Most things to do with buying or selling a home can be pretty stressful, from finding the house of your dreams, to securing the financing, all the way through to closing. But for most transactions, everything, absolutely everything, hinges on the home appraisal. This is probably why so many myths and misconceptions have grown up around the process. We’re here to help you sort the truth from the stories.
Myth #1: Home Appraisals and Home
Inspections Are the Same
This couldn’t be further from the truth. The sole purpose of a home
appraisal is to determine the value of the home, in that moment, in those
market conditions, in the shape that home is currently in. A home inspection,
on the other hand, determines the condition of the home, along with any major
defects, in the moment when it’s being inspected.
The waters get muddied when buyers are securing FHA or USDA loans, which
require an additional loan-specific inspection be performed by the appraiser.
This particular kind of inspection is there to ensure that the home meets the
loan’s minimum standards, not to determine the overall condition of the home.
Always have a home inspection, it’s a much different thing.
Myth #2: Home Appraisers Create
Market Values
Although the home appraiser will assign your home a rough value, the
work they do is actually based on a thorough study of the current real estate
market’s conditions, the condition of the home, the value of each component of
the home, the value the neighborhood contributes, and a myriad of other
factors, as well as the fact that a buyer was willing to pay the amount of your
contract for the home.
So, while any individual home appraiser could be considered to be
contributing to market values, they in no way set them. You can think of them
more like a reporter, simply telling the story of your home and the things in
it, for better or for worse. They see homes every day and understand what a
dollar will buy in their particular markets.
Myth #3: If You’ve Had an
Assessment, You Don’t Need an Appraisal
While an assessment is
a type of valuation of a home for the purposes of determining tax
responsibility, they don’t go into the kind of depth an appraisal does. Do you
remember the last time someone went onto your property and into your home to
perform a tax assessment? Of course not, because they’re simply not that
thorough. Tax assessments have to be done quickly due to the sheer number
performed at once, so they are often painted with a very broad brush.
Appraisals, on the
other hand, can each take several hours, including the time the appraiser is on
site examining the home’s interior. This is why when someone believes their
assessment to be incorrect, they can challenge it using a home appraisal. The
appraisal is simply more accurate. Never use an assessment for sales or
purchase purposes, you’ll be sorely disappointed.
Myth #4: The Appraiser Is on the Bank’s Side
An appraiser is a
neutral third-party expert who is contracted by banks to determine the value of
your home so they can use this figure in making your loan. This doesn’t mean
that appraisers are working on behalf of the bank or that they’re simply there
to make the numbers work out every time. Sometimes, appraisers come back with
very bad news about homes, determining that they absolutely cannot be appraised
for the transaction price, or that there’s something about them that means they
cannot meet the minimum requirements of a given loan type.
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