing to compromise on, and which attributes buyers will only accept if they come with a huge price discount.
What do you believe are the most important value determinants in your area? What's the relationship with your area and the closest areas that have more consistency in sales? If your house was currently listed for sale, what would be the next best alternative? What would be the most similar slightly inferior alternative? What's the marketing history and prognosis for those properties? How do they relate to both older and recent sales? How does the sales history of your house relate to other sales data? These are all questions that an appraiser needs to ask before they even get started with their analysis.
The trouble with doing your own appraisal is that it's hard for any homeowner to look at the situation from any perspective but their own. It doesn't mean that the appraiser is necessarily right and that you're wrong, but there is virtually a 100% certainty that your view is biased.
What would convince me that the appraiser had an unreasonable, fraudulent, or negligent opinion of value? It wouldn't be that another supportable opinion of value exists. That's commonplace. It wouldn't be that contradictory data exists. That's the very nature of the appraisal problem for complex properties. The only thing that would convince me would be if a trusted expert put at least as much time into the analysis as the appraiser and came to an opinion regarding the quality of the appraiser's work.
From my (our?) point of view, this discussion is much like an appraiser complaining about the adequacy of a philosophy course based on sundry detailed actions of the professor, analyzed in a way that only the appraiser saw fitting.
I appreciate that you're attempting to play the game by our rules but that's tough, particularly when there's so much debate about the rules between appraisers.
If the market in your area was as predictable as you imply, there wouldn't be any disagreement with the appraisal. If the sales in your area are as disparate as you make them sound, then you absolutely shouldn't be ignoring comparables that are distant, older, vary in lot size, or vary in improvements. Ranking comparables is different than categorically rejecting them.
Even though the appraisal form requires component-based analysis and reporting, it sounds unlikely that buyers in your area look at properties that way. The secret to appraising in your area is likely to have a "feel" for which attributes (or the lack of) buyers consider to be deal breakers, which attributes buyers are willing to pay a premium for, which attributes they are willing to compromise on, and which attributes buyers will only accept if they come with a huge price discount.
What do you believe are the most important value determinants in your area? What's the relationship with your area and the closest areas that have more consistency in sales? If your house was currently listed for sale, what would be the next best alternative? What would be the most similar slightly inferior alternative? What's the marketing history and prognosis for those properties? How do they relate to both older and recent sales? How does the sales history of your house relate to other sales data? These are all questions that an appraiser needs to ask before they even get started with their analysis.
The trouble with doing your own appraisal is that it's hard for any homeowner to look at the situation from any perspective but their own. It doesn't mean that the appraiser is necessarily right and that you're wrong, but there is virtually a 100% certainty that your view is biased.
What would convince me that the appraiser had an unreasonable, fraudulent, or negligent opinion of value? It wouldn't be that another supportable opinion of value exists. That's commonplace. It wouldn't be that contradictory data exists. That's the very nature of the appraisal problem for complex properties. The only thing that would convince me would be if a trusted expert put at least as much time into the analysis as the appraiser and came to an opinion regarding the quality of the appraiser's work.
From my (our?) point of view, this discussion is much like an appraiser complaining about the adequacy of a philosophy course based on sundry detailed actions of the professor, analyzed in a way that only the appraiser saw fitting.
I appreciate that you're attempting to play the game by our rules but that's tough, particularly when there's so much debate about the rules between appraisers.